10—Friday, December 1, 1967 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS, Flint News Community Calendar Two Leaders Dec. 5—Temple Beth El Sister hood Board Meeting. 12:30 p.m Dec. 5—Bnai Brith Women's Thea ter Party at Fisher Theater. De troit Dec. 6—Beth Israel Sisterhood: Meeting. 12:30 p.m. Dec. 7—.IWVA Board Meeting.! 8:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Irwin Shapiro Dec. 7 —Cong. Beth Israel board meeting. 8:30 p.m. The .Iewish War Veterans Auxil- iary of Flint made visits last month to Caro Hospital and Sagi- naw Veterans Hospital. serving a total of 244 patients. Hanuka gifts have been sent to .Jewish soldiers from the Flint area. The next board meeting will he held 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Irwin Shapiro. Reservations for the New Year's Eve Dance. to be held 9 p.m. at Beth Israel Synagogue. may be made with the general chairman, Mrs. Irving Wiseman. Mrs. Martin Cohen was elected department historian. Members of the newly formed Flint Chanter. Bnai Brith. will pro- vide baby-sitting services and transportation for the new March of Dimes Maternity Center at Berston Field House. The National Foundation will join the Flint Health Department. Community Planned Parenthood Association and Bnai Brith Women in offering free prenatal and postnatal care to the indigent. regardless of mari- tal status. Flint chapter has 12,000 leaflets and window poster in the Berston area announcing the open- ing of the center. Pelav-in Elected Region Officer at CJFWF Meeting B. Morris Pelavin of Flint was elected vice chairman of the East-Central Region, Council of Jewish Federations and Walfare Funds. He was elected at the CJFWF general assembly in Cleveland, where Mrs. Noah Miller of Akron (above) was named chairman of the region. Dr. Ira B. Marder, who won the Flint Jewish Community Council's 1967 Young Leadership Award, is shown with Louis J. Fox, president of the Council of Jewish Federations and Wel- fare Funds, at the council's 36th general assembly in Cleveland. S25,000 Reward Posted in Bombing of Rabbi's Home JACKSON. Miss. (JTA)—Gov- ernor Paul B. Johnson of Missis- sippi and Governor-elect John Bell Williams denounced the night bombing last week which virtually wrecked the home of Rabbi Perry E. Nussbaum of Temple Beth Israel of Jackson and nearly cost the rabbi his life. Mayor Allen , Thompson announced that the city had increased its reward for the arrest and conviction of the bom- bers from $5,000 to $25,000. The explosion, which shattered Rabbi Nussbaum's home shortly after 11 p.m., was the second act of violence in recent months I against the rabbi who has been active in the civil rights move- ' ment. Last Sept. 18, hit-and-run bombers blasted Temple Beth Israel. Jewish organizations quickly demanded federal protec- tion for the rabbi and for others whose lives and property were threatened by racist violence. The Union of American Hebrew Con- gregations in New York. congre- gational organization of Reform Judaism, sent a telegram to fed eral officials asking them to take firm action to end the "reign of violence, terror and intimidation" in Mississippi. American Adolph Held, president of the Jewish Labor Committee, tele- graphed U.S. Attorney General Ramsay Clark expressing "shock" that after the bombing of Rabbi Nussbaum's synagogue, "no ade- quate protection" was given to the rabbi, who "has been made the target of violent terrorism in vio- lation of his own civil rights." Held urged "immediate federal in- tervention and protection in this case." Nathan Perlmutter, national af- fairs director of the committee, Among the Flint public high called for "round-the-clock inves- school students receiving all As tigations by local and federal au- during the first marking period thorities." He cited the "string are: Debra Arenson, daughter of of terror bombings of St. Paul's Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Arenson; Church Parsonage in Laurel, Miss., Mitchell Sorscher, son of Dr. and and the Jackson residencies of Mrs. Sam Sorscher: and Bruce Methodist lay leader R. B. Kochit- Osher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- zky and of Rabbi Nussbaum, all ward Oster. within a week." Youth on the Move Benjamin Winsen, 68 Benjamin Winsen, owner of a Flint jewelry repair shop who died Nov. 9. leaves his wife. Frances; two sons. Glenn E. and Daniel R.; a daughter, Mrs. Wayne S. Scha- fer: six sisters, three brothers and four grandchildren. The Jewish News regrets the omission of Mrs. Winsen's name in the list of survivors last week. Classified Ads Get Quick Results Rabbi Nussbaum, who is search- ing for new living quarters, hit out against the Ku Klux Klan and the segregationist "Americans for the Preservation of the White Race." He said that while he had no proof that either of these or- ganizations were implicated in the bombings, they had helped create the kind of "climate" that per- mitted "this present reign of ter- ror," Gov. Johnson urged all Mis- sissippians to cooperate with law enforcement officials in "appre- hending these depraved bombers " AJCornmittee's `Many Faces of Anti-Semitism' Explores Roots of Irrational Ma ss Hostility SAN FRANCISCO — The Ameri- can Jewish Committee is calling on social scientists to examine the roots of mass psychopathology as the next frontier in which to pur- sue the fight against anti-Semitism This new approach to the un- derstanding of anti-Jewish hostil- ity is urged in a booklet, "The Many Faces of Anti-Semitism," to be published Saturday and made public here at the American Jew- ish Committee's annual national executive board—Western regional conference meeting, at the Fair- mont Hotel. The booklet also sug- gests that the study of anti- Semitism, which has been called the world's "classic prejudice," can provide insights useful in fighting bigotry against other groups, such as Negroes. The 40-page illustrated booklet. which summarizes the theological. economic, sociological, political and psychological sources of anti- Semitism. points out after exam- ining the behavior of demagogues like Hitler that "even these in- sights into the psychology of viru- lent prejudice do not supply all the answers concerning the path- ology of anti-Semitism." The authors of the booklet. Rose Feitelson and George Salomon of the AJC's publications service, add that people in a group often have been known to condone and join actions that they would never ap- prove as individuals. In Nazi Ger- many, for example. "seemingly re- sponsible men and women were transformed into a frenzied rab- ble. ready to perpetrate, or ac- quiesce in. the most staggering atrocities." How was it possible? the au- thors ask, then indicate that so- cial scientists, who earlier had investigated the roots of indi- vidual prejudice, are just be- ginning to look into the roots of irrational mass hostility. "Mass injustice and violence are not a German monopoly," they add, pointing to the record of how Americans have acted in conflicts with the American Indians. in the mistreatment of 100,000 people of Japanese ancestry on the West Coast during World War II, and on countless occasions as mem- bers of "howling lynch mobs." Systematic inquiry along these lines has been begun at the Center for Research in Collective Path- ology.at the University of Sussex. in England, under the direction of Prof. Norman Cohn. A historian and behavioral scientist. Dr. Cohn is the author of "Warrant for Genocide," a study of the myth of "Jewish world conspiracy." The authors of "The Many Faces of Anti-Semitism" acknowledge that overt hostility against Jews, in the U.S. and various other coun- tries, appears to be at a low ebb today—a view also expressed in a preface by Nathan Glazer, profes- sor of sociology at the University of California at Berkeley. Even so, they warn, "no one knows what the future may hold LAS VEGAS to the Brandeis U. Library generous tax deduction For Pickup Call 398-8877 Nat'l Women's Comm. CALL 8642165 MORRi s B C K 342.. 7100 14500 W. 7 MILE AT LODGE X-WAY THERE ARE OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOU IN THE FUTURE OF ISRAEL Six-month Kibbutz-ulpan program (ages 18 - 30) work - study Hebrew. Study in Residential Ulponim, Universities, Yeshivot. Professional op- portunities for physicians, medical personnel, engineers, computer experts, teachers, social workers, etc. Retirement programs. There are many new privileges and advantages that will soon be avail- able to newcomers to Israel. For information on all of the above Shmuel Werzberger, Director of the Israel Aliyah Center will meet with all interested people at THE LABOR ZIONIST INSTITUTE, 19161 SCHAEFER RD. Tuesday and Wednesday, December 5th and 6th. Please call 341-0669 for on appointment prior to those dates. Or write ISRAEL ALIYAH CENTER, 13947 Cedar Rd., Cleveland, Ohio 44118 Tel. 321-9757 (216) THE PERFECT BAR MITZVA GIFT ISRAEL BAR MITZVA PILGRIMAGE July-August 1968 $8 60 Complete A unique educational experience for boys and girls of Bar Mitzva age. Rich religious, educational and cultural program, designed to acquaint par- ticipants with the land, its people and culture. 8th annual group ! DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND CULTURE JEWISH AGENCY FOR ISRAEL 515 Park Avenue New York, N. Y. 10022 For the Finest in Home Remodeling Residential and Commercial 358-2488 THE BEST FOR LESS AT NOW MORE THAN _ EVER DECEMBER 18th STAG ,M NICKS DONATE .. . Your old Books & Paperbacks Agnon Stories Published in Portuguese in Brazil SAO PAULO (JTA) — A collec- tion of stories by S. Y. Agnon, who shared the Nobel Prize for Literature, has been brought out here in Portuguese translation under sponsorship of the Israel Consulate and the Israel House of C u 1 t u r e. The 930-page volume, "Stories From Jerusalem," is the 11th in a series of 12 Jewish books being published in Portuguese by the Perspectiva publishing house, under the direction of Jacob Guins- burg. for the relationship of Jews and Christians in America. History, as the Jews have had occasion to learn many times over, attaches no time guarantee to 'golden ages.' " PLaza 2-0600