THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, September 14, 1962 -- 12 lOth Anniversary of Reparations Pact Is Observed in Israel, West Germany JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The tenth anniversary of the signing, of the Israel-West German repa- rations agreement was marked here with a statement issued by Finance Minister Levi Eshkol, a special program broadcast by Kol Israel, the state radio network, and by editorials in the coun- try's leading newspapers. The statement by the Finance Minister — which was prepared prior to Eshkol's departure for Europe and the United States— said that the Bonn government had fully and precisely carried out the agreement in accordance with the declared aim to com- pensate for the material damage caused by Hitler and his crimi- nal regime. Participating speakers in the broadcast commemorating the anniversary included Dr. Na- hum Goldmann, president of the Conference on Jewish Ma- terial Claims Against Ger- many; Moshe Sharett, chair- man of the Jewish Agency executive; Pinhas Sapir, Minis- ter of Commerce and Industry; Dr. Eliezer Shinnar, head of the Israel Mission in Cologne; and Professor Franz Boehm, who headed the West German delegation at the Luxembourg reparations negotiations. Davar, official organ of the Histadrut declared in its editorial that, although the agreement has been implemented correctly and the payments were even acceler- ated, it cannot be regarded as any kind of atonement for the terrible crimes committed against the Jews. "It represented at most a mod- est restoration of stolen Jewish property, the proceeds of which were used for the economic ab- sorption of tens of thousands of refugees who went through the hell of concentration camps," the paper declared. Haaretz, independent daily newspaper, noted that it was extremely difficult to imagine the development of Israel's economy for the past decade without reparations. At the same time, it said that the failure of the Bonn govern- ment to establish diplomatic relations with Israel was an =SIC %mu nvr: rcs, zatz hctr :ma's example of "faint-hearted- ness." The English - language daily, the Jerusalem Post, lauded the decision 10 years ago that Israel participate in the agreement cit- ing the foresight in divesting the question of its bloodstained emo- tional context. "The agreement was vindicated both from the political and economic angles," the Post declared. * BONN, (JTA) — Dr. Konrad Adenauer, the West German Chancellor, observed the 10th anniversary of the signing of the German - Israel Reparations Agreement in 1952 in a state- ment declaring he felt the pact had furnished "a solid basis for steadily improving relations be- tween the German people and the Jews." "I am satisfied," he assert- ed, in a special message pub- lished in the government's of- ficial B u 11 e t i n, "that the German Federal Republic has implemented the obligation it assumed 10 years ago." • • et to Tel Aviv for the Holy Days ia Paris! Economy Group Fares from New York only $592 per person round trip for qualified groups of 25 or more.* (Regu- far Jet_ Economy Fare: $876.) See your Travel Agent or call Air France: WOodward 1-1755. V "rective year round except certain peak-season weekends AIR FRANCE Austria-German Restitution Pact Goes into Effect VIENNA, (JTA) — Officials announced that Austria and West Germany exchange here on Tuesday ratification documents on the agreement by which the Bonn government will contribute to a fund for compensation of Austrian victims of Nazism. West Germany pledged to pay $80,000,000 toward the total pro- gram. The Austrian government has not yet made public the amount it will contribute to the fund. More than 500 Jewish lead- ers from the United States and Canada will take part in the National Planning Con- ference for Israel Bonds which will be held at the Shoreham Hotel in Washing- ton, Sept. 21-23. The confer- ence will launch the Fall phase of the 1962 Israel Bond By HANNAH PETOR War of Liberation, was situated in a dangerous position between the front lines. Then many ba- boons fled from their unsuffi- ciently guarded cages and it was a hard and dangerous task for the atendants to bring them back. A pair of Syrian bears ran three kilometers into enemy territory and could only be caught with the help of United Nations personnel and a team of Jewish policemen. The big Abyssinian lion was hit by a stray bullet and had to undergo an operation, which saved his life. The many observations on ani- mal and plant life contained in the Bible are proof of a deep and loving knowledge of the nature of the country on the part of the authors. We know now that the Israel countryside was densely wooded in antiquity and intensively cul- tivated by its inhabitants, and that it had a rich wild life which, through the subsequent centuries of wars and wasteful exploita- tion, has deteriorated. It was, therefore, only a short step to the idea, conceived in When the situation deteri- the 1940's of building up a col- orated and it became too dan- lection of the flora and fauna gerous for the animals to be of the country as it existed in kept close to the fighting zone, Biblical times—a Biblical zoologi- the Zoo moved to its present cal and botanical garden. Such location. a collection which was built up In one corner of the Zoo com- on the compound of the zoological department of the Hebrew Uni- pound is a botanical garden which versity, is at present under the contains flowers and shrubs men- direction of Prof. A. Schulov of tioned in the Bible. that department. campaign, whose goal is a minimum sale of $66,500,000; it will also mark the an- nouncement of the redemp- tion of the first Israel Bonds issued in the United States in May, 1951. Outstanding personalities who will address the conference include David Horowitz, Governor of the Bank of Israel (right), and Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, chairman of the board of governors of the Israel Bond drive: Want ads get quick results! FREE TO WRITERS seeking a book publisher Two illustrated brochures reveal how we can publish, promote and sell your book; tips to writers; facts and figures on how we published over 3000 auth- ors. All types of books wanted. Write Dept. JLR 9. Exposition Press, 386 Park Ave. S. New York 16 4+ JOHNNY LEBOW Our Service Dept. is open to midnight! KELLY CHEVY Jerusalem s Biblical Zoo 1 8045 LIVERNOIS 1 1 OF CURTIS UN 3-7000 0.■■■0•■•1■•■■••o■ olm..mroavoamool ■oan■o■■■■•■•■■■•■•ao■ nawo ■ 1)inme-1) ■ m-oanwo ema. CONGREGATION SHOMREY EMUNAH The missing species had to be replaced by animals im- ported from other countries. Lions were brought from Abyssinia and South Africa and bears from the mountains of Lebanon. Central African ostriches must do for the kind which are said to have lived once in the wastes of the Negev. A number of animals were recovered by the Zoo as gifts. Thus a two-year-old baby ele- phant recently arrived as a gift from John Wilks of California. Many dramatic incidents are connected with the Zoo on its former site on the Hebrew Uni- - versify grounds which, during the Announces High Holy Day Services In The New and Air-Conditioned Synagogue 1 ii Auxiliary Services will also be held at the SCHAVER AUDITORIUM, 19161 SCHAEFER HWY. Rabbi Sholem Flam and Cantor Joseph Birinholtz Will Conduct the Services Reserved seats for both locations are available. All Day Sunday and Every Evening from 7:30 to 9 p.m. At the Synagogue Office FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: UN 4-4355 or DI 1-9061 GEORGE LORIN LONDON HOLLANDER Metropolitan Opera's Leading Baritone 17 year old piano Virtuoso will dazzle Detroit's Music Lovers at THE MTH BALFOUR CONCERT November 4 — Ford Auditorium (All seats reserved) $5, $10 and $12.50; Patron—$25.00 $50.00;. Sponsor—$250.00 Phone: DI 1-8540 i Schaefer Cor. Clarita The collection of animals, of which the Bible mentions 130 in all, has now been brought to completion. It is a present housed in an extensive, well- wooded terrain on the out- skirts of new Jerusalem. In order to propound the idea of a Biblical Zoo, the various cages bear, besides the He- brew and Latin names, also the citation from the Bible in which the animals are men- tioned. Only a very small number of the animals have continued to exist here, the turtle dove and the leopard which prowls in de- solate mountain spots of Galilee, and certain species of deer. A difficulty that presented it- self was that of identifying the animals. In the Bible one finds several names for one and the same species as, for instance, in the case of the lion, the goat and the rabbit, and in the course of the centuries the same name to be applied to different kinds of beasts. POSH HASHANAH .SEPT.29-30 . OCT.8 YOM KIPPUR . . • . OCT.13-14 SUKKOT HOSHANAH RABBAH • OCT. 19 SHEMIN! ATZERET • • OCT.:20 OCT.21 SiNICHAT TORAH • A number of the country's leading newspapers, noting the anniversary, declared editorially that it is regrettable that there are as yet no formal diplomatic relations between West Germany and Israel. The Staatsanzeiger of Cologne expressed the hope that "this diplomatic twilight will soon be removed, unperturbed by the bluff and threats of the Arab world." * * * Noted Leaders atBond Conference Write: 10424 West McNichols ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF DETROIT f