Witnesses Say Soviet Jews in Camps for Demanding Exodus PARIS (JTA)—Three witnesses prison in January 1969 for slan- from the Soviet Union told an in- dering the Soviet Union after he ternational gathering here that a unsuccessfully applied for an exit number of Russian Jews have al- permit. ready been sent to concentration Meanwhile, the Communist camps or sentenced to prison Party newspaper Pravda has terms for demanding their right published a letter signed by 70 to emigrate and especially for "veteran bolsbeviks of Jewish making public appeals in that re- nationality" denouncing alleged spect. atrocities committed by Israel The witnesses testified in closed "as a result of the Zionist-Fas- cist policy of the bourgeois gov- session at the European Jewish Conference on Soviet Jewry which ernment of Meir, Dayan, Ehan and Sharer." opened here attended by more The English text of the letter than 300 delegates from 17 coun- tries. Their identities were not dis- and the names of all the signator- closed in order to potect the fami- ies along with the year of their lies they left behind in Moscow admission to the Communist Party was circulated here in Review of and Leningrad. The witnesses, two men and a the Soviet Press, a news digest woman, were described as past published by the Soviet Mission to members of the Komsomol, the the United Nations. The letter was apparently Soviet Communist Party youth or- ganization. They described in de- prompted by Egyptian claims that tail the cases of several Russian Israeli bombers blasted a primary Jews who went to jail and whose school in the Nile delta April 8, families were subjected to severe killing 30 children. But the greater harassment because they had ap- portion of its text- was devoted to plied for exit permits to go to Is- extolling Soviet treatment of its Jewish citizens and recalling the rael. After the testimony , was heard, role played by Russian Jewish workers in the Bolshevik revolu- the conference adopted a reso- tion and in the war against Hitler. lution urging the Soviet govern- Asserting that the Soviet Union ment to grant Jews "their con- stitutional rights" and the right has granted all nationalities, in- "to emigrate to Israel for those cluding the Jews, the fullest rights who wish to." It expressed soli- darity "with those Jews who 3 Teens Arrested in Link face their situation with courage With Synagogue Burglary and dignity," expressed "grave NEW YORK (JTA) — Three concern" over the "continued deterioration" of the Jewish po- teen-agers were arrested in con- nection with a recent burglary at sition in the USSR and recom- Ahavoth Torah Synagogue in the mended that a world conference be called "at the earliest pos- West Bronx. The police said they sible date to deal with this bad sold the synagogue's large candelabrum, which has been re- burning issue." covered, for $4 and had also taken According to the witnesses a bottles of wine and other items. large part of Soviet Jewry wants Rabbi David Toiv recalled that to emigrate to Israel, and thou- five Torahs had been destroyed in sands have already filed applica- an arson attack on the synagogue tions to leave. Many of these have several weeks ago. The teen-agers been deprived of work and other have not been linked by •police to elemental rights after Soviet the arson attack. authorities turned down their emi- He told the JTA that the Ortho- gration applications, the witnesses dox temple, at which some 50 said. They described as a danger- mainly elderly worshipers attend ous new trend the arrest of Jews services, had taken to reschedu- who have applied for exit permits, ling night time activities to the especially those who sent appeals daytime in the wake of these in- abroad. cidents and similar ones at syna- Cited as an example of such in- gogues throughout the city. stances was the case of Mrs. Lilia He noted that Mayor John V. Abramova Ontman, of Cheinovsky, Lindsay was serving as honorary who was arrested in December chairman of a campaign to restore and sentenced to 21/2 years in damaged or stolen religious pro- prison by a state court last Jan. perty and that the police depart- 8 for "slandering the Soviet Un- ment had initiated a "worship pa- ion and insulting the authorities." trol." Mrs. Ontman had requested per- mission to emigrate in order to re- POSTHUMOUS AWARD unite with her elderly father in The first Distinguished Service Israel. She had also submitted Award of the American Federation several unsuccessful applications of Information Processing Societies on behalf of her husband, her (AFIPS) will be presented post- adopted child and her younger sis- humously to Dr. Walter Hoffman, ter. When the authorities rejected May 6, during the banquet of the them, she declared that she no Spring Joint Computer Conference longer considered herself a Soviet here. The award will be presented citizen and refused her identity "in recognition of his selfless con- tributions to the federation and card. At her trial, she told the court the computer profession." that she based her request on the Soviet Constitution and on the Uni- versal Declaration of Human Rights, of which the USSR is a signatory. After sentencing, her sister was expelled from school and her adopted child was forcibly placed in. an institution, the con- ference was told. Also related was the case of Boris Koehubievsky, a Jewish engi- neer sentenced to three years in and opportunities, the letter con- tinued, "To the Israeli Zionist we say: stop your filthy solicitation. You won't find a single traitor among the Jewish working people of the Soviet Union." The dates next to the names of each of the signers indicated that about half of them were admitted to the "Communist Party" between 1903 and 1914. The letter added: "We have not forgotten the fight of our party against the Zionists, Bundists and other Jewish nationalists . . . we cannot without the greatest of anger and indignation" hear about "the destruction of Arab cities and other inhabited points, and the massacre of women, children and aged people." Theodore C. Sorensen, New York Democratic State Commit- tee nominee for the U.S. Sen- ate, told a Moscow audience Monday that the Soviet govern- ment should permit emigration to Israel, help seek a Middle East peace, grant Increased freedom of speech and agree to halt the arms race. He was reported to have inter- preted the response to his remarks on the "Jewish question" as nega- tive. Sorensen, invited by the In- stitute of the U.S.A. before his nomination, commented smilingly that he might be criticized for campaigning in Moscow instead of in New York. Sorensen, lawyer and former presidential aide, also met with Chief Rabbi Yehuda Leib Levin of the Moscow Central Synagogue, whom he gave a Bible from a New York rabbi, and with Foreign Trade Minister Nikolai S. Pato- lichev. Refused permission to have American reporters cover his re- marks at the institute. He tape- recorded the proceedings and made the recording available to newsmen in his room in Moscow's Budapest Hotel. On the matter of emigration, Sorensen, who is Jewish, declared in his speech that "The Soviet Un- ion should not keep its adherents of the Jewish faith who have been invited to settle in the state of Is- rael." Contending that he was not out to "embarrass the Soviet govern- ment," he advised it and "any government faced with this prob- lem" that "however contrary such a desire to emigrate may be to your wishes, your customs, the de- sires of a majority of your popu- lation or even your laws, let them go." Leonid Brezhnev, general sec- retary of the Soviet Communist Party, claimed Monday that peace could have been restored in the Middle East if it were not for Is- rael's "expansionist plans." He chided the United States and "other patrons of Israel" for the low state of their prestige in the Arab world compared to "the Sutton Place Opens Second Phase 56—ANTIQUES Private party will sacrifice fine collection of antique vases, pitch- ers, cut glass. Jewelry, Delft plaque, Wedgewood sugar shake, beautiful marble face with lace trim. 399-1270, APPT. ONLY SAT. & SUN. 11-6 13421 W. 10 MILE RD., OAK PARK THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 54—Friday, April 17, 1970 Sutton Place, luxury apartment-townhouse community at Nine Mile Rd., between Lahser and Telegraph lids., opens Phase II with 173 units now leasing. Directly opposite Plum Hollow Country Club and adjacent to a tree-laced ravine, the winding entrance leads through greenways to the two-bedroom, two - bath apartments and two- and three-bedroom townhouses with a variety of architectural treatments. A highlight of Sutton Place is Sutton Lodge and Swim Club, featuring a Spanish-motif two-story clubhouse with an Olympic- size pool and multilevel patio-terrace. An upper-level beamed ball feature such activities as bridge lesons, canasta and social events, such as the recent St. Patrick's Day-Purim party. Arab people's friendship with the Soviet Union." He promised that the Socialist countries would give the Arab peoples all the necessary assistance "to frustrate the plans of the aggressors in the Middle East." Brezhnev spoke at a meeting in Kharkov in connection with the presentation of the Order of Len- in to the Kharkov Region. "international inquiry" An under United Nations auspices to investigate "Soviet action against its Jewish population" was urged at a House subcom- mittee hearing here on the plight of Soviet Jewry. The proposal was made by Stan- ley Lowell, vice president of the American Jewish Congress and vice chairman of the Amercan Jewish Conference on Soviet Jew- ry. Lowell also outlined a program of action on Russian Jews that he said could be undertaken by the U.S. Congress and the State De- partment. He was one of five experts who testified at the hearing conducted by Rep. Leonard Farbstein, a New York Democrat, chairman of the subcommittee on Europe of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The hearing was held at the U.S. Customs Court House. Lowell called on both houses of Congress, by joint resolution, to "demand that the U.S. State De- partment and Charles Yost, U.S. ambassador to the UN, call for an international inquiry into Soviet action against its Jewish popula- tion" and that the State Depart- ment "make direct inquiry of the Soviet Union's foreign ministry with respect to the status of Jews in the USSR." Lowell also proposed that "world opinion be marshalled to demand that the USSR permit those of its Jewish citizens who wish to leave to emigrate freely to Israel and other lands that are willing to re- ceive them." Jerry Goodman, director of European affairs of the American Jewish Committee, said the Krem- lin's anti-Israel campaign has be- come "incerasingly shrill" in the past three months and has "sur- passed in hysteria" Russia's cam- paign against Red China, Czecho- slovakian liberals and Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia. He said Mos- cow's policy was designed to "ap- pease" its Arab allies. Seventeen college students from Philadelphia chained them- selves to the fence in front of the Soviet Embassy April 9 to protest the Soviet refusal to al- low Jewish families to emigrate to Israel. The students — most of them from the University of Pennsylvania—were all members of the Pennsylvania Committee for Human Rights Now. The university Is in the middle of Soviet Jewry Week. Police arrested the demonstra- tors, after cutting their handcuffs, and took them to the police sta- tion. The group sang "Let my peo- ple go" all during the proceedings Franz Schoenberner, Anti-Nazi Editor, 77 NEW YORK—Franz Schoenber- ner, last pre-Nazi editor of Simpli- cissimus, the German satirical magazine, died last Saturday at age 77. Mr. Schoenberner, the son of a Berlin pastor, fled Munich in March 1933 and made his way into Switzerland. Under his editorship for 31/2 years, Simplicissumus fiad been strongly anti-Nazi. In the first of three autobiographical works, "Confessions of European Intellec- tual," Mr. Schoenberner described his life up to the time of his flight. He emigrated to the United States from France in 1941. In one 1930 issue of Simplis- simus, Mr. Schoenberner ran a cartoon showing two German policemen lifting the top of Hit- ler's head and examining the void inside. the caption read: "Isn't that strange that you can make such a lot of trouble with so little stuff?" In the United States, he contin- ued his fight against Hitler, work- ing for the Office of War Informa- tion, joining a refugee committee and writing for American maga- zines. A paralytic since 1951, Mr. Schoenberner was confilkd to a wheelchair after an assault by a TEL AVIV—The wife of a rabbi neighbor whom he had asked to tried to phone her mother in Lon- turn down a radio. don Monday and got Cairo instead. This was the conversation reported Leonard Wolford Fox, by Radio Israel: "Hello, Cairo, how are you over Ex-Detroiter of DC Attorney Leonard Wolford Fox, there?" "We're waiting for more of your a former Detroiter who was with bombing," the Egyptian operator the U.S. Government Post Office's contract negotiation department in replied. Washington D.C., for the past five `You know, you don't have to be years, died April 9 at age 58. bombed." A native Detroiter, Mr. Fox was "Tell that to Moshe Dayan," said a graduate of the University of the Egyptian. Michigan's ,law school. His wife, "Perhaps you better tell that to the former Mildred Vass, also was Nasser," the Israeli woman coun- from an old Detroit family. tered. Mr. Fox, former owner of Peter's London then came on the line. Sportswear on Griswold Ave. down- Normally there are no communica- town, leaves, in addition to his wife, tions between Israel and the Arab a son, Rabbi Michael of Jerusalem; world, and there was no explana- two daughters, Mrs. Michael (Su- tion for the unusual wrong num- sanne) Glaser of Cleveland and Laura; a brother, Arnold; and two ber. sisters, Mrs. Rosalind Sherman and Harriet, all of Detroit; and three grandchildren. Interment Washington. I Say, Cairo, Are You There? g3rzat g3rst4 • • • ,O ctivities LOUIS MARSHALL CHAPTER at a recent dinner, installed the following officers: Mrs. William Olson, president; Mrs. Stanley Litinsky and Mrs. Jack Koffman, vice presidents; Mesdames Manuel Dorfman, Sam Leaderman, Ed- ward Parish, Isadore Sklar, Isadore Goldfarb and Charles Niskar, secretaries; Mrs William Plotkin, junior past president; Mrs. Harry Buchalter, treasurer; and Mes- dames Sam Gotlieb, Harry Clive, Albert Halprin, Benson Litwak, Louis Dorf, Bertha Brotman, Sam Freedman and Albert Schwartz, board members. Samuel Landau, 86 Samuel Landau, former owner of Penn Furniture Co., 13330 Michi- gan, Dearborn, died last Saturday at age 86. Mr. Landau, 25342 W. Mont- marte, Oak Park, was a native of Austria and a Detroit resident for 70 years. He retired in 1960. Mr. Landau was a member of Cong. Bnai Moshe and Knights of Phy- thias Lodge 55 and a trustee of Pisgah Lodge, Bnai Brith. Mr. Landau leaves his wife, Millie; two sons, Sol and Alfred; a daughter, Mrs. Irving (Jean) Rosen; three sisters and seven grand-children.