20—Friday, April 14, 1967 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Report Names Jewish Farmers ft U.S.; State Man Introduced .sweet Potato Cultivation Here The Jewish Agricultural Society Monday issued a 100-page report N.% lewing the status of Jewish farmers in the United States and' pointing out that thousands of , them continue to make a signifi- cant contribution to the total out-1 put of food and fiber in the United ! States. Their gross product is esti- mated at 5500.000,000. While there has been a decline I in the number of small and less well financed Jewish operators as has been true of farmers generally in the United States, the ones that remain have become integrated into the American farm community and are no longer to be considered as an immigrant group with spe- cial problems. The report calls attention to a number of outstanding individual producers, among them Ben Ro- senberg and his sons of Sodus, Mich., who were responsible for introducing the commercial culti- vation of sweet potatoes into Michigan and who also grow many fruits including apples, grapes and cherries. Julius Goldman, whose Egg City is located in Moor Park, Ventura County, Calif., has one of the largest egg-producing operations in the country; Harry Eisen of Norco, Calif., also has a very large self- contained egg enterprise. David Freedman Co. of Thermal, Calif.. an important growing- shipping concern headed by Lionel Steinberg. raises 25 different crops including carrots, cabbage, grapes and cotton. In the Northeast, among lead- ing breeders and hatchers of eggs are Max Brender and Law- rence Batinkoff, both of Fern- dale, N.Y., Maine Farms Inc. of Auburn, Maine, operated by the Stein Brothers, is one of the larg- est and most efficient poultry operations in the east. The report also pays 'tribute to the growth and strength of many outstanding feed cooperatives like the Inter-County Farmers Coopera- tive of Woodridge, N.Y.; Central Jersey Farmers Cooperative Asso- ciation of Ilightstown, N.J.; Del- aware Valley Farmers Cooperative Association of Flemington. N.J.: Central Connecticut Farmers Co- operative of Manchester, Conn., which have performed yeoman service for the farmers in their areas. It also calls attention to the many outstanding Jewish scientists in the fields related to agriculture and notes with particular pride the name of the late Jacob L. Lip- man, who was one of the leading soil scientists in the United States, head of the New Jersey Agricul- tural Experiment Station, and also for many years a director of the Jewish Agricultural Society. The report also mentions Dr. Sidney Hoos, professor of agricul- tural economics at Berkley, and Dr. Hans Fisher, head of the de- partment of nutrition at Rutgers. The society notes that while it regrets the decline in the number of Jewish farmers which has been due to overriding sociological and economic trends, it remains proud of the part it played in helping thousands of immigrants become self-supporting citizens of the United States. Florida Firm Ends Import of Anti-Semitic Books in Spanish MIAMI (JTA) — The Goyescas Corp., Florida's largest importer of Spanish-language publications, which has been doing a brisk trade here in anti-Semitic literature, an- nounced that it has discontinued the import and sale of the anti- Semitic works. Disclosure that the American book market has been flooded re- cently with anti-Semitic literature in Spanish, produced in Mexico, was made recently in New York at a meeting of leaders of the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith. The Jewish Floridian, local weekly, had reported that these books are being sold here "al- most faster than they can be imported," since Miami's Span- ish-reading public has increased vastly through the influx of Cuban refugees. Henry Wolff, chairman of the ADL's Florida regional board, and Arthur Teitelbaum, director of the ADL regional office here, hailed the book firm's announcement. Among the volumes distributed by Goyescas until now have been Spanish translations of the notor- ious canard, "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion," and other works picturing "international Jewry" as responsible for world wars and "conspiracies against the human race." First Hagada for Partially-Sighted Is Printed; Available Upon Request NEW YORK CITY — This Pass- over, for the first time, Jews throughout the world who are par- tially sighted will be able to par- ticipate in the seder with the aid of a large print edition of the entire Hagada, in 18-point bulletin- size type, which has just been is- sued by the Jewish Braille Insti- tute of America. Judge Emil Baar, president of the institute, announced the strikingly beautiful Hagada, in Hebrew and English, was printed in Jerusalem. A copy is being sent as a gift, on request, to any partially sighted Jewish adult or child. Passover Seder with their families and sighted friends, because of the Jewish Br aille Institute. Sightless Jewish individuals in the United States, Canada, Israel, and many other countries have received from the institute either a copy of the Hagada in Hebrew and Eng- lish braille or a high-fidelity re- cording of the complete Hagada service in Hebrew and English. The institute's headquarters is at 48 E. 74th St., New York City. Wisconsin Votes to Aid Religious School Busing MILWAUKEE (JTA)—A con- stitutional amendment to allow the Publication of the volume was state to pay for the bus transpor- made possible through a grant tation of religious and other non- from the affiliated sisterhoods of private school children was ap- the Union of Orthodox Jewish proved by a large margin by Wis- Congregations of America. consin voters in a two-day referen- Jews who are totally blind will dum, also be able to participate in the The vote reversed the views of the Wisconsin electorate which in 1946 defeated the identical pro- - Maker of Catalan Map Jehudah Cresques, a Jewish car- posal by 545,000 to 437,000 votes. Approval this time was by a vote tographer who lived on the island of 461,354 to 355,782. of Majorca in the early part of the Supporters of the amendment 15th Century. was the maker of said it appeared that the voters the historic Catalan map of the had been influenced by a new ecu- world used widely by navigators menical spirit, by more federal of that era. He is also credited school aid programs and by the with having introduced the astro- hard work of favoring organiza- tions. labe into the art of navigation. 'Flying Dragons' Reissued by Dover as Paperback Of the many strange creatures which evolved during the Age of the Dinosaurs. few were as peculiar as pterodactyl, the dragon of the air. Millions of years before the first birds, these flying vertebrates combined in a unique way charac- teristics commonly associated not only with birds but with reptiles and mammals- as well. The name pterodactyl is derived from the peculiar way in which the animal was equipped to fly: the wing was supported by a single digit. the fourth, which was greatly elongated to allow for maximum surface space on the wing. From the bones and fragments found, particularly those from Eng- land and Germany, many more in- teresting things have been learned about these extinct creatures. The first general comprehensive book on the subject. Dragons of the Air: An Account of Extinct Flying Rep- tiles, was written by H. G. Seeley, a leading authority on dinosaurs who did a great deal to bring geol- ogy and paleontology to the atten- tion of a wide public. In this book, Dr. Seeley covers thoroughly the bone structure, plan of skeleton, and probable form of the brain and respiratory system, among other things, and compares them with those of mammals, birds, and mod- ern reptiles. Now reprinted by Dover as a paperback, 51.75 with a new intro- duction by Dr. Erwin H. Colbert of the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Muse- um of Natural History, the book gives a full history of the discovery and classification of pterodactyls. Ambassador of Jews Simon Wolf was often referred to as "Ambassador of Jews in the U.S. to Washington." For over half a century he labored to help his co-religionists. He came to America from Germany as a lad of twelve with a love of learning and a devotion to Judaism absorbed from his father, a teacher of Hebrew. The demo- cratic and liberal ideas fostered in his childhood led him to forgo a business career with his uncles in Cleveland for the challenge of law and public affairs. Lincoln and the slavery issue attracted him to the new Republican Party. He used it as a springboard to launch a life- long crusade against anti-Semitism. The confidant of every president from Lincoln to Harding, he was one of the most effec- tive spokesmen and lobbyists the Jewish people have ever had. He spent his life fighting bigotry and prejudice both here and abroad. He worked tirelessly for Jewish causes and public welfare, struggling to ameliorate anti-Jewish policies and to counteract the bureaucratic red tape which continuously threatened America's "open door" policy to immigrants. By his 80th birthday he had been instrumental in preventing the deportation of at least 103,000 Jewish refugees, officially inadmissible to the U. S. because they had fled Russia penni-, less and without proper papers. When he died in 1923, Simon Wolf's eulogy was delivered by former President William Howard Taft, then Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. Justice Taft declared in part : "He was a leader in Israel, and had the interest of his people deeply at heart ...In his death the country loses a patriot, and the Jew- ish people a strong man." TRUE BLUE TRUE GREEN MENTHOL P. LORILLARD COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1760 First with the Finest Cigarettes through Lorillard research