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August 25, 1961 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1961-08-25

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

Austrians Arrest Nazi

VIENNA, (JTA) — Police at
Graz have arrested a former
Nazi SS officer, Stephan Rojko,
on charges of having murdered
"a number" of Jews in the The-
resienstadt concentration camp
during 1944 and 1945.
Czechoslovak authorities re-
cently requested the extradition
of Rojko to Czechoslovakia.

"One of the
Year's Best!"

Marshall to Open
Lecture Series
at Bnai Moshe

Brigadier • General S. L. A.
Marshall, military analyist and
editorial writer for the Detroit
News, will open a series of fall
p r o grams
sponsored by
the Bnai Mo-
she Men, '
C l

•-



ne
—N.Y. Times —Herald Tr
view
N.Y. Post —Saturday

6 6

**** FOUR

Ballad- of a
Soldier

Also

Satre's Adaptation Arthur Miller's

"THE CRUCIBLE"

Simone Signoret - Yves Montand
- PHONE OPEN
8664020 6:45
Adults $1.00
Students 75c
17730 JOHN R, No. of 6 Mile

ART

\ PANCAKE
HOUSE

IN---.44011111111

1.5 0

1,3ve

or e isn
pa ncakes

at
rega- Gen. Marshall
xiliaries are planning to
the men in hearing Gen.
arshall discuss: "Israel, The.
Middle East and Some Side-
lights of the Eichmann Trial."
The general public is invited.
Admission is free.
Nate Sharon will be chair-
man for the evening.

*

Marshall to Address
JNF Breakfast at
Convention of ZOA

The highlight of the Jewish
National Fund breakfast, Sept.
ssions of the
1, at one o
onist Or-
conventi • of the
of Americ opening
ganizat .
aldorf-Astoria otel in
at th
ill be
ork on Aug. 30
Ne
dress by the mili y ana-
and lecturer; Gen 1 S. L.
Marshall.
r. Promi
e other
e break-
speakers
hiff, JNF
fast wll
ernard A.
prest
an of the
, and Mendel
tive director of

arshall's close iden-
ener
with the State of Is-
tific .
ates back to 1956, when
he flew to Israel sei'Ve
the Sinai Campa

Dinner

DARBY'

Is a real tr at

yer
300

Visit Our
SKYLIG
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d

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v arxties

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A Pleasure

g'ervietrioer! ei.eryowiray

COTEd NUCc1.7

r"‘:AKE JAHSCF,Ei:

Resv. UN. 2-6742

SEVEN MILE at WYOMING

PAUL NEWMAN — EVA MARIE SAINT

1->CC3113US

'Jewish Peoplehood' I Teheran Center Is 'Beam of Jewish
Topic of Symposium Culture in Moslem Community
at ZOA Convention There are about 80,000 Jews minded youth in Teheran, has

The 64th annual convention of
the Zionist Organization of Amer-
ica, which will be held Aug. 31-
Sept. 3, at Hotel Waldorf Astoria,
New York City, will highlight a
symposium on the meaning of
Jewish Peoplehood with the par-
ticipation of eminent scholars
and spiritual leaders.

Judge Ira G. Kaufman,
president of the Zionist Or-
ganization of Detroit, an-
nounced that Morris M. Ja•
cobs, Dr. Bernard Weston and
Leonard L. Radner will repre-
sent the ZOD at the national
ZOA convention.

The symposium, to be held at
the Oneg Shabbat session Sept.
1, will be presided over by Rabbi
Max Nussbaum of Hollywood,
and will have speakers Rabbi
Arthur Hertzberg, author of "The
Zionist Idea," and Dr. Oskar K.
Rabinowitz, author of "Herzl,
Architect of the Balfour Decla
tion."
on
Dedicated to theme
ewish
Heritage—American a
day ses-
Democracy," the f
will fea-
sions of the conve
outstanding
ture an array
ionist lea • -
American and
bo 'A
ers, leaders
by
political part' and gree
Israel Amb ador to th
an. -
Avraham H
• th
er,
pr ide
Max Bre
ZOA, will eliver the ke
e op= ing
address at
night.
the conventi on Thurs

Request x ension
of Claims Deadline
for Victims of Nazism

GENEVA, (JTA)—The West
Germari government was asked
to -extend the deadline for fi •
of claims for restitution
ugees who suffered los
to their nationality.
forwar
The request was
neva re
by . Benevishiti,
we of the wish Agen-
at United
y, at conf ere
eadquarte
Nations uropea
on mea of im ment•
W
betw
agreem
ted N
the
many
ef-
for
mmissio
h
compensa n of these
es
i ctims.
the present time, only
e refugees are eligible to
stitution who filed claims be-
fore Oct. 1, 1953. Benevishti
pointed out that the 1953 dea
line excluded refugees w
could not register their s
until after 1953, due to t
detention in countries d
ed by the Communis
His proposal was s
by ' • Curwe
ritish
ative of t
y the repres • tive
for Aid. to Refug s, as w
High ission . The
delegate t d the . nfer ce
org ha already ad
aking a simi
e

nd in the Law of
f o
th Pro • is or the Sages a
s ng which thou canst
ha
fast by
erstan
no
e the
tt
the faith
own wan f in-
f t to t
ner
•lligen . lace it in a
er-
of your cart for futur
re-
ation, ut despise
ble
ligio • ecau• th
mat-
rsta o
to u
i DES
M •
ter."

FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES

COMPLETE and

UNCHANGED

LAST WEEK

Unlimited
Parking
LI 3-5800.

Evenings, 8:15 only — Doors
open 7:15; Matinee Wednes-
days, Saturday, Sunday at 2—
Doors open 1:15.
Admission: Evenings and
Sunday, $1.25; Matinees, ex-
cept Sunday, 90c, Children 50c
at All Times.

RADIO CITY

WOODWARD
at 9 Mile Rd.

living in Iran, nearly half of
them in Teheran, according to
a report prepared by .P. Glikson
for publication in the Jewish
Journal of Sociology in behalf of
the World JeWish Congress.
Most Persian Jews trace their
origins back to the Exile in Baby-
lon though there is an admixture
of later arrivals from Russia,
Baghdad and Germany.
Their economic and social
structure reflects that existing
in the country as -a whole: there
are a few enormously rich
merchants, bankers and profes-
sional people, but the vast ma-
jority of Jews in Teheran, Isfa-
han, Shiraz, Abadan and other
provincial towns eke out their
livings as small traders, artisans
and middle men. It is estimated
that about 20 per cent of the
Jews in Persia live on charity.
the last 10 years, the
abir Cultural Center,
Kores
group of Zionist-
t up b

SEPT. 1

-

10, DETROIT

been the focal point of Jewish
activity in Persia and made a
major contribution to rejuvenat-
ing this ancient community by
instilling in the young generation
understanding and knowledge of
Judaism, of world Jewry and of
Israel.
Reports received by the Cul-
tural Department of the World
Jewish Congress describe the
center as a "beam of Jewish cul-
ture in Asia, among a Moslem
community." Its establishment
and functioning have been made
possible by the consistently
sympathetic attitude shown by
the Persian authorities, the re-
port states, but there is an urg-
ent need to open many more
centers both in Teheran and in
the provinces.

An Omaha, Neb., ordinance
makes it illegal for two people
at a dinner table to use the
same fingerbowl.

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CARRY-OUT DINNERS

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ming Pool
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ocking Facilities •

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ON THE RIVER ROAD M29 between Marysville and St. Clair

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