Klutznick to Address Campaign Rally on March 22 Philip M. Klutznick, past international president of Bnai Brith and a former U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, will address the kick-off rally, 8:15 p.m., Wednesday, March 22, to mark the formal opening of the six-week Allied Jewish Campaign, Alfred L. Deutsch, campaign chairman, announced. Tickets for the rally may be obtained by calling the Jewish Welfare Federation, WO 5-3939. Klutznick has distinguished himself in Jewish communal affairs, in business and as a public servant. At the call of the late President Kennedy, he became a member of the United States Mission to the UN and the U.S. representative on the Economic and Social Council. He returned to private life in 1963. A real estate developer and urban planner, he planned Israel's Ashdod seaport. Pre-campaign activities are producing good increases in giving, Deutsch said. He pointed out that "we are approaching the $3,000,000 mark with nearly $300,000 in increased gifts." Philip M. Klutznick Lidice and the Holocaust: Jews as Nazis' First Scapegoats Commentary Page 2 "The response to the needs in Israel and in our local community are most gratifying. We are proud that our Detroit community is once again facing up to its obligations," Deutsch said. Detailed Allied Jewish Campaign Division Planning Stories on Page 6. 50th Birthday of the JTA HE C,,:– JEWISH NE I– ROIm 3 A Weekly Review MICHIGA Russian Jewry's Cultural Status N of Jewish Events Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle VOL. L, No. 1. 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd.—VE 8-9364—Detroit 48235—March 3, 1967 Editorials Page 4 $6.00 Per Year; This Issue 20c Two Prominent Negro Leaders Condemn Racial Anti-Semitism; Emerging Issue Rouses Rancor Kaddish, ifieschel Tribute Mark Service to Dr. Adler A mass Kaddish recited by a large Shaarey Zedek congre- gation that assembled at the synagogue Tuesday night was a deeply moving part of the service that was arranged as a memorial to Rabbi Morris Adler on the first anniversary of his passing. Tributes to the memory of the eminent leader who fell on the bima of Shaarey Zedek on the morning of Feb. 12, 1966, were paid by Rabbi Irwin Groner and Prof. Abraham Heschel of New York. The officers of Shaarey Zedek, headed by Louis Berry, president, stood with the rabbi and the cantors as Cantor Sonenklar chanted the El Molei Rahamim. A Maariv service was conducted by Cantors Jacob H. Sonenklar and Reuven Frankel, with the assistance of the Shaarey Zedek choir conducted by Dan Frohman. Psalms were chanted by Cantor Frankel. In the main foyer of Shaarey Zedek, the portrait of Rabbi Adler by Ben Glicker was on display. The martyred Detroit rabbi was described by Prof. Heschel as "the symbol of God." (Continued on Page 5) Rancor rose to a high pitch this week in the controversy over the emerging anti- Semitism in Negro ranks. Anti-Semitic articles that have appeared in the Negro monthly Liberator brought protests this week from two eminent Negro leaders, and the counterattacks upon them by the Liberator's editor added fuel to the developing issue. The two Negro leaders who registered their protests are James Baldwin, author, and Ossie Davis, actor, whose letters of protest against 'Liberator's anti-Semitic articles appeared in the new winter issue of Freedomways, described as "a quarterly review of the Negro freedom movement." Baldwin and Davis resigned froni the Liberator's advisory board as part of their protest. They stated that they had asked Dan Watts, publisher of Liberator, to carry their letters con- demning his paper's anti-Semitism but he had rejected their requests. "I think it is distinctly unhelpful, and I think it is immoral to blame Harlem on the Jew," Baldwin wrote at the end of a lengthy attack on many aspects of current American life, in which he indicated he considered anti-Semitism "the most ancient and barbaric of the European myths." Davis assails in his letter the "wild and unsupported • contentions" made by Eddie Ellis in an article, "SemitisM in the Black Ghetto," that appeared in the February 1966 issue of Liberator. "Where is that proof?" he asks, then he wrote: "Whatever Jews are guilty of exploiting Harlem are not guilty because they are Jews, but because — along with many Catholics, Protestants, Negro and white — they are exploit- ers. In a war against all exploiters whomsoever I am an ally. But Mr. Ellis seems to be calling for a war against Jews. If that is the case, I am an enemy." - Calling himself a "black nationalist," Davis denounced "black racism" as "no different from any other racism," and recalled that the late Malcolm X . "at last became wise enough to see racism as a vicious, destructive crime against the human spirit with most frightening implications." zol President. Charges CIA Aids Anti-Israel Activities on Campus Former Nazis Convicted: Found guilty of sending 15- year-old Anne Frank and 94,398 other Jews to their deaths, three former Nazis stand as they are sentenced to prison terms in Munich, Germany. They are (from left) Gertud Slottke, who pleaded innocent, 5 years; Wilhelm Zoepf, 9 years; and Wilhelm Harster, 15 years. (See story Page 32) NEW YORK (JTA)—About half of the 8,000 Arab students now studying in American universities are conducting a U.S.-financed campaign against Israel on the campuses at over 100 American colleges and universities, Jacques Torczyner, president of the Zionist Organization of America,. charged Sunday. He also alleged that "many of these students are allied with outright anti-Semitic groups." The Zionist leader made these charges in connection with the revelation that the pro-Arab American Friends of the Middle East is listed among the domestic American organizations that have been provided with American funds through the CIA. He further accused the latter organization with being "the driving force behind the subversive Arab propaganda onslaught on the campuses." Torczyner spoke before 200 Zionist leaders assembled from all parts of the country at a meeting of the national executive committee of the Zionist Organization of America, the ruling body of the organization between conventions, held in the Hotel New York Hilton. He sharply criticized the National Student Association, which he charged "adopted a resolution at a national meeting in Madison, Wisconsin in August 1965 phrased by the Arab Student Association viciously attacking the state of Israel." Torczyner strongly opposed the new attempts made under the new spirit of ecumenism for a dialogue between religious faiths. He termed the call of religious elements in this country to fight secularism as "dangerous." It would be very dangerous at this time to trigger a battle between -religious and secular elements in the Jewish *community." He said that "such a battle would split the Jewish community." He endorsed the position taken by the Orthodox leader, Rabbi Joseph Soleveitchik who opposed such dialogue as "this can only lead to new difficulties." Dr. Emanuel Neumann, world Zionist leader, who is national chairman of the 70th jubilee convention committee, announced that the 70th anniversary convention of the Zionist Organization of America will be held in Israel in July with an expected attendance of 1,200 delegates from all parts of the U.SiN (Milton Frieiwan's Comment, Page 32)