SS Witness, Assured of Safe Conduct After Trial, Nabbed in Switzerland; May Wind Up as Defendant After All BONN (JTA)—Erhard Kroeger, a former high SS officer who testi- fied at a war crimes trial in this country last week, after being as- sured of safe conduct, has been arrested in Switzerland, and his extradition to West Germany has been requested. The chief prosecutor at Wurt- temberg, where Kroeger ap- peared as a witness against four former Nazis accused of mass murder, said Kroeger will be charged with personal repsonsi- bility for the murder of 3,045 Jews and mentally ill persons in Lemberg, Poland, in 1941. The four defendants in last week's Wuppertal trial were also accused of having committed their crimes in Lemberg. Kroeger had testified that he knew nothing about any killings of Jews there. Three of the defendants were found guilty and given prison terms. Germany's demand for Kroeg- er's extradition is now being ex- amined by the Swiss juridical po- lice department at Berne. Kroeger is expected to contend that he is accused of a `poltical" crime which is not subject to extradition. He was arrested by Interpol at Zur- ich, where he had stopped on his way from Wuppertal, to visit a son, He makes his home in Italy. Kroeger is accused of having had contact during the war with Heinrich Himmler and Reinhardt Heydrich, both of whom had headed the Gestapo at different periods during the Nazi regime. In Stuttgart, the trial against 10 former Nazis charged with killing the Jews of Tarnopol, Galicia. during the Nazi occu- pation of that city was resumed Tuesday. The jury will hear several witnesses from abroad. Meanwhile, it was reported from Kassel. that former Gestapo offi- cer Rudolf Wiesner, a leading Nazi sought for questioning in con- nection with his wartime activities in Nazi-occupied Poland, was ar- rested last week in Kassel. Rain Damage in Negev TEL AVIV (JTA)—Extraordin- arily heavy rains, followed by floods, caused great damage Mon- day and Tuesday in the Negev. Highest Record for Israel Bond Sales Set in 1965 The 1965 Detroit Israel Bond tivities resulted in Israel Bond 600, UAW and $25,000 by the Unit- campaign resulted in $2,528,450 in subscriptions totaling $1,136,700. ed Bakery and Confectionary cash sales, it was announced by Adas Shalom again topped the Workers Council 30, AFL-CIO and David Safran, general chairman of list of more than 20 congregations nearly $20,000 by two Teamster Until his arrest, Wiesner had the Detroit Israel Bond Commit- and the entire country with over locals. been living for the past 20 years under the assumed name of Ru- dolf Wendtorf in a small town near Kassel. After he vanished in 1945, he was declared dead, and his widow" began drawing a week- ly pension in Bavaria. His wife was arrested with him last week, the report said. Pending investigation into his past, police are charging Wiesner with falsifying records and iden- tity papers. His wife faces similar charges and has been told she must repay some $30,000 drawn by her as a war widow. In commenting on the arrest, a spokesman for the Kassel police said that the fact that Wiesner had been living for 20 year under another name in a town where many knew his real identity, "makes you wonder how many other Nazis may be hiding like this." Three former Nazis went on trial in Lueneburg Monday on charges of participating in the wartime murders of several thousand Jews in Czenstochow, in occupied Poland. The defendants are Paul Degen- hardt, '70, former captain of the German security police in the area; Kurt Jericho, 57, now a busi- nessman; and Otto Loebel, 51, a law court guard. They are charged with deportation of many thou- sands of Jews to the Treblinka murder camp, and with participa- tion in many individual acts of murder of Jews. Dr. Herbert Zimmerman, a former Nazi police officer accused of the murder of 20,000 persons, mostly Jews, in Bialystok, eastern Poland, in 1943 and 1944, commit- ted suicide last weekend only a few minutes before he was to have been arrested at his home near Bielefield. Police said that Zimmerman, a lawyer at Brackwede near Biele- field, shot himself just before he was to have been taken into cus- tody pending preparation of his trial on mass murder charges scheduled to open in March. He was a commander of the Nazi se- curity forces in Bialystok during World War II. tee. This was the biggest year in the history of the Israel Bond drive here, topping last year's figure by $278,000 for more than a 12% increase over the previous banner year. Sales to the Jewish community were $337,000 more or nearly 21% over 1965. The High Holy Day Appeal and other synagogue-centered Israel Bond activities, including dinners, and leadership receptions, were major factors in this year's re- cord total. The congregational ac- Lavon Case's 'Third Man' on Hunger Strike (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV—The "third man whose testimony in 1955 led to what has become known as the "Lavon Affair" continued a hun- ger strike he began at Ramle prison Sunday, protesting the re- fusal of a parole board to order his release from the prison where he is serving a 10-year sentence. Due to security regulations, the man's name—as well as the details of the 1954 "security mishap" which later burgeoned into the "Lavon Affair" cannot be dis- closed. The 1954 security mishap re- sulted in 1955 in the dismissal of Pinhas Lavon, then minister of defense, and his later exclusion from the leadership of Histadrut. During the investigation of the security mishap, a high Israel de- fense officer was discharged, when he was blamed for the mishap. The man under arrest now, how- ever, blamed Lavon, but later withdrew his accusation against Lavon. He was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment dated from his arrest in 1957. He has now gone on a hunger strike, insisting that he has earned discharge from prison for good behavior. $33,000,000 Deficit in Israel's Budget (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) plant a tree IN ISRAEL In honor of all occasions or in tribute to the memory of a loved one. Trees represent the rekindled strength and lifeblood of the land. TREES conserve the soil. TREES beautify the land. TREES reclaim the wasteland. TREES provide the employment for new immi- grants. TREES strengthen world Jewry's ties with Israel. JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 18414 WYOMING AVE., DETROIT, MICH. 48221 Phone: UN 4-2767 JERUSALEM — Israel's budget showed a deficit of $33,000,000 for the first six months of the financial year starting April 1965, according to a report by the accountant gen- eral issued Wednesday. The report indicated that the ordinary budget had a surplus but that the development budget was in the red. The principal reason for the deficit was that anticipated external loans failed to materialize. Receipts from that source, the re- por said, were only 44 per cent of an expected total of $130,000,000 for the entire fiscal year. Committee for Six Million Nixes NY Monument Plan NEW YORK (JTA) — The de- sign for a planned New York monument commemorating the martyrs of Hitler's holocaust was flatly rejected by the Committee for the Six Million. The group rep- resents 34 national and local Jews murdered by the Hitler regime. At a meeting of the committee, presided over by Dr. Joachim Prinz, president of the American Jewish Congress, a resolution was adopted unanimously criticizing the New York Art Commission for accepting a design for the pro- posed memorial without consulting the committee. The site selected for the memorial, said Dr. Prinz, is acceptable. That location is in Lincoln Square, a small city park facing the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6—Friday, January 7, 1966 aitaritagasamomaiotawaitmeafaimerstasi" $425,000. Phillip Stollman is chairman of the Congregational and High Holy Day Council, and its co-chairmen are Norman Allan, Morris J. Brandwine, Judge Nathan J. Kauf- man and Max Sosin. The fall dinner, attended by nearly 1,000, at which Tom Bor- man was honored with the Is- rael Freedom Award Medal for his many years of dedicated leadership to the Israel Bond cause, was the highlight of the year's campaign and contribut- ed greatly to the success of the 1965 effort. A $100,000 Israel Bond pur- chase by the United Jewish Charities, from its endowment fund, was announced at the Bor- man dinner by Hyman Safran, president of the Jewish Welfare Federation. Another highlight of the year was the dinner, sponsored by the Israel Bond Trade Union Division, which honored Al Barbour, presi- dent of the Wayne County AFL- CIO Council. Subscriptions by unions totaled over $300,000, in- cluding $100,000 by the UAW In- ternational; $75,000 by the Retail Clerks International Association, Local 876; $25,000 by Ford Local Banks purchased an addition $200,000 in Israel Bonds in 1965, 1 by the National Bank of Detro. with a second $100,000; Manufac-- turers National Bank with a sec- ond purchase of $50,000 and the Michigan Bank and City Nation- al Bank with additional $25,000- each. Charles Grosberg, trustee chair- man, was again a double gold- en trustee in 1965 by virtue of his purchase of over $100,000 in Israel Bonds and Mrs. Morris L. Scheyer, chairman of the Israel Bond Women's Division, became a golden trustee of Israel with a purchase of $50,000. Outstanding among the Lands- manshafter was the work of the Bereznitzer under the leadership of Sol Kanat in whose memory more than $30,000 worth of Bonds were bought or sold. IF YOU TURN THE *V.S.11 tfr. UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T FIND A FINER WINE THAN Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich. NOBODY UNDERSELLS WOODY PONTIAC "AND DON'T EVER FORGET IT!" COME ON OVER — WILL YOU? WE WANT TO SELL YOU A NEW PONTIAC! TWINBROOK 1-1600 JOS. CAMPAU at CARPENTER 4enommemosmisommr Half Mile South of Davison The "Fieldil* SALUTES GEORGE STEINBERGER In jest, our Man of the Month once made reference to himself as "one of the world's best salesmen." Then, when pressed for proof he quipped, "I sold my wife on choosing me over my many competitors . . . and my persistency is 100%. With only occasional reselling that contract is still in force." This may very well have been George Steinberger's finest and most memorable sale, but in this great performer's long underwriting career—which was last month marked by his 20th anniversary in the profession—there have been literally hundreds of company honors and industry awards, all of which make him, in our book, "one of the world's best." To review George's truly fantastic records as a Franklinite makes us regret only that we were not privileged to meet him ten years sooner. He had begun his life insurance career in 1945 immediately after graduation from the University of Detroit College of Law, but it was not until 1952 that the magic of the Franklin Specials brought George into the fold as General Agent in Detroit. The Steinberger secret of success is an unswerving belief in his product and himself. His credo—"You can if you want to enough." And this belief has brought him to previously unheard of heights in the industry. Since 1950 he has been a member of the Million Dollar Round Table and this year he received the coveted National Quality Award for the eleventh time. He is a Life and Qualifying member of the Franklin Million Dollar Conference. He is a 60 and Key Club qualifier many times over, and a member of the unique 100 $Million Club. Even this, our Man of the Month award, is not new to George Steinberger for he was similarly honored in 1958 and again in 1961. A master at all the Franklin Specials, but a true pioneer in the sale of one of the Franklin's newest exclusives, the Preferred 70, George is already in 1965 approaching $4 Million in volume. And with $1,028,825 in new sales for November, he may well achieve the $5 Million mark. George, it is a great honor for us to honor you. *Reprinted from The Franklin Field, December 1965 FRANKLIN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SPRINGFIELD ILLINOIS Distinguished Service Since 1884