THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—Friday, January 2, 1959-22 17-A-La1S FOR SALE 45-BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES CHERRYLAWN near Margareta. For sale or will build to suit. Call UN 1-7742. 20 - OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT ATTORNEY WILL SHARE office with young attorney. Only $22.50 per month. Apply 1202 David Stott Bldg., afternoons, WO. 3-6060 or MI. 6-1904. WANTED PARTNER With $ . 8,000 for manufacturing new proven wanted household item. To be sold in U.S.A. Item retails for 59c. Write Box 280, The Jewish News. 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 35, Mich. 50-BUSINESS CARDS 35 - INSTRUCTION HEBREW, Yiddish. English teacher, Bar Mitzvah specialist, David Horowitz, TO. 5-3652. ,. BAR MITZVAH. Hebrew Bible, Yiddish, English. Call experienced teacher, WE. 4-1793. EXPERIENCED Bar Matzvah. He- brew, Bible teacher. Call, TO 9-0686. ATTENTION! Spanish classes start January. Special rates for groups. Call WE 4-8573. 40-EMPLOYMENT Fields Employment Couples, Cooks, Maids, Chauffeurs, Janitors, Caretakers, Porters DAY or WEEK ALL CITY MOVING AND STORAGE CO. Large, Modern Vans. Com- plete Moving Service. No Job Too Large or Too Small. 14948 MEYERS VE. 8-7660 FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. FURNITURE repaired and refin- ished. Free estimates. WE 3-2110. LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY SEP.VICE Alsc Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 4-4587 TR 3-7770 PERSON with own car to drive children to school 2 afternoons a week. 4-6 p.m. DI. 1-3816. WILL TRAIN COLLEGE MAN FOR SOCIAL SERVICE WORK TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO FULL OR PART TIME . . . Must be neat in appearance, clean cut, good moral charac- ter. Courses in humanities de- sirable but not essential. $2.50 hourly. Candidate should be single, approximately six feet tall, from age 21 to 25 and willing to learn. Send complete resume, include references and snapshot if available. Box 279 The Jewish News, 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit 35, Mich. ARE YOU THIS MAN? Are You or Do You Want to Be A Successful Salesman? Experienced in retail furni- ture, clothing, shoes, men's wear or insurance helpful This Is What It Takes! Late Model Car Irregular Hours Drive Within 50 Miles of Detroit Work Eves. 5 Days Morn. and Afts. on Sat. & Sun. Hard Work and A Desire to Better Yourself This Is What We Offer! We train you for 2 weeks. You will make $7,000 per yr. up. Can make up to $20,000 a yr. We turn all leads daily. No service or collection problems. Chance for advancement. Work for 50 yr. old family firm and one of the largest compa- nies of its kind in the coun- try. If Your Are This Man and You Want to Work Call VA 2-2205 for App't. JEWISH SECULAR school seeks qualified Yiddish Teacher for Sunday Mornings and 2 afternoons a week. Excellent salary. Call DI. 1-3816. Call Reeve's Employment Service IF YOU NEED GOOD DO- MESTIC HELP. DAY OR WEEK. LI 4-5138 40-A-EMPLOYMENT WANTED GOOD singer available for all oc. casions. Reasonable. TO. 5-3652. AMERICAN-POLISH speaking girl wants housework by day or week. Dependable, trustworthy. UN. 2-1017. HOME NURSING, HOUSEKEEPER, will baby sit. TO. 5-9777. RELIABLE MAN with chauffer's license wishes work. Delivery, janitor, etc. Will accept any rea- sonable wage. TW. 1-1147. UN 1-5075 A-1 PAINTING, decorating. Rea- sonable prices. Free estimates. VI 2-1026, BR 3-6271. CARPENTER, all kinds of altera- tions. Reasonable. Call WE. 3-0815 or WE. 5-1761. CARPENTER WORK of all kinds- Porch, floors, steps, kitchen cabi- nets, doors, panelling. Work my- self. UN 4-1897. EXPERIENCED Painting and Deco- rating, reasonable rates, immedi- ate service. TO. 8-6668. EXPERIENCED dressmaker willing to go to your home or my home. Alterations for adults and chil- dren. Call TO 5-2929. Weizmann Guard Jailed as Spy TEL AVIV (JTA)-A guard at the Weizmann Institute of Science at Rehovot has been arrested and will shortly be brought to trial on charges of espionage, police officials an- nounced here this week. The name of the arrested man was not revealed. The suspect, who has been under detention since Novem- ber, will face two charges: passing information to a foreign agent with the inten- tion of violating the security of the state, and passing in- formation without authorization with intent to harm the secur- ity of the state. The first charge carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison, while the latter may bring up to a life term. The Weizmann Institute has a number of nuclear science projects in progress and, like other institutions of higher learning in Israel, is working on research contracts for the United States armed forces. The accused man has an 18-year-old son living in his country of origin. This young man is the child of his first marriage. In Israel, he lives with his second wife, a Polish Christian, and a ten-year-old son. Check Commons Candidate for Anti-Jewish Activity LONDON, (JTA) - Lord Hailsham, chairman of the Brit- ish Conservative Party, was re- ported making a personal in- quiry into charges that Major James Friend, a prospective Tory candidate for Commons from Bournemouth, has close links with the anti - Semitic League of Empire Loyalists and has engaged in anti-Semitic ac- tivities. Boxing Commissioner Abe Kotzen Dies at 61 Abe Kotzen, Michigan deputy boxing commissioner, died Dec. 30, at the age of 61. Mr. Kotzen, of 4017 Beuna Vista, in addition to his post on the boxing commission, also served on the Michigan State Prisons Jewish Chaplaincy Com- mission, and was a member of American Legion Julius Rosen- wald Post. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War I. He is survived by his wife, Bert; a son Allan Edward Kot- zen; and four sisters living in Nel,v York, Mrs. Sol Horn, Mrs. Zelda Novak, Mrs. Milton Schneider and Mrs. Max Posner. Services will be at noon to- day from Ira Kaufman Chapel, with burial at Machpelah Ceme- :ery. Moslem Court Rules Boy Is Premier's Son TEL AVIV, (JTA) - The claim of Avraham Maziliah, a Jewish boy living in an Israeli kibbutz, of being the grandson and sole heir of the late Nuri Pasha es-Said, assassinated for- mer Premier of Iraq, was up- held by a Moslem religious court in Jaffa. Nuri Pasha's widow has made an application to the High Court in London, seeking con- trol of the entire Nuri es-Said estate. The boy's relatives here entered a claim that he was the sole heir. They claim that Avra- ham was the son of a Jewish mother and Nuri's only son, Sabah. The Arab religious court in Jaffa, before whom attorney Max Seligman, of Tel Aviv, brought the case, heard wit- nesses and ruled in favor of the boy. Now Avraham's claim to being the sole heir of the mur- dered Iraqi Premier will be certified to the High Court in London. Hebrew Corner Strictly Confidential by PHINEAS J. BIRON . . Feuchtwanger Marginal Notes on writing. Lion Feuchtwanger wrote every day, not less than We met Feuchtwanger al- six hours. . . . His first draft most the first day of his ar- rival in the States. . . . We had corresponded with him while he was still in Europe during the interim period when the Nazis had released him and the American authorities were pon- dering whether to grant him refuge. . .. Eventually the late President F. D. Roosevelt in- structed the State Department to issue a visa and Lion Feuch- twanger came to America in 1941. . . . He was fragile look- ing, small in stature. . . . Even his face had the contours of a midget. . . . Yet his appearance was deceiving for the little Lion was strong physically. . . . He told us, as a matter of fact, that he followed a strict re- gime of physical training. . . . He was a methodical person. . . • His schedule called for early rising and the diet of an athlete. . . . His weight re- mained always the same. . . . Trim, lean, he was a bundle of energy. . . . He was eager to have his works published in Yiddish and so we arranged with the Jewish Morning Jour- nal to print his "Josephus" and "The Oppermanns" in serial form. . . . The financial con- sideration was far from im- pressive b u t Feuchtwanger liked the idea of being read in Yiddish. . . . The first interview, an exclu- sive one, we obtained while Feuchtwanger was in New York. . . . It was really a dou- ble interview for we had also invited author Lewis Browne and his charming blonde wife. . . . We had dinner at the Cafe Royal on Second Avenue, in New York's East Side. . . . Browne, who later committed suicide, was in a most jovial mood, entertaining us with stories about his student years was always written on pink paper. . . . His second on yel- low, if we remember correctly. . . . His final draft for the publisher was on white paper. . . In his household every- body was nervous until he reached the white paper stage. . . . Then he calmed down and his good humor returned. . . But during the pink and yellow phase s, Feuchtwanger was tense and demanded silence and permitted no interruptions. . . . No visitors. . . . He was a very meticulous craftsman. . . . His research, especially when he wrote his historical novels, took him Jonger than the actual writing. . . . Feuchtwanger had at one time, while still in Europe, written a slender volume on a series of conversations he had with Stalin. . . . This book was to plague him during his entire life. . . . Unless the U. S. Gov- ernment relented during the last few years, Feuchtwanger, we believe, was not granted his U. S. citizenship. . . . He never returned to Europe for he did not care to travel on his Ger- man passport. . . . From time to time we received a short note from him, always in his own handwriting, in which he answered questions we would poSe him in connection with his work. . . . He wanted to see his novel, "The • Opper- mans," dramatized for the stage. . . . We secured the co- operation of a playwright, but nothing came of it because Feuchtwanger did not approve of the dramatization. • . . He lived a rather retired social life, devoting himself to his literary work. . . . There can be no question that Lion Feuchtwanger will be remeni- at the Hebrew Union College. bered as a talented novelist, an . . . . Lion, in- a more serious accomplished story - teller, a •mood, asked a lot of questions Translation of Hebrew column. about Jewish life in this coun- most competent craftsman in Published by Brit Ivrit Clamit. the field of letters, both as a The State of Israel is one of try. . . • And then the two fiction writer and a critical authors compared notes on the few countries in the world where a man can go out of his,, their respective methods of essayist. front door (the entrance to his' house), built two-or three years ago and find signs of a house . T T• from seven thousand years ago. Almost everyday you can read in the newspapers about new 71)f- ? archeological discoveries. The distant past, about which we ,z741- ) Fr wrj _nr-r); have known only from books, is revealing its secrets and is oiwipr.)'? 1-)D4 nitovpn nivIti;1 arousing interest among all sec- tions (strata) of the people. 111. 1;1 Pown7? t7;1r,t ririp nt q'? rf,t,; t . One of the clearest signs of this interest is the gathering of .111rIVI-P7.?re 7 '?74 1.10z ? "tPrIte; '40 ;.T 17M irr; the Israel Exploration Society, 1 4r, 1 4 R 7?z?') it1"42 ; held this year in Safad. Thou- rniv r1r417r)r) sands of people of all ages and ninitpri ni-rp nn 1 717 n7tri7.1 , r) 7,4 '407? 11 '.1 tr4rb from all parts of the country streamed to Safad in order to - 1'p4 I1z,174 uvr4 participate in this interesting gathering. 147 rin it n44ins74 rTjt 'tiny This year the gathering was Past and Present 41=rn r-rozr-r • i 01.1J env nrlK devoted to the region of Galilee and especially to the various eras of the city of Salad, be- ginning with the Biblical era down to Safad in the War of Liberation. Special interest was aroused by the discussions of the im- portant excavations carried out in recent years in the ancient city of Hazor. This was an im- portant Cananite city in Galilee, and it fell into the hands of the Children of Israel in the thirteenth or twelfth century B.C.E. The archeologists are not unanimous about the period in which Hazor fell. Some say it fell in the period of Joshua, and others say in a later period. But on one point all the archeologists are agreed - that the broad public in Israel shows a very great interest in the history of its country. tv;:n ,Lr'n1 741vry n']174 rli"t?;r) "T'L? 7'7P4 nVti ,rpirrr,3 -)41ri7 n4rItzin nultps.? - ttilptp ,ionyt? lin?? P -. 1 nkt ;1'24 z ?) 114.P t? .1 ,;4; mr)vry,- . 1 rs,47.i,prr ririt7:5p4 77 ?T Pr1 R nt.7p : tt, ;1'1317 71.7r it nir4vryrj z. ptg ityr4 tt,:n n1.71 . 77 riIr ri tg O P 7.1 Trlr7 1.v? , r.)iirr:1171 irT;t:; nz?ix rVn n7r);:i ninnt# trznri inn rnt,.;ti nir;vr.)7.1 reP 7?'7 1 :r1V". nrrilr ri nn4 np;f. "itr.1 .131N r.'.477? 9r:)ntgr.I 17 (trptry row? !in; rai,Vri;) rry.,