THE DETRO IT JEW ISH NEWS—Friday, Fe bruary 5, 1960-8 810,08E000 Reclamation Allocations Voted by Claims Against Germany Parley AMSTERDAM, (JTA)—A budget of $10,081.000 for 1960 disbursements was approved at the closing session of the board of directors of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. The budget, as proposed by Jacob Blaustein, senior vice- president, and approved by the board, includes an allocation of $7,781.241 for relief and re- habilitation of victims of Naz- ism; and $1,852,350 for recon- struction of cultural and:educa- tional institutions destroyed during the Nazi regime. In the relief and rehabilita- tion portion of the budget are included grants to organizations aiding needy victims of Nazism in South American and Austra- lia; and allocations to organiza- tions in 30 countries aiding about 125,000 beneficiaries. The cultural and educational grants will aid the reconstruction of Jewish schools, talmudic semin- aries and academies, including also appropriations for scholar- ships, research, fellowships, doc- umentation centers, and events commemorating the catastrophes for which the Nazis were re- sponsible. Blaustein warned the con- ference that Jewish communi- ties throughout the world must plan to shoulder their own welfare needs entirely in the near future, since the monies allocated to the con- ference from West German reparation funds will termin- ate in 1963. This year. as in the past, Blaustein reported, there were about 400 applications for funds, totaling requests from 'Jewish organizations in 30 coun- tries for more than $20,000,000. Only about $50.000,000 more remains to be paid to the con- ference in the next five years, Blaustein pointed out. He ex- pressed the hope that the Jew- ish organizations around the world, serving the needy vic- tims of Nazism "will manage, during the coming half-decade, to bridge the gap between local income and expenditures." Moses A. Leavitt, treasurer of the Claims Conference, reported that the conference disbursed $10,122,239 in 1959. Of the total, he said, $5,850,000 went toward a program of capital invest- ments for buildings in Jewish communities around the world. The conference distributed $1,795,000 for cultural and edu- cational reconstruction, includ- , ing $124,000 for research and International Bnai Brith Council Decides on Offices in Six Lands AMSTERDAM, (JTA) — The Bnai Brith International Coun- cil, at its first meeting here, announced plans for the estab- lishment of six offices for re- search in contemporary Jewish affairs and for the promotion of greater cultural interchange be- tween Jewish communities in various parts of the world. Philip M. Klutznick, chairman of the International Council, said that except for a New York office which will have primary responsibility for Bnai Brith activity as a Jewish organiza- tion affiliated with the United Nations, the other five offices will conduct negotiations with the leaders of the Jewish com- munities for the proposed pro- gram. It was indicated that three of the offices would be in Europe, one in Israel and the fifth in Latin America. It was recom- mended that a disbursement of $840,000 be made from the reparations funds the organiza- tion received last year from West Germany. The funds will be used prim- arily for Jewish educational and cultural programs. The largest single allocation of 5425,000 I , will be used in Israel. Pro- grams in Latin America and Europe will each receive $100,000. Programs in Great Britain and Ireland will get $60,000 and $20,000 will be ex- ' pended in Australia. I WW1 the exception of Israel, the funds will be matched on a dollar for dollar. basis with ; money raised by local Bnai Brith sources. The Council, in a resolution, . denounced the Arab boycott as a "policy of aggression against Israel arid economic warfare against Jews throughout the world." The resolution followed a review of boycott activities by Label A. Katz, president of Bnai Brith. He said that the Arab states had been encour- aged in use of the boycott by the "nonchalant attitude of many persons and governments" toward it. The resolution urged that "governments and business en- terprises resist the boycott and denounce its immoral interna- tional behavior." The boycott, the resolution stated. violated all principles of amity among, members of the family of na- tions. I U. S., German Groups Agree to Step Up Anti-Nazi Education AMSTERDAM. (JTA) — A sponsibility" in West Germany program for intensifying West German public school educa- tional activities so that German youth may understand "the his- torical truth about the horrors which the Nazi racist policies brought to the world." was pro- posed in a joint statement is- sued by the Jewish Labor Com- mittee of the United States and the Social Democratic Party of West Germany. The program was agreed upon after a conference here between Adolph Held, chairman of the JLC, and Dr. Adolf Arndt, who represented the ex- ecutive board of the Social Dem- ocratic Party in Germany. After discussing the recent outbreaks of anti-Semitic manifestations in Germany. Held and Dr. Arndt agreed on a program, calling for: • , 1. The stepping up of anti- Nazi educational activities in West Germany's elementary and high schools; 2. Removal from posts of "important political re-' 16th Annual Jewish Music Festival to Begin on Feb. 13 commemoration projects. Included among the capital investment projects on which Mr. Leavitt reported were com- munity center in Brussels, Bel- gium; a community center, synagogue and homes for the aged in Denn- ark; community centers in Grenoble, Lyons and Strasbourg, France; a mental hospital, synagogue and com- munity center in Holland; a home for the aged in Florence, Italy; and a community center and synagogue in Madrid, Spain. Dr. Nahum Goldmann, president of the conference, expressed gratification over the acceleration of German settlement of indemnification claims during the second half of 1959. But Dr. Goldmann expressed "serious doubt" as to whether the indemnifica- tion debt to Jewish victims of Nazism will be repaid in full by the March 31, 1963, dead- line for such completion, set by the West German law on the subject. Dr. Goldmann commended the speed with which West_ Ger- many is meeting its reparations obligations to Israel. Last year, for the seventh year in succes- sion. Dr. Goldman said, Ger- many has met its schedule of reparations payments to Israel as agreed upon in 1952. During 1959, he reported, Israel re- ceived from Germany goods and services valued at $60,714,085, bringing the amount since that program was launched, to a total valued at $452,380,152. Indemnification payments made during the past decade, the conference president re- ported, have reached a total of $1,660,411,428 as of September 1959. He expressed on behalf of the Conference, "profound disappointment" over the fail- ure of the German states to take steps toward the indemni- fication of victims. of Nazism from Rumania and Hungary. At stake, the figures show, are the claims of some 40,000 claimants from Romania and about 1,000 from Hungary. The 16th annual nationwide hood As Reflected in Jewish celebration of Jewish Music Music." Festival, to be observed under the auspices of the Jewish Music Council of, the National LIFE UNDERWRITER Jewish Welfare BOard, opens on EQUITABLE LIFE OF IOWA the Sabbath of Song, Feb. 13, Consultation on ALL it was announced by Rabbi Life Insurance Emanuel Green, Council chair- Home Phone Bus. Phone man. Theme of the month-long VE 8-9846 UN 1-4965 Festival is "Peace and Brother- RICHARD J. HEWN RICHARD avici nursin g Wome PROVIDES PROFESSIONAL CARE FOR THE FOLLOWING • Terminal Cancer • Postoperatives • Cardiac • Fractures • All Chronically III Long Term Patients • Senile .,::( :-. -special Rates -to Doctors Referrals The David Nursing Home was establiShed in 1947 at 5505 Second Blvd. The new location is on one floor and is considered one of the most modern nursing homes in the state. All facilities for medical care available. Nurses on duty 24 hours a day to ensure our patients the finest of care while they are guests of the home. 13241 W. CHICAGO (Lif--LRENFEILD)TE 4-6670 SERVICE STATION -*COLOR 4.- BLACK 8. WHITE Admiral MOTOROLA Stereophonic Conversions Old Phonographs Converted to Stereo DAY`SUNDAY SERVIC E.-Z- CREDIT TV- SERVICE RADIO • NI4/ • PHONO AUTO RADIO SERVICE SERVICE STATION MUNTZ PHILCO (4) EMERSON CITY • • • • • Dumont • Silvertone MagnovOX •Westinghouse V-M • Crosle7 Hot Point • Olympic Airline •Vebcor TV -Rentals "STNC I: 1933" Written Dexter Sales & Service Guarantee 11565 DEXTEX• LICENSE N..216 on ALL Repairs TE. 4-2858 =" PHONE REGISTRATION FOR SPRING TERM = Now Accepted by BETH YEHUDAH SCHOOLS Dedicated to Intensive and Traditional Jewish Education ALL DAY SCHOOLS FOR BOYS and GIRLS: Central Day School Hebrew Academy Dexter and Sturtevant WE 1-0203 Nine Mile and Kipling, Oak Park — LI 8-8020 Nursery thru High School Nursery thru 3rd Grade — especially from positions as "members or advisers" to the Bonn Government — such indi- viduals as may have been "the intellectual initiators" of the anti-Semitic manifestations "and have led the way and supported Nazi ideology." The two leaders pledged con- tinuance of joint efforts by the Jewish Committee and the West German labor movement toward eradication of "every vestige of racism and neo-Nazism from the West German Republic." AFTERNOON SCHOOL NETWORK FOR BOYS and GIRLS: American's $1,000,000 Gift to Build Nazareth Stadium NEW AFTERNOON HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM FOR BOYS AND GIRLS — 13 AND UP TEL AVIV, (JTA) — An anonymous American donor has given the Nazareth municipality a gift of $1,000,000 for the con- struction of a stadium and swim- ming pool in the town for the use of "Christians. Moslems and Jews." The stadium and the pool will be built in a natural amphitheater east of the town. Northwest Hebrew School Livonia Hebrew School 17376 Wyoming UN 4-9776 Botsford School Livonia Dexter Center Bnai Israel Torah Center 12305 Dexter WE 1-0203 13855 W. 9 Mile Rd., Oak Park LI 8-8020 Spring Term — Beginners Classes in All Branches Transportation Furnished to All Branches For Information Call Each Branch or MAIN OFFICE W E 1 -0203