THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 12—Friday, March 1, 1974 Boris Smolar's I I 'Between You . . . and Me Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1974, JTA Inc.) INSIDE. UJA: Nobody knows how many Jews in this country are managing to evade making contributions to the United Jewish Appeal—the fund-raising agency for hu- manitarian needs in Israel through the Jewish Agency= and for needy Jews in other Jewish communities abroad through the Joint Distribution Committee. It is estimated that two-thirds of American Jewry are conributors to the UJA, with a third shirking their Jewish humanitarian responsibilities. The UJA is now embarking on an effort to identify them and reach them. It decided to start a special mass campaign, the ultimate goal of which is to receive a maximum response from every po- tential Jewish contributor in the United States. Lay and professional leaders of the Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds throughout the country are expected to use all their resources, imagination and creaivity to make this effort a success. UJA leadership is realizing that such a mass campaign for broadening the base of the fund-raising drivle around the country cannot be effective unless it becomes a "massive campaign" which galvanizes a community. A variety of programs and new techniques for constructive activity in this direction is now being worked out by the UJA and the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds in co- operation with local federations. Many communities already have thousands of non- contributors on their current lists as well as low-end givers —contributors of less than $100. They regularly solicit them twice a year through the mails. This experience has proven to be only marginally successful with mixed results. The national UJA is therefore undertaking a direct mail pilot program using the lists voluntarily provided by a number of larger communities. In projecting a Third Seder for every Jewish commu- nity in the country, the UJA, this Passover, will introduce into Jewish homes two innovations. One is a special Hagga- da prepared by its Rabbinical Advisory Council, and the second is a Fifth Question. Every Jewish family will receive a centerpiece which is being specifically designed by UJA to be .placed on the Seder table on Passover. The - attractively designed center- piece 'has as its main purpoge the presentation of the Fifth Question which is related to Israel's needs and JeWish identity. The text of the Fifth Question reads: "Why is this night of Passover, in the year when Jewish freedom was, threatened by the Yom Kippur War, different from all other nights?" The answer is: "Tonight as we celebrate freedom, our Seder must be a symbol of solidarity with the Jewish people, a link with Jews everywhere and a demonstration of support for Jewish survival in Israel and throughout the world." All rabbis throughout the "country will receive a com- munique concerning the Fifth Question. They will he asked to communicate its concept to their congregations. Others too will be urged to mobilize and sensitize all segments of the community to the Fifth Question. Supplementing the centerpiece will be a series of other materials which also have the Fifth Question as their theme, including- radio and television spots, posters, window stickers, buttons—all aiming to make the Fifth Question a rallying point for the entire Jewish community. In the period between Passover and the Third Seder on - Israel's Independence Day, the UJA leadership and the leaders of the local communities will intensify the mass campaign to reach every member of the Jewish community, and to heighten the consciousness of the link between American Jewry and Israel. RAMAT GAN—The Inter- national Red Cross 'in Gen- eva, has notified Rector Menachem Zevi Kaddari of Bar-Ilan University that its negotiations with Israel and Syria regarding Israeli pris- oners of war was continuing, but that it considered the fate of the Israeli prisoners and the Syrian civilians displaced by the October War as "equally important." The message came in re- sponse to a cable sent sev- eral days ago by Bar-Ilan's rector, Prof. Kaddari, on be- half of the university's sen- ate, protesting the failure of the International Red Cross to condemn Syria's refusal to turn over a list of the pris- oners and permit the Red Cross to visit them. T h e Bar-Ilan university senate also criticized the Red Cross for speaking up late and then only "half-heartedly in muffled tones, condemn- ing the Syrian o u t r a g e s against Israeli prisoners of war equally with Israel's re- . Names of War Dead to Be Published TEL AVIV (JTA) — The names of Israeli soldiers who were killed from the start of the Yom Kippur War through Feb. 12 will be compiled in a "Sefer Hakedo-shim," book of the fallen, to be published within three weeks. The "Sefer Inkedoshim" had been previously used in Central and Eastern Europe by Jewish, communities after a pogrom. This is the first time such a booklet is being issued in Israel. Up to now the names were listed in newspapers. But some argued that news- papers were not the proper place since they are used for packing, or wrapping or ust thrown away. After sending a question- Children's Literature Center Due in Israel Red Cross Claims Issue of POWs Relates to Displaced Civilians NY Poll Hits Soviet Trade, Arms to Israel WASHINGTON (JTA) — Rep. Samuel S. Stratton (D., NY)_ has reported that re- plies to the annual question- naire he had distributed in mid-December in his Con- gressional District showed that about two out of three respondents oppose extending military assistance to Israel and 4-1 are against giving President Nixon authority to adjust U.S. tariffs to boost U.S. commerce with - the Soviet Union. Stratton said in a statement that he had sent a 10-point questionnaire to some 161,000 households in Albany, Schenectady and Amsterdam in upstate New York with a population 'of 467,189, ac- cording to the 1970 census. There are about 18,600 Jews in the three cities. To the question, "Do you favor furnishing military as- sistance to Israel?" 31.9 per- cent replied yes, 50 per cent no, and 8.2 per cent were undecided, Stratton reported. On the question, "Do you favor giving the President wide powers to raise and lower tariffs to pr o m o t e greater trade with Russia?" 19 per cent replied yes, 75.2 per cent no and 8.8 per cent undecided. Stratton voted for the $2,2,000,000,000 emergency aid program for Israel and, being a co-sponsor of the Mills- Vanik proposal, voted for barring U.S. trade benefits and credits to the Soviet Union until it relaxes its emigration restrictions. naire to the bereaved fami- lies, it was decided to print the names in a booklet which will be available at post of- fices, public institutions, li- braries and Israeli missions abroad. The booklet will in- clude names of 2,328 soldiers killed. Only 32 families have asked that their fallen rela- tives not be published in- the When you cannot get a booklet. compliment in any other way, There will be also a list of 126 missing soldiers on the pay yourself one. — Mark southern front (18 families of Twain. MIAs have requested they not be listed). The soldiers missing on the Syrian front will not be included. There are 80 MIAs on the Syrian front who are pre- sumably held by Syrians as POWs. tie666 fusal to permit the return of Syrian civilians to -the war zone." In its reply signed by Dr. Eric Martin, president of the International Red Cross, the organization said: "ICRC considers any violation Gen- eva Conventions serious whether third or fourth con- vention. Public condemnation by ICRC has never been a means of achieving its ob- jective. P 1 i g s h t of Israeli prisoners of war is considered one of most important. Ef- forts continuing. Application Geneva Convention •for prO- tection civilians and occupied territories considered equally important. Overtures to Is-. raeli government will con- tinue." JERUSALEM— The David Yellin Hebrew Teachers Col- lege in Bet Hakerem is in- itiating steps in the develop- ment of a children's litera- ture center which will be related to the library and teacher education program of the college. The college foresees the center being used for sym- posia where educators will come to analyze and resolve problems inherent in teach- ing children's literature. appeals to the Syrian Arab Republic to recognize the right of human dignity for all mankind created in the image of God and cease pro- longing the agony of the prisoners' families and the prisoners themselves by re- leasing the names of the prisoners still alive, and per- mitting communications be- tween them, their families, the Red Cross, and the Classifieds Get Quick Res "United Nations." POTTER MOVING & STORAGE CO. * Catholics to Present Statement on POWs NEW YORK (JTA)—Father Joseph G. Konrad and Rabbi Bruce K. Cole of the Catho- lic-Jewish Relations Commit- tee, sponsored by the Dio- cese of Brooklyn, the largest Roman Catholic diocese in the United States, and the Bnai Brith Anti-Defamation League, left for Jerusalem to present to the Israel For eign Ministry, a statement in support of the Israeli prison- ers of war in Syria. The statement, released at ADL headquarters, declared that "the Catholic-Jewish Re- lations Committee, in the name of God and humanity, One of Allied Van Lines Largest Haulers 1300 N. Campbell Road Royal Oak 2253 Cole Street Birmingham LI 1-3313 Phone 557-7177 - MI 4-4613. By appointment only E ALIBU-R Men's Hair Styling Rochelle Joe - Bruglio Manicurist Available 17300 W. 10 Mile Road, Trojan Bldg., East of Southfield-Road Tuesday - Saturday 8-5 A new Buick, Opel, or Honda car from Tamaroff Buick is just the thing to cure the blahs of winter. 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