28—Friday, March 17, 1967 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Editor of Jewish Observer in London Dismissed by Zionist Federation LONDON (JTA)—The board of directors of the Zionist Review dis- missed Jon Kimche last weekend as editor of the Jewish Observer and Middle East Review as the culmination of a dispute in which Kir-riche accused the Zionist Fed- eration of Britain of censorship in the Zionist Review, publishers Of the ,Observer. The dismissal was contained in a lengthy letter to Kimche, which was released in its entirety. The letter denied that the dispute with Kimche emanated from an intervention 'last week by Israel's Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, who was reported objecting to an article published in the Observer against Israel's Minister of Justice Yaacov Shapiro. - It charged Kimche with ignoring instructions from the editorial committee not to print an article on unemployment in Israel, which the committee considered "mis- leading." The printers were ordered MIZRACHI TOURS TO , --, ISRAEL, Special PESACH and YOM ATZMAUT Tour April 22 — May 16, 1961 $1025 All inclusive price includt$ ••Round trip flight via jet • Strictly kosher meals 'In first class hotels • Pesach in Jerusalem • Independence Day Celebration grandstand. tickets • Guided tours throughout Israel _Don't take chances—Travel with the organization that has sent over 15,000 satisfied tourists to Israel! Send for Brochure listing hundreds of group flights to Israel and Europe at $535. For reservations and Information contact: Detroit Mizrachi Office 18033 Wyoming DI 1-0708 not t_o print that issue, and Kimche was charged with repeated viola- tions of an agreement of his duties as editor. In Jerusalem, Monday, the foreign ministry denied that the Israel government had been in-. volved in the dismissal of Kimche. The ministry' spokes- man said -the issue was one that concerned solely the British Zionist Federation. The foreign ministry's spokes- man said the only action taken by the government was a protest by Israel's envoy to London, Ambas- sador Aharin Remez, against the Observer's call for the resignation of Shapiro, and the periodical's criticism of the Israeli judiciary as a result of the secret arrest, trial and sentencing to one-year year prison terms of the two Bul magazine. President Shazar Tuesday night remitted to three months the one- year prison terms of the two "13u1" editors, Shmul Mor and Maxim Gilan, who will be freed one month from now under the reduced sen- tence. - Hebrew Teachers Return After 2 Strikes in Canada WINNIPEG (JTA) — After two stoppages called here by the Fed- eration of Jewish and Hebrew teachers, who charged the Jewish Welfare Fund's administration with failure to go through with an agreement for a wage increase and retroactive pay, talks were re- sumed here between the teachers and the Jewish School Board of Winnipeg, in an effort to straight- en out the dispute without further overt action by the teachers. The teachers and the .Jewish School. Board agreed three week's ago to a twelve and one half per cent wage increase. The teachers contend that the agrreement had included a clause to make portions of the increase retroactive to Jan. 1, 1967. The welfare fund, however, re- jected the retroactivity claim. The welfare fund condemned the stop- pages as a disservice to the com- munity and the students. After a meeting, however, both sides agreed to continue their negOtia- tions. , PhonoGift Girls Really Know Their Numbers By CHARLOTTE IMAMS The "dishpan" hands d_oing the work this past week at 18451 W. Ten Mile have been dipping into piles of pledge cards for the Allied Jewish Canipaign. . • ' . It's a corps of women who. may. have left their own work undone at home so they Can call' other women to persuade them that "$2 will buy. a pair of shoes for a child • in • Israel. Won't you raise your pledge :this year?" • Operation' PhonoGift, in its third year of existence with the women's diYision of the campaign, is a two- week thrust by 400 workers for funds from 9,000 women in the Metropolitan Detroit area. In the auditorium of the Zionist Cultural- Center in Southfield, they sit at small tables ranged around each wall-20-27 volunteers. working an average of two _hours a day once a week, and often more. Their prospects are the small givers, who can make or break any - campaign. - -By the time the campaign is over next . Wednesday, they will have terephehed---or attempted to-J all 9,000 *Omen. - In February, the division sent out letters and blank pledge cards to 11,000 names. Two thousand reSponded. Now, the task is to con-. vince the remainder. It's not always an easy - task, as a look at the folding table in . the center of the auditorium will testify. Next to the pretzels and candy offered to fuel up the workers, stand more than a dozen plastic dishpans marked "Call Later Today," "Moved," "Discontinued" and, the biggest pile, "Refused." A group not easily discouraged, however—their motto, imprinted on little signs at each desk, is "Smile as You Speak" -- the women of PliOnoGift try to follow the example of their chairman, Mrs. Ben Mossman, who keeps a ready smile of her own. She's part of the "hierarchy," the women's division officers who chip in to handle the problem calls, a woman who refuses to ' give because she has a complaint about an agency, or the one who insists that her husband gives enough for both of them. Mrs. Mossman, Mrs. Arthur Rice, the women's division chairman, or one of the other leaders often soothe the ruffled feathers of the former and stress to the latter the woman's important role in the com- munity. While the biggest problem is a lack of knowledge on the part of the prospect, "actually, most women are very responsive," said Mrs. Mossman. "Very often, they sincerely want to know what the Allied Jewish Campaign does." Of 11,000 prospects in the PhonoGift division, 10,000 women give under $25. Last year, they contributed a total of $48,000. Workers this year are stressing in- creased giving to cover mounting needs and operating Costs. "But the smallest gift is appreciated when it comes from a willing heart," Mrs. Mossrnan added. "Some of the cards are re- turned with a note 'Sorry we can't do better.' One old lady sent in _$1 wrapped in a napkin. These gifts I treasure." No gift is too small to pick up. . A motor corps, operating out of nine depots in Detroit and suburbs and under • the chairmanship of Mrs. • Gerald Gerger and Mrs. Miles. Jaffe,* is prepared to collect on - any pledge, according to a pre-arranged schedule. Keeping at the heels of the tele- phone Solicitors is a small army of clerical workers, headed by Mrs. Harry Frank. • Mrs. Frank's six-day volunteer week would make a teamster com- plain to his union. But she runs a tight operation, getting out the : Ditahited MAUL Sattlilq. . • *AIL g(011112, ? • • • cards, literature and special letters to suburban residents with un- listed phone numbers. The mail- ing's caught up for now. "Next week I'm going to collapse," she admitted: _ When the PhohoGift Days . are over, Mrs. Morris Baker will begin her job post:campaign cleanup, the follow-through on the pledges of• the preyious two weeks. Why the PhonoGift? Why the vast appeal by •telephone when for yearS the • women's diviSion had used the personal, face-to-face , approach? . "To put it bluntly," said Mrs. Sidney Hertz, vice chairman in charge of briefing, "we found it was getting harder and harder to find volunteer workers. For one thing, the distances to Over have become much greater with the community moving to the suburbs. "Secondly, •ve don't feel right about asking a woman to go 'door to door. It's just not safe." She added: "It's Still hard to get volunteers." Those • who come out, though, find a certain camaraderie await ing them.' "The ,sting of a refusal isn't 'so bad when there are 20 of you making phone calls at the same time," Mrs. Hertz said. One long-time women's division member working on PhonoGift for - the first time is Mrs. Aid Kushner. Her husband made the bdoster signs that cover the walls' of the auditorium: "Care and Share With Us," "$12.50 Will Buy a Layette." She confesSed she left- the beds unmade to come down • and Make calls. • - Mrs. °Kushner gets few refusals. "You've got to use 'your imagina- tion when you speak to ,,yoUr prospect. Never use pressure, and if they're antagonistic, don't bother. The best time to call is the _morning, . before they, go , for. the . day and again' beore dinner." Mrs. Kushner_ smiled as she talked tO the next woman. The sign on her desk read "Smile as You _Speak." 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