Demonstrations Continue in Israel Against Germans (Continued from Page 1) temporarily until Israel's new em- bassy is completed at Bad Godes- berg, a suburb south of the capital. The Israeli envoy is expected to present his letters of credence to President Heinrich L u e b e k on Tuesday or Wednesday. He made his first visit to a West German official Tuesday, paying a courtesy call on Dr. Karl Car- stens, state secretary of the foreign ministry and acting minister in the absence of Foreign Minister Ger- hard Schroeder. Establishment of diplomatic re- lations with Israel has put West Germany's relations "with all Middle East states" on a "clear, honest and unassailable basis," Chancellor Ludwig Erhard de- clared Monday. Speaking at Bern- kastel, the Chancellor made that comment on the arrival of Ben- Nathan. He also said that his government was ready to re-establish diplo- matic relations with any of the Arab governments that suspended such ties when West Germany an- nounced last March it planned to recognize Israel. But, the chancel- lor added, the Arab states would have to make the first move in that direction. More Demonstrations JERUSALEM (JTA) — A wide variety of former partisans, ghetto fighters and representatives of all political parties except Premier Levi Eshkol's Mapai announced plans to stage protest demonstra- tions here when Dr. Rolf Pauls, West Germany's first ambassador to Israel, presents his credentials to President Zalman Shazar. The presentation ceremonies were scheduled Thursday. The demonstrators planned to picket the route used by Dr. Pauls in the center of Jerusalem leading to the President's house. In the continuing demonstrations against the establishment of diplo- matic relations between the two countries, the leftist Mapam party sponsored a march Monday night. Several scores of placard-carrying youths marched through the main streets of Jerusalem, demonstrat- ing against Dr. Pauls and urging "remembrance," a term used in reference to the Nazi genocide of European Jewry. After the demonstrators finished their scheduled and approved march, they returned to the streets and began disrupting traffic. Sev- eral of the youths went to the home of Mrs. Golda Meir, Israel's for- `Every Friday' Closes; Existed for 35 Years CINCINNATI (JTA) — Samuel M. Schmidt, founder and editor of Every Friday, the English-Jewish weekly he has been publishing here for 38 years, announced that he is discontinuing the publication of the newspaper. The first issue of Every Friday was dated Sept. 23, 1927. The final issue is dated Aug. 13, 1965. The announcement was made by Schmidt in a front-page editorial, \ accompanied by a facsimile of part of Page One of the first issue. The editorial noted that Schmidt, who is 82, has found it difficult due to his health to continue pub- lication of the newspaper, which has been a labor of love for him. Competition in the field has also been a factor, the editorial indi- cated. Schmidt has been secretary of the Bureau of Jewish Education here 25 years. His newspaper re- flected broad community interest in Jewish education, Zionism, Orthodoxy and firm support for the Jewish Welfare Fund here. A final, farewell article by him paid tribute to his late wife, Mrs. Es- ther Ida Schmidt, who "provided the needed inspiration and en- couragement, without which I would never have been able to make the grade." A picture is a poem without words. — Horace. eign minister, and sang the national anthem, Hatikvah. Police restored quiet but made no arrests. A group of about 30 instructors and students of the Hebrew Uni- versity distributed 20,000 leaflets and yellow badges with the word "Jude" Tuesday to passersby here in protest against the ac- creditation of Dr. Pauls. The leaflets urged Israelis not to forget the Nazi crimes against European Jewry, not to use Ger- man products and not to befriend Germans. Authors of the leaflets stressed that they did not belong to any political party and that the group had no desire to express any opin- ion on the issue of Bonn-Jerusalem diplomatic relations because this was a political decision taken by the government. Their appeal, they said, was directed at the individual Israeli; urging him not to forget. Dr. Pauls made a point on the second day of his arrival here to visit the Yad Vashem shrine set up by Israel in memory of the six million European Jews slain by the Nazis in World War Visibly shaken by the displays of photographs and other documents of the monstrous Nazi genocide, the envoy called the visit "one of the most moving hours in my life" and added he felt that "as many human beings as possible should see it — especially Germans." He said he would try to contact the Yad Vashem to arrange such visits and that he planned to make an- other visit himself to the Mount Zion shrine. Dr. A. Tenen of the Remem- brance Authority escorted the en- voy through the Yad Vashem build- ings. Dr. Pauls listened in almost complete silence as Dr. Tenen ex- plained the grisly exhibits. In sharp contrast to the situation before he arrived, only one demon- strator was present at Lydda air- port when his plane touched down. She was Bronke Klibanski, a sur- vivor of the Bialystok Ghetto up- rising against the Nazis and an active member of one of Israel's ex-partisan organizations. She also went to Mount Zion, and, as Dr. Pauls and the Israeli security guards passed her, said quietly but audibly in Hebrew and in German, "Pauls go home." At the airport, the envoy said that the past should not be for- gotten but urged that Jews and Germans "look forward to the fu- ture." One of the newsmen referred to his past career as an officer in the German army in World War II, and asked whether he consid- ered himself the right man for the diplomatic post. He replied that he would try to prove his suitability far the task. In West Germany, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard and Opposition leader Fritz Erler said the arrivals of the envoys opened "a new page" in relations between the two na- tions. The Chancellor told an elec- tion rally he wished Dr. Pauls "success in his mission for the benefit" of both countries. Dr. Er- ler, the shadow cabinet foreign minister of the Social Democrat party, said in an SDP communi- que that he hoped the step would not be an end in itself and that both countries should continue to work for improvement in relations, particularly among their younger generations. Radio and television networks in West Germany interrupted regular programs to report the envoy's safe arrival in Israel. They indi- cated that they saw in this a signi- ficant and welcome omen for improvement of Israeli-German ties. Students Join Protests TEL AVIV (JTA)—Members of four university student associations staged a mass demonstration here Sunday night in the continuing pro- tests against Israel's diplomatic ties with West Germany. The students were from Tel Aviv University, Bar-Ilan University, THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 20, 1965-7 the Technion of Haifa, and the Tel Aviv Branch of the Hebrew Uni- versity. Several thousand demonstrators marched silently through Tel Aviv's main streets during the weekend in a demonstration or- ganized by the right-wing Herut. A banner carried by the demon- strators read: "Germany Sends Diplomats to Israel—And Missiles to Egypt." Another read: "Normal Relations with Murderers — Sin Against History." At the end of the march, Herut leader Menachim Beigin told the demonstrators: "Pauls s w o r e eternal allegiance to Hitler. In the name of thousands of Jews, let me say that Pauls is unwelcome here." His statement was loudly applaud- ed. A former partisan, Haim Lazer, told the crowd: "The least we can do now is to make Germans living among us feel they are living in a ghetto." A Committee of Organi- zations of Holocaust Survivors planned to distribute leaflets against the relations with West Germany in major urban centers. 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