Know Your Community Our Many Functioning Agencies For more than 40 years De- able should be given to agencies troiters have been making contri- serving Israel and 30 other coun- butions to the Allied Jewish Cam- tries of the world; 38 per cent paign so that their money could should go to Detroit services, and be put into a single fund to be 5 per cent to national services. distributed with planning and fore- Nearly one-half of the $1,636,- sight to many beneficiary agencies 000 which was allocated for local and services. services last year went to health The Jewish Welfare Federation and welfare agencies in Detroit. is charged with the responsibility FRESH AIR SOCIETY — Each of providing the funds where summer nearly 2,000 Jewish chil- they're needed most. dren enjoy wholesome camping For purposes of classification experience in a variety of settings, the 54 agencies and services which ranging from beginning camping receive money from the Allied for the very young to the travel Jewish Campaign and the Federa- camping for teens who cover the tion are divided into three general United States on special trips. categories — local agencies, over- Manned by professional, w e I 1- seas and Israel agencies, a n d qualified staff, the camp is consid- ered outstanding by camping asso- national agencies. ciations. Early in December of each year HEBREW FREE LOAN ASSOC. preceeding the fund-raising drive, people active in the Jewish com- — This very old and respected munity, its agencies and its an- agency provides interest-free loans nual Allied Jewish Campaign, to help meet business and personal meet to review the needs of the emergencies and encourage self- several categories of agencies. The support. The $2,600 provided an- citizen's group then recommends, nually by the Federation pays for after ath ire from professional and office space and help. lay leader ,:, the proportions of HOUSE OF SHELTER — Pro- the final campaign total to be al- vides temporary shelter for Jewish located to the various categories transients. of servi,e. JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER The December conference de- —The Center is one of the best termirmil. the campaign raised known since its program is a minimum of $5.750,000, that 57 planned for all ages to provide per cent of the 1967 funds avail- essential recreational, cultural and HEBREW SELF-TAUGHT ex AHARON ROSEN travel Irn s 1 noll-Ach-ah .246 end .247 soW automobile rrekhoi, neer descend !in.s.) •oh-rehd see 248 .249 .250 (M.S.) rob-c ?'nix1,72. .Z1 HIP :71 —pnnn • `7 niinn .117* '1.rkr;1'4zi - TT 1 1 i trrj !nnx - Ow ;pn! wiD45 iypIn ,ninn riam 11n31 optrizil rr MN" - noise .241 rah-ahsh Queue tohr .242 station tah-hahnah central mer-kah-zee lad bah-boor .243 .244 .245 n7rr.pn .tv!'mpio? -"inn , r! !win nrx rub 0,17011 tr5yrr .5bm tv-pn: op: ;inn rub to trinis? ...t7T7f 1-1??1,? Tx, — T13) ripv Trrnr$ ;v? - ri4in re, ▪ "1"?.! Eoz*z krn - .15 .1,7b4i?, 1.14V? n4i1 '2V? .17117 X'.1173 ,nxi1 !73V re27 lin',', pia rub rlIn4 .tin nVnn 19n4 runic - ?;17y? - 11b15 1,1* mr; ,71 !Dz; rzny? - Q31i1 It; mrt run ?p re2 .x4Vi r-nn 71/3124 xvIV ,-Inkt X9n - ;Tin= mrp rr.yiD?? 1 7i7317:23 .111' a1 — 5inn:s sips,' ton - ri-psy? WO) , mitt' 51i0 — 173I7 X9,1 r? 11' ,n1mn rpm ,n-prinn as7 nnitp X'7 :ni=r1 1:rkti .10 r:'" - 1V?D? Reading material in vocalized Easy Hebrew, emit also material for advanced students may be obtained through your local Hebrew Organization or by writing to : Brit lent Olamis, P.O.B. 7111, Jerusalem, Israel, Publithed by Brit !nit Olangt 40—Friday, April 7, 1967 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS informal educational service s. About 50 per cent of the budget is met by membership dues and fees, the Federation supplies $180,000 toward the deficit. JEWISH FAMILY AND CHIL- DREN'S SERVICE—This agency provides the casework services needed for troubled families, coun- seling for children and assistance for the elderly. It offers residen- tial care and treatment where necessary. It is the "family friend" in a great variety of personal troubles. JEWISH HOME FOR AGED — With understanding and solicitous care, the aged live in pleasant surroundings. The chronically-ill old person also receives the treat- ment he needs. The r e c e n t l y opened Borman Hall is an addi- tional facility through which the community honors its "mothers and fathers." JEWISH VOCATIONAL SERV- ICE and COMMUNITY WORK- SHOP — Youngsters receive ca- reer counseling; college students find needed summer jobs or schol- arship loans, and the hard-to-place older people having physical or emotional problems find help with employment here. The workshop provides sheltered employment for those who need help in adjusting to the pressures of a normal job. RESETTLEMENT SERVICE — Many a newcomer to Detroit has had the helping hand of the Serv- ice in getting settled in a new country. Some of our leading citi- zens today have benefited as has our community in turn. SINAI HOSPITAL AND SHIFF- MAN CLINIC—Filling a vital need in the health field the hospital and its clinic provide patient care, research and medical educa- tion under Jewish auspices. It is an important contribution to the medical welfare of our commun- ity. The Federation supplies $134,- 000 toward research and staff beds. TAMARACK HILLS AUTHOR- ITY—This agency provides the money for the development of the camp sites at Brighton, Ortonville and Camp Kennedy in the Upper Peninsula which are used by the Fresh Air Society and year 'round by a long list and variety of com- munity groups. Jewish education has been cen- tral to the Jewish Welfare Fed- eration program since its very beginning. Just over $500,000 was allocated to Detroit Jewish schools last year from contributions to the Allied Jewish Campaign. Detroit is proud of its United Hebrew Schools, the outstanding communal school system in Amer- ica, which serves children from pre-school through high school and Midrasha in 10 branches a n d through the affiliated schools, Beth Yehudah Afternoon Schools, Com- bined Jewish Schools of Sholem Aleichem and Arbeiter Ring, and the Hayim Greenberg Hebrew Yiddish School. In the community relations field the JEWISH COMMUNITY COUN- CIL provides a co-ordinated pro- gram of community relations to advance civil rights and civil lib- erties of all citizens. Its programs are many and varied and encom- pass the entire Detroit community. An increase on a pledge for 1967 will only maintain present services. A substantial increase in a pledge is essential if Detroit is to more nearly meet the needs of its people here and abroad. The services which are supported to help needy Jews in Israel and throughout the world will be out- lined in the April 14 issue of the Jewish News, and followed on April 21 with a discussion of the national agencies which receive Detroit's support through the Fed- eration. Chinese Reds Renewing Shipments of Arms to Palestine Liberation Army (Continued from Page 1) aid to the Shukairy organization. The Paris correspondent of the evening newspaper Maariv re- ported Monday that a serious rift had broken out in Syria between El Fatah and the Syrian govern- that "the most important military improvements made by the Egyp- tian military have been noted in their air force, one of the best equipped in the world today." He made known that "re- cently the Soviets delivered SU•7 "Fitter" ground-support aircraft to . Egypt. The senator stressed men Acicording to the dispatch from Paris, diplomatic sources there that "this is the first time this aircraft has been delivered out- said Syria had decreed a slowdown of El Fatah's anti-Israel depreda- side the Iron Curtain . . Their air force now has MIG-21C Day tions, for fear that Israel might fighters and MIG-21D all-weather retaliate against Syria. The El fighters." Fatah leaders had declined to curb their terrorism inside Israel, with (Sen. Symington also said Is- the result that the split between raeli general Moshe Dayan was the sabotage leaders and the gov- emphatic that non-Vietnamese troops could never succeed as lead- ernment is widening. Syria Monday renewed firing ers of the pacification program in South Vietnam, "because the vil- against an Israeli tractor team working in a field belonging to lagers would not accept their Kibbutz Haon, on the southeastern recommendations." The report, shore of Lake Tiberias. This was just declassified, was based on Symington's talks with Dayan, who the second attack in two days. Quiet had prevailed in the tense recently returned from Vietnam, area Sunday night and Monday in Tel Aviv in January. morning, while United Nations military observers were checking Israel Defense Budget Sunday's attack by Syrian gun posts, But Monday afternoon the Hiked 'Tens of Millions' TEL AVIV (JTA) — Israel's :Syrians directed heavy machine- . gun fire again at the Israeli farm- defense budget will be "several tens of millions of dollars" higher ' ers, following through with anti- tank guns. An Israeli patrol re- this year than it was in 1966, ! turned Monday's fire, There were Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir said no casualties on Israel's side either here Sunday night. He made that disclosure at a meeting of mem- Sunday or Monday, bers of the Mapai-Ahdut Avodah The first attack, carried out alignment. Sunday, had just been investi- Answering questions about the gated by the UN teams, after 1967 budget, Sapir said also that, Israel had filed a complaint with since 1951, Israel's expenditures the Israeli-Syrian Mixed Armis- for security purposes had multi- tice Commission, and the United plied by 14 times. Nations men were about to leave the area, when Monday's firing began. When the Israelis re- Hebrew Column turned the fire, the exchange lasted about 10 minutes. Colors of the The Syrian attacks had been Israeli Flag directed against tractor operators In the days of the First Zionist Con- cultivating fields which had been gress in Basel, Switzerland, Jewish lead- safely worked by the Israelis for ers argued over the colors of the Zionist a long time. The incidents were fia lince when Benjamin Theodor Herd with David seen here as a continuation of was speaking on the matter they noticed a Jew going to Syrian provocations in the demili- Wolfson synagogue with a Talit in his hand. tarized zones on the Israeli-Syrian Immediately Wolfson said to Herzl, the colors of the Tait will be the colors frontiers, where the Syrians have of our flag. These colors accompanied been increasingly trying to pene- us in the Diaspora from our childhood the grave. They will also be with trate lands previously cultivated till us on our road to our Fatherland. And so indeed it was decided that by Israeli farmers. blue and white will be the colors of Two acts of sabotage by infiltra- the Zionist flag. Fifty years later, with the establish- tors, one of them resulting in the ment of the State of Israel the colors blowing up of a pumping station of this flag became the flag of the of Israel. and the other endangering a rail- State (Published by Brith Ivrtth Olamith.) road line, were reported Sunday. The pumping station is owned by Kibbutz Misgav Am, located about 21/2 miles from the border where Israel, Syria and Lebanon meet. Posters bearing the insignia of El Fatah were found near the site of the explosion. The threat against the railway '1i"471 ".1 14ii7n line was discovered near Kfar Saba, about 100 yards from the - r1 .7z TWA? Tivitrir yi Jordanian border. Railroad track 11732. walkers found a hand grenade '1 'K1 attached to one of the rails, and dismantled the explosive before any damage had been caused. A military spokesman reported that an Israeli army patrol foiled 511 ri474 ,1:1179 a sabotage attempt to blow up a building in the 94th terrorist raid into Israel in the past 24 months. nirr The patrol found explosives placed underneath an uninhabited house .no?n i7T a nm-rn3 near the border in the western Upper Galilee area, and defused ropz?il ntr3 1:7? them. Footprints of three persons were found leading to the nearby 1'1;1! "JIM a7 re?y7 1?4* Lebanese border. • • • 517 .1 171 laton “mltro 5ri7 '47?4 trs14471 51,7 735 n17 Try 5*--17:1 ?.?T ?4 •erg r??:4; '174* 131 sii?0 Sen. Symington Sees 17? ;;;Fin ur Tlizi Advances in Egypt's rrrtg rz31.14i?, 1371 Armed Forces on Trip (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) WASHINGTON — Egypt has achieved "major qualitative im- provements" in her armed forces, especially the Egyptian air force, Sen. Stuart Symington revealed Monday in a report to the Senate committees on armed services and foreign relations. The report was based on the senator's recent visit to Egypt on his return from Vietnam. He also visited Israel on the same trip. Symington, who formerly served as U.S. secretary of the Air Force, noted extensive Soviet assistance to the Nasser regime. He reported nri'm •nlz 217317 . urT14 01111M -11 'nz? torai 7 Ott 'ma 5v 1:11)?*u Iv? Pi? mtva •ist ovprl tpri?? ,5131tr -112+-p? ;imp '31;* nil 1:4 n'224 547 17;* .5t 1 fr "r2"r? 51 g PP311 "sn'Olv Ir'2? MITI)