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November 25, 1966 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-11-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE- DETROIT JEW1SH - KEWS — -

Friday, November 25, '1966-5

Gift to Build 3 Schools

ADIL's Feiffer Collection Exposes Facism

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A Name worth
Looking Into...

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel
Rogosin, the prominent U.S. indus-
trialist and philanthropist, has
contributed $1,500,000 for the con-
struction of three secondary
schools in Tel Aviv, Ashkelon and
Nahariya. The contribution, which
was made known during a meeting
between Rogosin and Finance Min-
ister Pinhas Sapir, will be used
to build secondary schools to be
located in slum areas of the three
cities.

I 0

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P I

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Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith has published "Feiffer on Civil Rights," a collection of
the civil rights cartoons of Jules Feiffer, of which the above is a typical sample. Feiffer, says Bayard
Rustin in a foreword to the book, "is the master of the comic epiphany, of that dramatic, illuminat-
ing moment which both humorous and a more efective moral comment than any sermon one
can imagine." The artist's devastating critique is aimed against prejudice of all kinds, against anti-
Semitism, racism, all the negative "isms" which have not yet been cut out of our society. In the
panel, he has two sorority girls discuss what to do about Jewish applicants. Anti-Semitism is "passe,"
they agree, but "How do you handle it — now that they've been judged 'not guilty'?" "We simply tell
them it doesn't apply to us. After all, we don't take Catholics either."

Dermatologist Oppose Meeting in Germany

By MILTON FRIEDMAN
(Copyright, 1966, JTA, Inc.)
WASHINGTON—A growing num-
ber of American dermatologists
are protesting that West Germany,
where the Nazis made lamp shades
of human skin, is not an appro-
priate site for the coming World
Congress of Dermatology.
Coincidental with the designation
of Kurt Georg Kiesinger, a former
Nazi, as chancellor — candidate,
many American physicians have
made known that they will not at-
tend the meeting in Munich next
spring. The medical mood has also
been influenced by the election of
eight neo-Nazis to the Parliament
of the German state of Hesse.
The dermatologists' response is
not universal. Some leading Jew-
ish dermatologists insist they will
attend because the "new" Ger-
many is "different."
Others, sensitive to recent po-
litical manifestations, served
notice that they will visit neith-
er Germany nor Austria. The
Austrian government has failed
to deal with a recent resurgence
of anti-Semitism.
This development in the medical
profession reflects similar emerg-
ing tendencies among university
professors and other intellectuals.
Dr. Maynard Lender of Boston
is circulating a national petition
against the Munich meeting. It is
in the form of a letter that the
official "archives of dermatology"
refused to publish.
Dr. Lender told colleagues that
he could not, in good conscience,
accept German hospitality. He
said "we, as dermatologists, Jew
or non-Jew the world over, must
realize that the very individual
who acts as our host . . . is the
same one who was interested in
the medical research and experi-
ments of the Nazis . . . "
He said: "The Germany of to-
day must be constantly reminded
of the henious crimes against hu-
manity. What better way than re-
fuse to meet in the heartland of the
country that spawns, with the
same underlying and inflexible
mentality that is demonstrated in
the hearts and minds of the new
as well as the old generations,
such continued hate, particularly
toward Jews . . ?"
Dr. Lender said:
for one,
refused to go to Germany on any
terms or for any reason at all.
For those who do not share my
feelings, please remember to
visit the gas chambers and ovens
at Dachau, only less than one
hour from Munich . • . "
An eminent Washington derma-
tologist said he shared Dr. Lend-
er's views; that he did not think
Germany had offered much to the

healing arts since the First World concentration camp "dermatology"
War; that "a nation that allowed experiments perpetrated by Ger-
sadists to make lampshades out of man doctors.
human skin of victims mass-mur-
The view of many dermatologists
dered because of their religion is in America appeared to be that not
not a nation that deserves the dis- only were a handful of SS fanatics
tinction of being host country to to blame but that thousands of
the World Congress of Derma- German physicians expediently
tology." collaborated with the regime of
Other physicians said they had Adolf Hitler.
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