• Argentina Cracks Down on Anti-Semites, but Eichmann Is Released BUENOS AIRES (JTA)—Neo-Nazi Horst Eichmann, son of the late Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, was among 400 right-wing and Communist extremists arrested here in a round-up by Argentine federal police. Many of the right-wing extremists are associated with such groups as the anti-Semitic Tacuara. The arrests came on the eve Neighborhood Changes and Replacements of a parliamentary inquiry into extremist and Communist influence in Argentina's schools. According to Interior Minister Juan Palermo, Eich- mann, who appeared at a press conference here last year wearing a Nazi armband emblazoned with the swastika, was released for lack of "substantial evidence." A police spokesman said that a search of extremist hide-outs had unearthed quantities of arms and ammunition. The vio- lent deaths in the last few weeks of three youths had aroused speculation that an underground war was being fought among Argentina's extremist groups. Palermo said that the anti-Semitic, right-wing branch of the Tacuara movement had been repressed, and reported that 45 of its members were detained by the police. JEWISH NE Lessons of Past, Pacts for Peace i - r A Weekly Review Editorials Page 4 Self-Negations, Self-Hate, Lack of Pride Voided M i-Q M I GA. NJ by People's Faith of Jewish Events Commentary Page 2 Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper--Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle VOLUME XLVI I I—NO. 1 Printed in a 100% Union Shop 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 48235—VE 8-9364—Aug, 27, 1965 $6.00 Per Year; This Issue 20c Charge Communists Withhold Data Against Nazis; lamed for Israeli Riots Against est German Envoy More Auschwitz Personnel Face Trial BONN (JTA)—Possible trials for 326 more former officials of the Auschwitz death camp, in addition to the 17 found guilty and sentenced Aug. 21 at the conclusion of the 21-month trial in Frankfurt, were en- visaged by the government here, as the aftermath of the lengthy Frankfurt proceedings continued to agitate all of West Germany. In ending the trial last week, Chief Judge Hans Hofmeyer gave the maximum sentences per- ' missible under German law — life sentences — to six of the defendants, meted out prison terms ranging from 14 years to three years to 11 others, and acquitted three. Karl-Guenther von Hase, the spokesman for the government, an- nounced the plans for the possible trial of 326 more Auschwitz personnel but, at the same time, blamed Communist countries, "especially Russia," for holding back documentary material that would aid West German investigations of many former Nazis implicated in the mass killing of Jews. He charged that "in Leningrad alone, there are 40 books of records containing the names of Jews killed by the Nazis, but the Russians have not made this information available even to the relatives of the slain." A group of opposition Social Democratic deputies, who are assured • of re-election on Sept. 19 in the West German parliamentary balloting, said they would introduce legislation in the new parliament to provide more adequate means for investigation of Nazi war crimes. They said they were moved to take this step by the Auschwitz trial in Frankfurt. Friedrich Kaul, the attorney who represented East German victims (Continued on Page 7) Crisis Grows in illapa i; hree Quit Secretariat. rotest BiwG Expulsion Special to The Jewish News Based on JTA Israel Reports Gen. Moshe Dayan, former Israel minister of agriculture; Izhar Smilansky, novelist and member of the Knesset; and Uzi Feinerman resigned from the Mapai secretariat to which they were re-elected last week, in protest against efforts now being made by the Mapai Court of Honor to expel David Ben- Gurion. The Court of Honor ended its hearings on arguments to expel Ben-Gurion and six of his followers for creating an inde- pendent list for the November parliamentary elections, and announced it would issue a ruling next Monday. Two more of the six Mapai leaders who joined with Ben- Gurion to form the Israel Workers List (Rafi) to challenge Premier Levi Eshkol's leadership at the polls—Amos Degani and Gideon Ben-Israel—told the Court they no longer considered themselves Mapai members. The four other Rafi leaders — Ben-Gurion, ex-Deputy ,Defense Minister Shimon Peres, former Housing Minister Josef mogi, and Hanna Lamdan—said they were withdrawing from he Court hearings because the tribunal had made their defense gainst charges of splitting the party "impossible." Ben-Gurion appeared before the Mapai Court of Honor, hick had summoned him to show cause why he should not be expelled from the party for attempting to split it through formation of "Rafi." The name is made up of the Hebrew ini- tials of the Israel Workers List, an independent group which as announced it will run its own nominees in the November (Continued on Page 9) II Germans Angered by Anti-Pauls Protests BONN (JTA)—Pained surprised and shock dominated reactions in West Germany to the riotous demonstrations staged last week in Jeru- salem, when Dr. Rolf Pauls, West Germany's first ambassador to Israel, presented his credentials to President Zalman Shazar. Protesting Israelis, most of them survivors of the Nazi holocaust, clashed with police in the most violent fracas, Thursday, that led to 15 arrests and an equal number of injuries among the demonstrators and police. One of the more notable German reactions was a statement by "former Chancellor Konrad Adenauer that he was reconsidering his plans to visit Israel. Speaking in Muenster, the former chancellor said that the tensions in Israel might cause him to postpone his intended visit next November "at the invitation of my friend, David Ben-Gurion." Eric Mende, West German vice-chancellor, and head of the Free Democratic Party, a coalition partner, told an election gathering that the Jerusalem demonstrations were a resort to "noxious Communist-Fascist methods which cannot be tolerated." He added that the demonstrations were a "slander" against an entire generation of Germans who knew nothing of the Nazi past in a personal sense and was "now doing its duty." He called the demonstrations "a new attempt to place collective guilt on the German nation," and added that "people should also remember" the Allied World War II bombings of Dresden and Cologne. Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder told a Stuttgart Chamber of Commerce meeting that he did not expect 100 per cent of Israel's popula- War Predicted Over Jordan Water. Issue NEW DELHI—The illustrated Weekly of India warned in its current issue Tuesday that if Israel's Arab neighbors carried out their threat to divert the waters of the Jordan River, "Israel will be forced into war with the Arab League." The prediction was made in a pic- torial feature on Israel's tap of the Jor- dan River for its national water carrier to irrigate the northern section of its Negev wastes. The first stage of the project became operational this year. Under Arab League sponsorship, Leba- non and Syria began projects to divert Jordan River tributaries in their terri- tories to deny the river's waters to Israel. The weekly noted that the Arabs had agreed at the technical level to a Jordan River water-sharing plan developed more than a decade ago by the late Eric Johnston as a special emissary of Presi- dent Eisenhower. The plan, accepted by Israel and adhered to in the irrigation project, was rejected at the political level by the Arab rulers. "Without Jordin's waters, Israel can- not exist as a nation," the weekly de- clared. (Continued on Page 8) Chief Rabbi of Romania. Denies Anti-Semitism No Longer Grave Issue LONDON—Chief Rabbi Moses Rosen of Romania, one of the participants last week in the conference of 19 Christian and 10 Jewish leaders in Geneva, said Monday that he considered neo-Fascism and anti-Semitism in West Germany "a vital dan- ger for Jews as well as for world peace." The chief rabbi made his comment in a statement sent from Bucharest to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency here in which he disassociated himself for an evaluation giving the opposite viewpoint made at the close of the parley by Rabbi Seymour J. Cohen of Chicago, president of the synagogue coun- cil of America. The five-day meeting, sponsored by the World Council of Churches, was attended by religious leaders from the United States, Europe and Israel. Rabbi Cohen said at the end of the meeting that anti-Semitism was no longer a "grave" problem in Europe. Rabbi Rosen, who was the only East European representa- tive attending the Geneva sessions, asserted in his statement that the problem of anti-Semitism in West Germany was not discussed "in any form during the conference in which I took part" and that Rabbi Cohen was "not authorized by any one at the conference to declare that anti-Semitism in West Ger- many is of no importance any more." Rabbi Cohen had declared that he disagreed with reports of a resurgence of anti-Semitism in Europe and that such re- ports stemmed from the fact that occasionally some "idiot" painted an anti-Semitic slogan or desecrated a Jewish ceme- tery. Rabbi Cohen added a warning, however, that there were some "cesspools" of anti-Semitism "which still have to be sealed off." (Continued on Page 9)