"The Wisdom of the East — chairman and secretary of the Connections and Contrasts" will Conference, on the Rabbinic open the third annual Confer- aspect. ence of the Department of Near. A discussion will f o 11 o w Eastern Languages and Litera- among members of the panel tures May 7-9 at Wayne State and audience. As part of the University. Borman Near Eastern Lecture Under the chairmanship of S e r i e s, the evening discus- Prof Ephraim A. Speiser, world- sions Sunday and Monday are famous orientalist and chairman open to the public without Goetze of Yale University and a talk on the "Epic of Gilga- mesh" by Prof. Speiser. Dr. G. Merrill Lenox, Direc- tor of the Detroit and Michigan Council of Churches, will pre- side at noon luncheon and Fr. registration fee. At 10 a.m. Monday in the PROF. IL L. GINSBERG . of the department of Semitics at the University of Pennsyl- vania, the conference will focus on "The Literary Heritage of the Near East." Participants in the opening session, to be held 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Community Arts Auditorium, will be Prof. Sam- uel N. Kramer of the Univer- sity of Penn- sylvania, with the Sumerian viewpoint; Prof. John A. Wilson, direc- tor of the Ori- ental Institute, Prof- Kramer University of Chicago, Egyptian heritage; Prof: Harold L. Ginsberg of the Jewish Theological Seminary, Biblical; Prof. Franz Rosenthal of Yale University, Aramaic and Arabic; and Prof. Abram Spiro, WSU Near Eastern department McGregor Memorial Conference Center, Profs. Kramer and Gins- berg will discuss, respectively, Sumerian and Ugaritic "Epics." Following a panel-audience dis- cussion, luncheon will be served. C. Allen Harlan, presi- dent of the Harlan Electric Co., will preside, and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Carrol F. Deady of the Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit, will deliver the invocation. Winfred Harb is o'n, vice- president of academic adminis- tration at WSU; Leonard Kasl member of the Detroit Bo of Education; Williain V. Ma acting associate dean of WSU College of Liberal and Drs. Speiser and Spiro i 11 discuss "Near Eastern Stu at Wayne State University." Following lunehebn, at 2.30, "Mightier Than the Pyramids," a lecture on Egyptian literature, will be delivered by Prof. Wil- son. "Elusive Aspects of Biblical Literature" will be discussed at the public lecture in the Community Arts Auditorium 8:30 p.m. Monday. Prof. John L. McKenzie, S.J.; of Loyola University will speak on "The Poetry of the Old Testament" and Profs. Ginsberg and Spei- ser will discuss "Wisdom Theme s" and "J," respec- tively. The opening Tuesday ses- sion, 10 a.nt, in the McGregor C en t e r • will be - centered on "From the Land of Nimrod — Aspects of Akkadian Litera- ture." A general appraisal will be rendered by Prof. Albrecht Difficulties Beset Moroccan Jews CASABLANCA, (JTA)—Jew- Hopes among some ele- ish students in Morocco were ments of Moroccan Jewish reported to have been the re- leadership for a Government statute giving _ M o r o c c a n cent victims- of a new act of Jewry a position similar to discrimination - in a competition that of the Moslem commu- to send three students from nity in relations with the Morocco to study electronics Government were also be- lieved to have been dashed in France. The contest was organized• by by the recent death of Em- an electrical energy unit on the barrek Bekkai, Moroccan Min- basis that the _three students ister of the Interior. The Minister, who had p with the highest, grades would be sent to France. When the sided at the Congress of Je results showed that the top Communities in Rabat rec three contestants were all Jews, had declared himself re the initial promise was forgot- grant such status to the ten and three Moslem candi- can Jewish communities. dates, who ranked fourth, fifth peared unlikely that a su and sixth in the competition, re- to the post would appr ceived the study trips instead. project. The decision to ignore the If 'a new Minister is three top winners because they from the Istiqlal party, were Jewish was reported to has claimed the Ministry have followed publication of long time, the project was se protests by Moroccan news- certain to be rejected. M. Bek- papers which charged that as kai had also committed himself soon as the three Jewish stu- to granting passports to Jews dents finished their studies, who wanted them. If the new they would go to Israel to stay. Interior Minister is an Istiqlal A typical Arab newspaper com- representative,. Moroccan Jews ment was that "Morocco must seeking passports seem likely not prepare Israel's technical to experience many difficulties. experts." The Moroccan opposition It was also reported here that newspaper, L'Avant Gard e, twenty Jews alegedly trying to which expresses the views of emigrate to Israel were arrested the Moroccan Union of 'Labor, by Moroccan police, April 15, came out editorially in opposi- at Melilla, in Northern Morocco, tion to the proposal for special according to a report printed status. The newspaper said that here by Al Adam, ..the newspaper Moroccan Jews should have organ of the Istiqlal Party. their own organization only for The paper demanded that the social and religious purposes. Government take "severe The newspaper also lauded the measures to punish the guilty," declaration by a number of and that Morocco prosecute Jewish intellectuals and senior "the leaders of Zionism." Al Alam also stated that the leader government officials who "com- of the arrested group of Jews bat anti-Semitism together with had escaped arrest. Zionist activity." . anti-Semitic teacher who fled from West Germany to avoid a one-year jail term for saying publicly that not enough Jews had been gassed, was en route to Tripoli. Zind was pla Italian ship had hi since Nap lea to wa sail A lower d that his West Germany. When the Rome Court of Cassation, Italy's high- est court; upheld the lower court, Zind was released from jail. He reportedly had been en route to a teaching job in when he was arrested in OR HAVEN SING HOME 07 South Lafayette Royal Oak Across from Detroit Zoo 24 Hour Nursing Care Take All Medical Cases LI 8-6644 SHERWOOD AUTO SERVICE E ON ALL MAKES AND FOREIGN CARS OMATIC TRANSMISSIONS A ■ comp e_ ROF. JOHN A. WILS i N . Ricksfor St. Matthe% copa will deliveA ocati "Intert tame al E c h o e " will be d cussed by Rab • ris Adler, of Co aarey Zedek, on "S cism in the mud"; Very Rev. Dr. Robert H. Whittaker, director of the School of Theology (Epis- copal), on "Demythologizing of Scripture and Its Problems"; Rev. Dr. Walter Markowicz, professor, Sacred Heart Seminary (R.C.), on "Early Near Eastern Christian Monasticism"; and Dr. Speiser, on "Crises in the Bible and Today." The final session beginning at 2:30 p.m. will be "Neighbors and Heirs," a discussion of Hit- tite and Arabic literature by Prof. Goetze and Rosenthal. Closing remarks will be de- livered by Dr. Randall M. Whaley, vice-president for grad- uate studies and research at WSU. Registrations for the confer- ence are now being accepted. Checks for $5. per participant and $2 per luncheon should be made payable to Wayne State University. ailing, Rebuilding, Exchanging Wheel Service—Balancing & Aligning BRAKES REPAIRED - r • Brakes and Power Steering Specialists Use Genuine Parts • All Work Guaranteed CALL UN 2-2200 FOR APPOINTMENT If Busy Call UN 2-9714 20522 LIVERNOIS at 8 MILERD. I-1 IT 3D S 0 1 ■ T ' Bonn Drops Charges of Ukraine Atrocities - BONN, (JTA)—The investiga- tion against the Ukrainian SS bat- talion, "Bergma which for- •• mer Ref Iinister Oberla er had b • Ner, has en closed, according to an a 'uncement by the Bonn pros- ution office. The Association of Vic Nazism had filed charges ag nst the battalio accus bers of. c ittin Russia pr no ch ender resigned in- ist st last May his ac- tivities in the period had become a s of widespread conten nd debate both in ermany and abroad. JFK to Ask Extension for Civil Rights Body WASHINGTON, (JTA) — An extension ' of the life of the Civil Rights Commission, sched- uled to end its activities in November, will be asked of Congress by the Kennedy Ad- ministration. The Commission was created in 1957 for a two-year term and was extended in 1959 by Con- gress for another two years. It was indicated that the Adminis- tration has always assumed that the Commission would be con- tinued and that civil rights of- ficials in the Administration simply had not yet gotten around to putting a request before Congress. e t ANT- Mgr ANs„ THE' LAST OF THE JUST stirring novel by Andre' Schwarz-Bart winner of the Prix Goncourt Lauded by French critics as "one of the most important books to appear in our time" --- The Last of the Just is a drama of Jewish suffering, martyrdom and trans- figuration. Translated from the French by Stephen Becker — this book grips the reader with its warmth, simplicity, humor and understanding of people. A book to read, discuss, remember. 4.95. Get your copy now in Hudson's Book Shop: Down- town, Mezzanine; Northland and Eastland. 9 - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, April 28, 1961 `Wisdom of the East-Connections and Contrasts' German Anti-Semite Ushered Out of Italy NAPLES, (JTA)—Professor offense was a political one and Will Open Third Near Eastern Conference at WSU Ludwig Zind of Offenbach, the refused to extradite him to