German Unions - Urge Ban of Neo-Nazi Party BONN (JTA) — The West Ger- man trade union movement sent to every member of Parliament Tuesday a demand that Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger act to ban the ex- tremist National Democratic Party. The movement contended that there was sufficient evidence to bring such a proposal before the federal constitutional court to seek the ban. Interior Minister Paul Luecke has publicly called the . NPD a neo-Nazi party but re- jected earlier demands for action to ban it. The administrative court of Schleswig-Holstein r u l e d here Wednesday that the city of Flens_ burg must allow the NPD to use the city hall for a mass rally Wednesday. Flensburg had denied the hall to the NPD for an election rally, and the party had appealed to the state's highest court. Schleswig-Holstein will e l e c t representatives to its state legisla- ture next month, and the NPD is putting on a vigorous drive' on behalf of its ticket, boasting that it expected to obtain at least 12 per cent of the votes in the state. Last year, the NPD scored stun- ning election successes in state elections in Hesse and Bavaria. Meanwhile, it was repotted that the neo-Nazi party will not be able to hold its national congress at the end of June or the beginning of July in the Bremen City Hall, as planned, because the management of the hall finds it "lacks space" for the meeting. The National Democratic Party now has 30,000 members of whom about one-third are between the ages' of 20 and 45, an NPD mem- ber of the Bavarian Parliament asserted. The membership figures were given by Wolfgang Ross, 32, a former German army captain. He said also that workers formed the largest segment of NPD mem- bership, comprising 29.3 percent. Reform, Conservative Back Easier Abortion Law in New York State NEW YORK (JTA) — Three Jewish religious groups joined with the Protestant Council of the City of New York in a criticism of the Catholic Church's opposi- tion to liberalizing the state's abortion law in which the Protes- tants and Jews expressed regret that the church had imputed to them "advocacy of murder and genocide." The statement was issued by the Protestant Council, the New York "Federation of Reform Syn- agogues, the Association of Reform Rabbis and the New York Metro- politan Region of the United Syn- agogue of America, the association of local Conservative congrega- tions. The Jewish position on the is- sue is not unanimous. A number of Orthodox rabbis also have ex- pressed opposition to the proposed abortion law changes. SPECIAL GROUP of RECORDS Long Playing Reg. $3.98 SALE C PRICE and Up AT SPITZER'S 24900 COOLIDGE at 10 Mile Dexter-Davison Plaza 542-7520-1 Friday, March 3, 1967-9 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Organized Labor . Condentns Arab Aggression Against Israel Jew Replaces Controversial VP BAL HARBOR, Fla. (JTA)—The equivalent of the United Jewish of Wayne, N. J., School Board executive council of _the AFL-CIO Appeal, in which he said, that Is- meeting here, adopted a five-point statement on the mounting threat to peace in the Middle •East. The statement declared: "1. The executive council vit 's with deep concern the syste-d'a'-ic intensification of Soviet intrigue in the Middle East during the Last year, especially in Egypt and S7tia. "2. Notes the repeated acf:; of aggression by the Syrian regime against Israel, thereby threatening the security and stability of the en- tire Middle East; "3. Deplores Nasser's gas bombing of Ktaf Village on the Saudi-Yemen border and the pro- vocative aggressive actions by Syria against Jordan calculated to subvert and replace its gov- ernment with a dictatorship which would follow the warlike course pursued by Damascus and instigated by Cairo; "4. Draws particular attention to the incitement and menace of bor- der warfare against Israel — such as the infiltration of its territory for the perpetration of warlike acts, the laying of mines and other forms of aggressive action; "5. Urges the United States gov- ernment to adopt a strong stand against such aggression, to refuse all economic and technical assist- . ance to those countries sponsoring a policy of encouraging border warfare and eliminating their neighbors." The same day Vice President Hu- bert H. Humphrey told a session of members of the United Jewish Ap- peal's National Young Leadership Cabinet in Washington that the U.S. government is doing every- thing possible to slow down the arms race in the Middle East in order to redress any imbalance of power that may threaten Israel's independence. The remarks by the vice presi- dent were made during a two-day parley in the nation's capital, where 118 members of the UJA Young Leadership Cabinet were given intensive briefings on inter- national and domestic affairs by the departments of state, defense, health and welfare and the office of economic opportunity. Humphrey's remarks on the Mid- dle East arms race emerged dur- ing a general discussion on the United- States government's efforts to achieve peaceful relations among all the sovereign- powers. The vice president also stressed that it was the government's policy • to pre serve the sovereignty and terri- torial integrity of all the nations in the Middle East. In London Abba Eban, Israel's foreign minister, declared that the Israel government would like the four major world powers — the United States, Britain, France and the USSR—"to support the princi- ple of no territorial change" in the Middle East. • - Mere reiteration of the 1950 Tripartite Declaration, in which the three Western powers joined to guarantee the integrity of the borders of Israel-and the Arab states, would be insufficient at this time, he stated. "What we ask," he said, "Is for Israel to be given the means of assuring her own safety. And we ask the four great powers to ex- press their readiness to help any state in the Middle East whose in- tegrity and security are threaten- ed." Eban, who was in London all last week, made that statement at a luncheon given in his honor by the Foreign Press Association. Among his activities was a principal ad- dress at the -annual dinner of the Joint Palestine Appeal, the British rael "invites" the four major pow- ers to cooperate in their Middle East policies and specifically re- quested the Soviet Union to apply its European policy regarding ex- isting frontiers to the Middle East as well. Eban told the JPA event "Three of Israel's neighbors have been avoiding a military confrontation, leaving only Syria as the question mark." In an interview over the British Broadcasting Corportaion, Eban predicted that there will probably be no "sudden peace" in the Middle East, but- added that it was unlikely that there would be war, since "nothing is impossible in the Middle East, but nothing is inevitable." Eban left Tel Aviv Tuesday night for a tour of Southeast Asia during which he will visit seven countries — Thailand, Australia, New Zea- land, the Philippines, Japan, Cam- bodia and Burma. (Eban's first stop on the tour will be Bangkok, Thailand, where he will be welcomed by the foreign minister and will meet with the king of Thailand.) * S * Two Israelis Wounded in Action With Jordan TEL AVIV (JTA)—Two members of an Israeli border police detach- ment were wounded during a four- huor exchange of fire with Jordan- ian border troops in the Tulkarem central area. The Israeli army spokesman said that a Jordanian position opened fire on Israeli sur- veyors. An Israel security detach- ment returned the fire. United Nations observers twice called for a cease-fire which Israel accepted and the Jordanians ap- parently ignored. One of the Israeli patrolmen was wounded in the fighting to that point. Finally the Jordanians opened fire again, wounding the second pa- trolman. The Israelis did not return the renewed fire. Israel filed a com- plaint with the Mixed Armistice Commission. * * Syria Tells Security Council That Israel 'Strayed' From MAC's Prepared Agenda UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA) Apparently preparing its excuses for scuttling the extraordinary ses- sion of the Israeli-Syrian Mixed Armistice Commission — which is now stymied by Syrian refusals to adhere to that session's one-point agenda — Syria has presented a lengthy letter to the Security Coun- cil here, charging that Israel has "strayed away" from the agenda. The letter, dated Feb. 23 but made public here only Tuesday, ac- cused Israel of insisting on "final- izing" her alleged military occupa- tion of the demilitarized zones on the Syrian-Israeli- frontiers, build- ing up "military fortifications" in the area, refusing to remove those installations after being requested to do so by United Nations military observers, and expelling "Arab farmers from their villages." After three meetings of ISMAC, Gen. Bull adjourned the session just as it was ready to hold a fourth meeting because Syria insisted on broadening the agenda. Mrs. ESTHER GORDMAN of Omaha, Neb., realized a dream of a lifetime recently when she dis- covered she was the winner of a free trip to Israel, the result of a drawing by the national blue box committee of the Jewish National Fund. WAYNE, N.J. (JTA) — Newton Miller, vice president of the Wayne Township School Board who last month called for the defeat of two Jewish candidates to the board, was himself replaced Feb. 21 by the only remaining Jewish member of the board. Miller, who had urged the defeat of two Jewish candidates because he said that Jews were "liberals," especially when it came to spend- ing for education, stepped down as vice president in favor of Fred Lafer, whose seat on the board was not up for election in last week's balloting. Lafer was elected vice president unanimously. Miller, who was sharply critic- ized for his anti-Semitic remarks, declined to retract them althoug'h he denied he was an anti-Semite. Jack Mandell and Fred Kraus, the two Jews whose defeat Miller had called for, were badly defeat- ed in the election. When the new board met to elect its officers, Lafer was unanimously elected to succeed Miller. David J." Caliri, a Presbyterian, was elected president, a post Miller had indicat- ed he hoped to receive. - After the vote and an exchange-1 of conciliatory remarks between • Lafer and Miller, the new board - gave Miller a unanimous vote of confidence in an apparent effort , to heal the divisions over his stand,..: which led to a vote of censure by the prior board in a resolution ask- ing him to resign, which he rejected. Miller was not up for reelection. 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