Opening Campaign Rally Slated March 23rd (Continued from Page 1) As plans go forward for the rally, the city is mobilizing in an- ticipation of the coming campaign. Young people will be distributing, campaign posters to stores, busi- nesses and congregations in the city and its suburbs. The congre- gational council is now actively involved in assuring support by synagogue, temple and congrega• tion members. Children from the many Hebrew and Jewish schools will be studying and talking about the campaign that benefits 57 ag- encies and services locally, nation- ally and overseas. Members of the junior division of campaign will act as hosts and ushers at the rally. Heads of Jewish fraternal organi- zations are now contacting their members. Campaign divisions are keeping up the steady pace of advance meetings that already raised more than $3,000,000 for the 1966 drive. The women's Phon-O-Gift cam- paign got underway Wednesday. Under the leadership of Mrs. Mor- At mechanical trades function are (from left) Peter Brown, Warren Greenstone, Zvi Kolitz, guest sneaker, David S. Mondry and Stanley J. Winkelman. mittee and president of Fed- eral Department Stores, will be guest speaker. Responsibility for the section is slated by Al Sklar, section chairman, with the co- chairmen, Charles Abramson, Mar- vin I. Danto and Eugene Mondry. David S. Mondry, chairman of the division, reports that this will be the division's second major meeting in March. A meeting held last week broke all attendance records for the division and re- sulted in a 22 per cent increase over last year's pledges. Eisenberg and Green, general campaign chairmen, applauded the work of the divisions and urged all members of the Jewish community to join with community leaders in launching the campaign at the rally March 23. Arab Spy Gets 15 Years; Another on Trial Will Escape Execution HAIFA (JTA)—An Arab caught in November 1964, as he attempt- ed to infiltrate into Israel was sen- tenced here in the Haifa District Court Tuesday to 15 years im- prisonment. Convicted on a charge of spying, the man, a Lebanese, had been wounded in a gun battle with Israeli security forces dur- ing the 1964 incident, but has now recovered fully from his injury. Mahmoud Hijazi, a Jordanian Arab sentenced here to death a year ago after he was captured as a member of an El Fatah gang bent on sabotage inside Israel, will escape execution, it was indicated Monday. He is on trial again before a military court. He was granted a second trial following his earli- er death sentence because he had not been defended by foreign counsel. Tuesday, the prosecutor of the case said he will not ask for the death sentence, due to "special circumstances" in the case. Hijazi has pleaded not guilty to all four points in the indictment facing the military court. He is accused of firing at members of Israel's de- fense forces, throwing a hand grenade at an Israeli patrol unit, illegally carrying firearms and being a member of "a gang of felons." He was captured in Janu- ary 1964, after infiltrating into Is- rael near the Jordanian border along with other members of El Fatah. BE SMART... ET KoBLIN SNEAKY. AD 5 MURRY icoaur cos 18039 WYOMING • UN, 1-5600 Ex-Nazi Officer Sentenced to 9 Years for Killing Jews in Soviet Russia SOL EISENBERG ris Brandwine, volunteer workers are manning a battery of phones day and evening at Phon-O-Gift headquarters in the Zionist Cultu- ral Center, 10 Mile Road and Southfield. The social services section of the professional division will hear Federation President Safran at IRWIN GREEN a brunch noon Sunday at the Furniture Club. Norman G. Silver is chairman, and Sam Marcus co- chairman of the section that in- cludes professional leadership of the social service community. The real estate and building trades division will hold its an- nual volunteer workers rally 10 a.m. March 20 in room 272 of the Jewish Center. A business meet- ing is planned to follow a spon- sored breakfast, according to Har- old Berry, chairman of the division. Furniture and allied sections of the mercantile division will join for cocktails and dinner at 6 p.m., March 22, at the Furniture Club. Alan E. Schwartz, a member of the Federation executive corn- FRANKFURT (JTA) — Adolf Harnischmacher, 56, a former SS lieutenant, was sentenced by a Frankfurt court to nine years at hard labor for complicity in the wartime murder of at least 380 Jews in occupied Russia. The defendant was a member of an Einsatz Commando unit which murdered Jews near Mogilew. The total number of victims of the unit had been estimated at about 80,000. Harnischmacher confessed he had shot Jewish men, women and children and led the firing squad in such killings. A call for Jewish witnesses who might be able to testify against six Germans charged with war crimes at Busk, Poland, was is- sued here Monday by the public prosecutor. The official said that preparations are under way td try the men. He is looking for Jews who may have lived in Busk between 1941 and 1944. In Dusseldorf, six former Nazis went on trial on charges of par- ticipating in multiple wartime murders of Jews and sick per- sons in Tarschtsha, in occupied Ukraine. The defendants were members of Einsatz Commando unit num- ber 5, one of the special squads which followed in the wake of Hit- ler's advancing armies with the assignment of wiping out all ac- tual or potential resistance in con- quered territories by killing Jews, partisans and other "undesirable elements." The defendants are Karl Jung, 53, former chief criminal commis- sar; Guido Horst Huhn, Dussel- dorf, 55; Christian Sterling, 61; Kurt Syplie of Berlin, 56; Fritz Sievert, Lubeck, 52; and Oskar Jeger, 63, a factory worker. Jung was accused of giving orders for the shooting as a leader of a section of the unit in Tarschtsha. Huhn, who succeeded Jung 1st Group of Africa Police Being Trained in Israel (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) JERUSALEM — Israel inaugur- ated Tuesday a five-month course for training policemen from Afri- can countries in general police work, especially in traffic control. The first group of Africans, 10 Ethiopians, was enrolled in the course Tuesday. All are officers in the Ethiopian Police Corps, several of them being deputy superintendents of police. Other Africans to take the course, it was said, are expected in the coming weeks. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6—Friday, March 11, 1966 in 1941 as head of the unit sec- tion, was charged with participa- tion in the liquidation of the Tar- schtsha Jewish population. Huhn was accused of shooting at least 200 men, women and children in the neck. Sterling and Syplie were charged with being .members of the firing squad. Sievert was accused of organizing the murder action. The indictment charged that 15 members of the commando unit took 25 patients from a hospital near Kiev in 1941 and shot them. Jeger was charged with killing two or three of the patients in that atrocity. Meanwhile, the trial of eight men on Nazi war crimes charges started in Zagreb, the capital of the Croation province of Yugo- slavia. The defendants are charged with having prepared lists of names of Yugoslav Jews in advance of the German invasion of Yugoslavia and thus to have helped in the de- portation and murder of Jews named in the lists. A number of Jewish survivors will testify dur- ing the trial. 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