!- VV3.t 47;W.11,1-Vtv4i .1 0:!V 'Not Ftee - to. Desist'—AJC ommittee History. of "Not Free to De- ','Not Free to Desist" by Dr. rived , s'trength from American The. author Dr. Naomi' W. Cohen, is an Naomi W. Cohen is a history of ideals, it helped sustain them. As sist," the American Jewish Committee, reformer, critic, pressure group, associate professor of history at covering the years 1906-1966. or gadfly, the organization never Hunter College. Published by the Jewish Pub.. ceased to remind the nation of its lication society of America, this responsibilities to the cause of free, volume reviews the important dom. At the .same -time, iheIghikt events in which the AJC played mittee labored unceasinglY;10 a major role. It deals with the tend freedom's boundaries. l'heY. anti-Semitic experiences, the reja.. who had staked their faith-milk& tionships with Zionism, the even- promise of America and bad benefits tual adoption of a strong pre-Is- shared in the country's became America's championi." . rael stand- Naturally, the personalities who One wonders whether JPS now ea ers amo ng e under review — men like Louis American Jewish Congress and Marshall, Cyrus Adler, the Sulz- Bnai Brith. -, bergers. Souse of the issues are lightly twitched upon, and on at least one major American Jewish ex- periesee—the Leo Frank Case —there is just this brevity: "The Committee skirted Issues affect- ing individuals or limited num- bers of Jews; in some cases it sought to divest the issue of any Jewish label. Accordingly, though Louis Marshall served as mussel for Leo Frank, the Committee refused to• act offi- cially, as an organization;-insist- ing upon treating the case as a travesty of justice, of concern to all Americans irrespective of religion." • Committee-Ziont relationships are outlined and the issues involv- ing church-state conflicts, immigra- tion restrictions, civil rights cam- paigns and many more issues are alluded to in order to provide an understanding of the 60-year his- tory of the AJCommittee. "Not Free to Desist" must be viewed as an organizational tribute and should be judged strictly .the purview of an intention to outline an historic record of one of American Jewry's major com- munity groups. The author's tri- bute to AJC is contained in these concluding words: "Although the Committee was grounded philosophically in talmu- dic precepts of communal respon- sibility and patterned directly on European Jewish models, its ideals flourished because they were nur- tured in an American matrix. To fight bigotry and to defend human freedoms, to uphold rational or- der. due process of law, and in- dividual merit were in the self- interest of the group But they were also the national ideals stamped by the Enlighteument up- on 18th Century America. Even the Committee's foreign interests —to protect the rights of Jews abroad, to-find havens of refuge for the persecuted — affirmed the nation's role as the trustee and exemplar of liberty for the entire world. The American Jewish Committee not only de- PRICE QUALITY NORTHLAND !;: 0 Wins Points at Bar-Han 4- 4t • F 4' GEORGE 4, OR VAL ts! Classified A hits the heights at an even five feet . . . slightly on the robust side. Odd in size they ore, but they do have their clothing. Not only do they find the proper size they need in the latest fashioris . but .Shifman's old tailors will. custom tailor their 'selection to their exacting dimensions.. UNCoLN CENTER • . Greenfield at 1014 Mile gds MACOMB . Mitt D LEA Jeff is over 6 feet and on the slim side . . . Mutt Student Strike RAMAT-GAN — The senate of Bar-Ban University has asked deans to encourage dialogue be- tween lecturers and students, with the stipulation that decisions re- garding all academic matters -re- main strictly in the hard- of the teaching staff. Students at Bar-II• . recently waged a 21/2-week str''-e to abolish final BA examin in some of the departrrto and gain re- presentation on ...le senate. The senate decided to invite two students to take part in certain senate meetings, as observers, without voting rights and also agreed to the introduction of a new grading system, which will make - grading consistent with that at other universities. Rector, Prof. Menachem Zvi Kaddari, said many of the stu- dents' demands were met. The Students Union Council expressed confidence in the rector and the deans. THE DESOWAIN1S1fNEWS 1X—Friday, March 31, .1972 -EVERYTHING, FOR HIM' BRIGHTON MALL. uvortia MAU, • I 9.5 at - Old Grand River W.• Seven Mile at Middlelielt - ,;CHERR Y charge arge and most major -ch Your Shihnon's d - il Y;n n otr il4Z115i ed . 7 .