New Record Set in Allied Drive

(Continued from Page 1)
were related. Noteworthy is the
enrollment by the junior division
of 400 new contributors. The small
givers through the metropolitan
division also registered gains.
Reports in behalf of the cam-
paign divisions were submitted by
Marvin I. Danto, Sol R. Colton,
Philip T. Warren, N. Brewster
Broder, Harvey Weisberg, Jack
A. Robinson, I. William Sherr,
Michael Maddin, William Green-
berg and Mrs. Morris J. Brand-
wine.
The anticipated total of $13,-
372,000 will be $2,000,000 in excess
of the largest sum raised until
now—the $11,362,885 subscribed
in 1970. Last year 24,596 made
their gifts to the Allied Jewish
Campaign, but at least 3,000 more
are yet to be reached this year.
The campaign chairmen, joined
by- Avrunin, emphasized that the
drive is not considered ended
until the unsolicited are reached
and their participation in the
campaign is assured.

Alan Schwartz, president of the Ann Arbor. Paul Zuckerman, who
Jewish Welfare Federation, intro- soon will assume top leadership in
duced Fisher. The invocation was the United Jewish Appeal, repre-
given by Rabbi Moses Lehrman.
sented the nationl UJA, which is
Guests at the dinner included the major beneficiary in the Allied
Prof. and Mrs. William Haber of Jewish Campaign.

100-Per-Centers Honored by Campaign

PHILADELPHIA (JTA) — The
Federation Foundation, a fund
sponsored by the Federation of
Jewish Agencies, which permits a
giver to set aside funds for public
charities in the year of the gift or
later, while ,taking current advan-
tage of the full income tax deduc-
tion, has received a favorable rul-
ing from the Internal Revenue
Service, according to Morris A.
Kravitz, federation president. He
said the new foundation comes
under a special provision of • the
1969 Tax Reform Law.
Although classified as a private
foundation, he said,' contributions
to the Federation Foundation are
deductible in the same way as are
contributions to public charities.
Richard L. Newburger, the fed-
Representatives from campaign sections which have attained
eration endowment fund chairman,
said he expected the new founda- pledges equalling 100 per cent or more of their last year's total
tion would be very successful be- were honored at a recent report meeting of the 1971 Allied Jewish
cause of its uniqueness. He said Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund. Shown are junior division leaders
contributions to the new founda- (from left) : Stanley Frankel, Burton Farbman, Robert Slatkin,
tion were deductible "up to 50 Mark Hauser, Mrs. Robert Slatkin, Mrs. Michael Maddin, Lawrence
per cent of adjusted gross income Jackier, Michael Maddin, Campaign Chairman Meyer M. Fishman,
annually" and that contributions Mrs. L. Robert Levy, Campaign Chairman Max Shaye and Melvin
over that amount could be carried Bonin; seated: Lewis S. Grossman, pre-campaign chairman.
In the metropolitan division are (from left) : William Greenberg,
over for five years.
Morris Asher, Fishman, Morris Elken and Shaye.

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Czech Harassmentof Jews Exposed

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The
Czechoslovakian National Council
charges that Czechoslovakia and
the Soviet Union practice the same
kind of anti-Semitism.
Referring to the "regrettable
plight" of Jews in the Soviet
Union, the council said, "We
Americans of Czech and Slovak
descent feel compelled to bring
to public attention the fact that
this kind of anti-Semitism is not
limited to the government of the
Soviet Union but is equally the
policy of the present Communist
regime in Czechoslovakia."
The letter, signed by Jame V.
Kragora, president; Fr a n c i s
Schwarzenberg, vice-president, and
Vlastislav Chalupa, secretary of
the Council which was founded in
1918 and has its offices In Cicero,
Ill., continued: "While freedom
and justice are being denied to
all Czechoslovakian citizens who do
not fully support the present re-
gime, Jews, whether in exile or

at home, seem to be singled out
for special criticism by the pres-
ent authorities. The harass-
ment is being justified by the
alleged danger of so-called inter-
national Zionism on the part of
the Jews in Czechoslovakia."
The council mentioned that books
recently published in Prague and
Bratislava denounced these alleged
dangers of Zionism. It also stressed
that anti-Semitism is "totally alien
to the traditions of the Czech and
Slovak peoples as was amply dem-
onstrated in the days of Czecho-
slovakia's freedom" under Presi-
dent Thomas G. Masaryk.

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Philadelphia Federation
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Internal Revenue Ruling

MAC•0-LAC

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

6—Friday, May 7, 1971

Synagogue Council Lends Support
to Selective Conscientious Objection

NEW YORK—The central co-
ordinating agency of Conservative,
Orthodox and 'Reform Judaism in
the United States has adopted a
major policy statement backing
selective conscientious objection,
it was announced by Rabbi Solo-
mon J. Sharfman, president of the
Synagogue Council of America.
The policy statement, adopted
after two years of study and de-
bate, calls on Congress to extend
the concept of conscientious objec-
tion to individuals who object not
to all wars but to a particular war,
only.

The statement was approved
by the three branches' rabbini-
cal organizations and by the lay
synagogue organization of Re-
form Judaism. The Conservative
and Orthodox synagogal bodies
abstained from the action.
Rabbi Sharfman noted that a
recent decision of the Supreme
Court has thrown the issue of
conscientious objection once again
to the legislative branch of govern-

ment. "The action of the Syna-
gogue Council of America is there-
fore particularly timely. It will
enable the council to join with the
National Council of Churches and
the National Conference of Cath-
olic Bishops, who previously adopt-
ed similar positions, together to
urge new legislation that will pro-
vide for selective conscientious
objection."

The statement declares that the
Synagogue Council of America,
"obedient to the Moral teachings of
the Jewish faith," supports an ex-
tension of the concept of conscien-
tious objection to permit those who
object to a particular conflict on
genuine grounds of conscience to
be exempt from participating in it.

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