Conversion of Jews "CRUX" of Recent Ecumenical Council LONDON (JTA) — One of Brit- ain's outstanding lay Catholics, who is a leader in efforts to im- prove relations between Jews and Christians, declared at Cambridge University that the "crux" of the recent Ecumenical Council decla- ration regarding Jews was the aim of converting Jews to Catholicism. However, he insisted, "the notion that there was a campaign on to convert Jews is quite fantastic." The statement was made by Christopher Hollis, a well-known British lookiit.er, who is head of the Catholic Church Council in this country, charged with implement- ing a new approach toward friend- ship between Catholics and Jews in Britain. Hollis was a speaker at the International Conference on Christian-Jewish Relations, con- vened at Newnham College, at Cambridge. Ninety scholars and religious leaders of various faiths from a number of European countries, as well as from the United States, are attending. The chairman of the conclave is Sir Seymour Edward Karminski, judge of Britain's High Court of Justice. Among Americans attending the conference are Rabbi Marc H. Tannebaum, director of inter- religious affairs for the American Jewish Committee; Dr. Jacob B. Agus, rabbi of Cong. Beth El, Baltimore; the Rev. Dr. Robert Dodds, director of ecumenical affairs of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States; and the Rev. Edward Flannery, a Jesuit priest who is a member of the United States Bishops Subcommission on Catho- lic-Jewish Relations. "We," Hollis said, speaking of the Catholics, "hope for con- versions. We frankly admit we pray for conversions. But our prime business is not with con- versions, but with edification of Catholics. Conversion is some- thing that must be left for God to look after." A number of Jewish participants in the conference objected to Hollis' formulations regarding con- version. The Rev. Dr. I. Levy, attending the conference as a representative of the World Jewish Congress, led the counter-attack. He said: "The mere use of that word 'conversion' has been a warn- ing light for Jews. It has under- mined the undoubtedly good inten- tions of the Vatican Council. Justice Karminski told the con- ference, as chairman, that neo- ORT—Russian Contraction: Term's Origin ORT now is referred to as the Organization for Rehabilitation Through Training. The origin of the name for one of the great Jewish movements that assists in providing vocational training for youths in backward coutries and in developing lands is: Its name, a Russian contraction was: Obtschestwo Rasprostranenija Truda—meaning Organization for development of Handicrafts, Indus- try and Agriculture Among Jews. It was organized in Russia in 1880. After World War I, head- quarters were moved to Berlin. Now its activities are global and it assists youths in Israel, in Latin America, African, East European and Moslem countries. Nazism remains a great threat to Christian-Jewish relations. "A cause of neo-Nazism," he declared, "comes from non-thinkers and psychopaths. We must try to reach those dull and unhappy people who are the most vulnerable to anti- Semitism. "The young Germans," con- tinued the high court judge, "realize what the Nazis did, and they are showing a tremendous determination that it must never happen again. We must remem- ber that most of the students were not yet born by 1945, so they could not have known about the atrocities. "Their response now, which is a strong one, is a sign for hope. There are differences in funda- mentals. But we are a people with common historical backgrounds. No religious belief can exist in a watertight container. I don't be- lieve we can remain in a vacuum forever." Rabbi Tannenbaum, in address- ing the conference, urged Christian leaders to "go it alone" in the area of inter-religious cooperation. "The striving for internal Christian unity," he said, "might lead to a pan-Christian exclusivisrn that could ignore the authentic plualism of the global human family." He warned that such an approach "could create a problem for all non-Christian religious groups. what's L THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 12, 1966-11 Eshkol Revises Strategy as Concession to Mapam TEL AVIV (JTA) — Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, eager to placate leaders of the Mapam Party to keep them from walking out of the coalition Cabinet and thus splitting the government, of- fered Mapam new concessions in regard to the government's pro- posed, three-year economic policy. The amended version offered Mapam by Eshkol would freeze dividends and the income of self- employed by imposing a new, 30 per cent tax on additional earnings, plus a possible 20 per cent surtax. These taxes would be levied on corporate and per- sonal earnings only. Eshkol worked out the amended version of his economic program at a conference with Finance Min- ister Pinhas Sapir, Minister of Commerce and Industry Haim Zadok, and David Horowitz, gov- ernor of the Bank of Israel. Despite the concessions offered Mapam, it was understood that the leaders of that party are not yet ready to give their full sup- port to the new economic policy. The government, however, is proceeding to make plans for im- plementing the new economic WRITERS N.Y. publisher wants books on all sub- jects, fiction, nonfiction. No fee for professional opinion. FREE: Brochures that show how your book can be pub- lished, publicized, sold; tips and article reprints on writing, publishing, con- tracts. Write Dept. 23H. EXPOSITION 386 PARK AVE. S., N.Y. 16 policy, coupled with a program of austerity in Israel. A Cabinet spokesman said that one of the items in the new pro- gram, designed to aid low in- come earners, would provide that such workers receive 12 pounds ($4) per month as extra compensa- tion to help them meet higher costs of living. THE BEST IN SALES AND SERVICE HANK NEWMAN President I'M THE DODGE BOY THAT SAVES YOU CASH! PAUL NEWMAN'S SPARTAN Dodge 855 Oakland, Pontiac — LI 9-6161 X u • ry? • • • • • • • • • • • • 40' • • • • • • • • • • • 11. • • • • One Killed, 24 Injured In Israel Road Mishaps JERUSALEM (JTA) — A 32- year-old Israeli- army doctor was killed in Beersheba when his jeep collided with a truck. Three sol- diers riding in the jeep were thrown clear of the collision and escaped injury. In Northern Israel, on the road from Haifa to Kiriyat Shmone in the upper Galilee, 24 persons were critically injured when their bus skided on a wet road and overturn- ed into a ditch. The injured were taken to a Haifa hospital. Police authorities have started an inten- sive investigation to establish whether the bus had any mechani- cal defects. (t o :O. Four-Month Trial Ends in Sentences to Nazis DUSSELDORF, West Germany (JTA) — Horst Guido Huhn and Karl Jung, were sentenced here to seven years and three and a half years imprisonment, respec- tively, for their part in a 1941 massacre of Ukrainian Jews dur- ing the Nazi occupation. In a trial lasting several months four others accused of complicity in the mur- ders were acquitted. To The Women Drivers John Mason Brown opened one of his always-sold-out-lectures with, "Mrs. Chairlad y, distinguished guests, and the two or three hun- dred ticket-holders still looking for a place to park . ." Money may talk, but today's dol- lar doesn't have cents enough to say very much. — Nashville (N. C.) Graphic. Is it "jetting" to Miami or a cruise in your own yacht? no! Is it bakery fresh bagels and lox lavished with Philadelphia Cream Cheese yes! 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