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April 27, 1973 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-04-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

2 Israelis Among 8 Being Tried on Charges of Spying for Syria

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Six
Arabs and two Israeli Jews
went on trial in a Haifa Dis-
trict Court Wednesday on
charges of spying for Syria.
They comprised the third
group of defendants tried so
far for membership in a

Syrian-directed Arab-Jewish
spy ring which allegedly
worked for the violent over-
throw of the Israeli govern-
ment.
Yehezkel Cohen, 30, of Bnei
Brak and David Kupfer, 26,
of Bat Yam allegedly were

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recruited into the ring by
Ehud Adiv, the head of its
Jewish section who was sen-
tenced to 17 years' imprison-
ment for his activities at a
trial earlier this month.
According to the charges,
Cohen was assigned the code
name "Shalom" and had or-
ders to commit sabotage
against army installations
and vital civilian enterprises.
At the time of his arrest,
Cohen allegedly was about
to go to Greece to make con-
tact with Syrian intelligence
agents.
Kupfer, a laborer, alleged•
ly joined the spy ring in 1(570.
He is charged with main-
taining contact with Syrian
agents and attempted sabo-
tage of military industrial
plants and power stations.
It was learned Wednesday
that prison authorities have
warned Adiv and his co-
defendant, Dan Vered, 28, to
stop spreading leftist propa-

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_

Toronto Aids
Jewish Poor

TORONTO (JTA) — With-
out the supplementary finan-
cial help provided by the
Jewish Family and Child
Service, many of the 5,000
Jewish poor of Toronto would
be in disastrous circum-
stances, according to Irving
Beckerman, president of the
agency.
He said the. Jewish com-
munity had always accepted
"an extended and unique re-
sponsibility" for the Jewish
poor which has been imple-
mented through a supple-
mentary aid program which
"is much more substantial
than in any other North
American Jewish com-
munity."
Reporting that the JFCS
I last year spent $311,470 for
some 640 cases and that
S300,000 has been allocated
for the program in 1973.
Beckerman said that "it has
raised the level of existence"
for poor Jews in Toronto
"from bare subsistance to
something closer to a digni-
fied, though not comfortable
way of life."
Jerome Diamond, JFCS
executive director, noted that
many of the Jewish poor get
public assistance but that
their plight would be dis-
astrous without the supple-
mentation program, which is
funded by the Toronto United
Jewish Welfare Fund and the
United Community Fund.
Karen Wynnychuk, JFCS
social worker, said the •e-
cipients range in age from
18-years-old to the elderly.
They include single Jews, de-
serted mothers, widows and
families.
Some are unemployable be-
cause of mental or physical
disabilities. Others are work-
ing people whose income is
not enough to meet the needs
of their families. Mainly they
are middle-class people hit
by hard times, she added.

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ganda among fellow prison-
ers in the Ramleh central
prison, where they are being
held for the time being. The
warning was issued by Pris-
ons Commissioner Aryeh Nir,
who accused the pair of con-
ducting political activities in
prison. Vered, a school teach-
er, was sentenced to 10
years' imprisonment for his
activities in the spy ring.

_

MIAMI BEACH — Larry
Paskow, president, and Abe
Marcus, executive director
of Harbor Island Spa South
announced the renewal of
their "Pay for 7, Come for
11 Days" spring and summer
spa vacation to extend
through Aug. 27.
Aside from the four day
vacation bonus, free golf on
two private 10-hole courses,
free tennis (day and night)
and free use of health facili-
ties are offered.

Strange Inconsistency
Strange inconsistency! to
persecute in the name of re-
ligion those who had given
the religion . . . Catholic
Spain, Protestant Germany,
Greek Russia massacred and
murdered Jews while sing-
ing the psalmody Jewish pa-
triarchs and prophets had
writ t e n. Oh! Christianity,
what crimes have been com-
mitted in thy name! - —Madi-
son C. Peters in "Justice to
the Jew."

Cancer Research
Fund at Hebrew U.
Born Out of Tragedy

JERUSALEM — The trag-
edy of a Montreal Jewish
family has become a hope
for the future with the dedi-
cation of the Eliezer and
Chava Kolatacz Memorial
Research Foundation for Leu-
kemia and Cancer at Hebrew
University's faculty of medi-
cine.
When Eliezer and Chava
Kolatacz lost their only child
David, to leukemia at age
8, they willed all their world-
ly possessions for research
into cancer. A few months
later, on Feb. 21, 1970, they
themselves perished in the
mid-air explosion of a Swiss-
air jetliner .by Arab terror-
ist activity.
Relatives and friends of
the Kolatacz family from
Canada, Belgium and Israel
recently gathered in the li-
brary of the cancer research
department of the Hebrew
University-Hadassah School
of Medicine to dedicate the
research foundation they had
willed.
* * *
Prof. Gabriel Stein, He-
brew University professor of
physical chemistry, said at a
memorial meeting for Alber-
to Casali, that his aid to ap-
plied chemistry at the He-
brew University may have a
catalytic influence on the de-
velopment of Israel's indus-
try in the next 10 years.
The late Casali was a pro-
minant Italian industrialist
and public figure and found-
er of the Casali Institute of
Applied Chemistry at the
university's school of applied
science and technology. He
died in 1972, at age 70.
Mr. Casali and his wife
Kathleen some years ago set
up a fellowship foundation
providing postgraduate re-
search scholarships for Is-
raeli students specializing in
applied chemistry.
Meanwhile, a new proj-
ect by the Jewish Coloniza-
tion Association which will
make possible the establish-
ment of a new teaching and
laboratory institute at the
Hebrew University's faculty
of agriculture was launched
at a ground-breaking cere-
mony on the campus in Re-
hovot.
The new facility, the Cen-
tral Building for Laborator-
ies and Lecture Halls, has
been necessitated by the ex-
pansion at the faculty in re-
cent years.
The new three-story build-
ing will be situated next to
the Kennedy-Leigh Agricul-
tural Library and will include
four lecture halls, four lab-
oratories and an auditorium.

'0 Jerusalem'
Paperbacked

Pocket Books, the Simon
and Schuster division, has
reissued "0 Jerusalem" by
Larry Collins and Dominique
Lapierre as a paperback.
The subject of a serious
debate over its handling of
the Deir Yassin incident, the
Collins-Lapierre volume was
for a long-time the number
one best seller.
Israel's major personali-
ties and leading Arab spokes-
man were the providers of
source material for this
volume.
Collins was in Detroit for
several lectures and he was
questioned extensively on the
Deir Yassin matter and
other incidents in this
challenging book.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEW:
Friday, April 27, 1973-21

Status Quo
Hurts Israel
Goldmann

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Dr
Nahum Goldmann, president
of the World Jewish Con-
gress, said Tuesday night
that Israel must take the in-
itiative for peace with its
neighbors because the status
quo "is not good for us."
He said he did not advo-
cate peace at any price but
felt that a minimum price
must be set "and the initia-
tive for that must come from
Israel." . -
Dr. Goldmann spoke at a
"Road to Peace" symposium
Sponsored by . the monthly
"New Outlook." The vet-
eran Zionist leader, who has
aroused controversy in the
past for his sharp criticism
of certain .Israeli policies,
said the current situation of
no-war, no-peace was detri-
mental for Israel and cculd
not be allowed to continue
much •odger:.
."It does not have the ad-
vantage .07 the challenge of
war and it does not have the
advantage of .a peace situa-
tion," he said. "The image
of Israel is in danger among
intellectuals and progressive
elements who were always
pro-Israel to a great extent
but are now drifting away
from us," he said.
"For too long we have
rested on the credit given us
because of the Holocaust.
Now our supporters are dis-
appointed and ask them-
selves if another Lebanon
has emerged on the Middle
East map," Dr. Goldmann
said.
He chided Israel for be-
coming a conformist society
where in the past it has al-
ways been non-conformist.
"The task the Jewish state
has assumed is to become
the guardian of Jewish values
and culture," he said, but
it cannot carry out the task
"as long as there is no peace
and almost all efforts are
devoted to security."

Israel Critic Denied
Visit to Yugoslavia

TEL AVIV (JTA) Men-
del Kohansky, an Israeli
theater critic and member
of the World Executive of
Theater Critics Association,
has received a last-minute
cable from the Yugoslavian
organizing committee of the
world executive meeting
scheduled to open in Novisad,
Yugoslavia, that his visit to
Yugoslavia at this time would
be inopportune.
The action of the Yugo-
slavians seemed to be in
line with a recently adopted
anti-Israeli policy demon-
strated by their over-exager-
ated panic which resulted in
the Israeli table tennis team
quitting the world champion-
ship games in Sarajevo two
weeks ago.

Planners to Meet

NEW YORK — A two-day
social planning institute,
sponsored by the Council of
Jewish Federations and Wel-
fare Funds (CJF) will be
held Sunday and Monday in
Boston at Brandeis Univer-
sity, Waltham, Mass., to
bring together social plan-
ning chairmen of Jewish
federations in 13 of the larg-
est cities in the United States
and Canada.

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