40—EMPLOYMENT 50—BUSINESS CARDS SALESPEOPLE WANTED CEMENT, PAINTING, and Plaster- ing. All city violations corrected. TO 6-6673. Men or women to service real estate brokers. Draw to qualify. Over 45 okay. RELIABLE wall washer. $4.00 up. One day service. TY 8-7243. TE 4-5796. AETNA MORTGAGE CO. UN 3-3191 55—MISCELLANEOUS ONE elementary Hebrew teacher and 1 Jewish history teacher for Sunday morning in Oak Park. Call UN 3-0584, Mr. Farber. QUALIFIED HEBREW TEACHERS WANTED State all qualifications. Write Box 584. The Jewish News. 17100 West Seven Mile Road. Detroit 35, Michigan. SALESMEN WANTED Are you interested in making a very good living? Our salesmen average between $12,000 to $18,000 first year. If you are consci- entious, hard working, you too can earn the same. No can- vassing or soliciting. APPLY IN PERSON 43800 MICHIGAN AVE. West of Wayne, Michigan TRADITIONAL Synagogue seeks ex- perienced youth counselor for teen-age group. BR. 2-3906. 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED LADY will baby-sit. Call DI 1-4591. 50—BUSINESS CARDS I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work, no job too big or small. BR 3-4826. LI 5-4035. NORTHLAND MOVING & STORAGE CO. LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE Agent For Lyon Van Lines Inc. 342-3151 NEW METHOD — Carpets cleaned; walls washed, by machine. Work guaranteed. Free estimates. KE 5- 8470—KE 8-1778. TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. UN 1-5075 LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing. Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable. Free estimates. UN 4-3339, VE 5-7453. FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day service TO 6-4005 526 Belmont. LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY SERVICE Also Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 4-4587 Plumbing and Heating, all types of plumbing, water heaters, base- ment toilets, second floor bath- rooms. all types of installations. Free estimates. MASTER PLBG. DR 1-4634 DR 1-3415 A-1 PAINTING. paperhanging, in- terior, exterior. Immediate serv- ice. Guaranteed. Reasonable. UN 4-0326. TURN YOUR old suits - shoes into cash. DI 2-3717. French Gestapo Official Jailed MARSEILLES, (JTA) —Jean Barbier, a French national who was a Gestapo official during the occupation of France and charged with the torture and shooting of hundreds of Jews and anti-Nazis, was disclosed to have been jailed by the Mar-. seilles military tribunal on his own request. Condemned to death in ab- sentia after France's liberation, Barbier lived peacefully for years in Marseilles under an as- sumed name of Leroyer. It was learned that police knew of his whereabouts since 1961 when a 13 - year - old girl complained about brutalities Leroyer had inflicted on her. A police inves- tigation of the charges disclosed Leroyer's true identity but the Marseilles military tribunal ac- corded him "provisional lib- erty." The tribunal decided to in- carcerate him at his own re- quest made, it was believed, out of Barbier's fears that survivors of the Gestapo's torture dunge- ons might respond to the leni- ency shown Barbier by killing him. In asking to be imprisoned, Barbier said he did so that he could reveal "the whole truth." But there were reports that he had received threatening let- ters which induced him to choose the security of a prison until he might arrange to find a new refuge under a new iden- tity. He was in charge of a spe- cial section of the Gestapo in Greenhold during the occupa- tion. JNF Plans Land Reclamation Along Jordanian Border JERUSALEM, (JTA) — A project for the reclamation of 3,250 acres of land along the Jordanian border, so as to strengthen the frontier posts along Jordan by the establish- ment of new settlements there, was announced by the Jewish National Fund's Land Develop- ment Authority. The JNF executive commit- tee also voted to carry out a number of other reclamation projects in 1963, involving 6,500 acres in 52 settlements. Shimon Ben-Shemesh, director of the Land Development Authority, reported that 4,800,000 trees were planted during the last season, providing nearly 750,000 days of work for Israelis. V. Gollancz Proclaims Self Judaeo Christian "Our hope is that by bringing together a number of prayers that we have happened upon we Sprinkler Systems Installed and Repaired. Reasonable rates. All may have illustrated, haphaz- work guaranteed. References. ardly enough, a by no means NOTTINGHAM SPRINKLERS unfamiliar theme. Which is this: `From amidst diversified and 527-5044 often warring creeds: over a vast span of history: in the language of many a nation—the DRESSMAKING single voice of a greater Human- AB Kinds of Alterations ity rises confidently to heaven.' " Call for Appointments These words are from the pre- face by Victor Gollancz to the UN 3-8283 book that he and Barbara 17175 ROSELAWN Greene edited together, "God of a Hundred Names," to be published July 12 by Double- BASEMENT day. LEAKS ! Victor Gollancz, London pub- All work guaranteed-3 years. lisher and author, talks of his Reasonable. religion as "nothing in par- SUBURBAN BASEMENT REPAIR ticular, but I sometimes de- scribe myself as a liberal, non- 424-1330 practising Judaeo - Christian." PAINTING, exterior-interior. Free His co-author, Barbara Greene, estimates. Reasonable. LI 7-5639. I s a practising Roman Catholic. KE 8-1047. Ben-Gurion. Discusses Renewed Syrian Attacks With Truce Chief JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Re- newed Syrian attacks on an Israeli patrol boat on Lake Tiberias and on Israeli field workers in the Shaar Hagolan area were among the subjects discussed between Prime Min- ister David Ben-Gurion and Gen. Odd Bull, the new chair- man of the United Nations Truce Supervision Organization. The meeting also was attend- ed by Henri Vigier, • political adviser for Bull, and Col. Yosef Kalev of the Israeli General Staff. Premier Ben-Gurion re- portedly cited the new wave of unprovoked attacks from Syrian positions on the northeast shore of Lake Tiberias where the Syrian gunners opened fire on 'Sunday on an Israeli patrol vessel with mortars and heavy machineguns. The fire was re turned and no casualties were reported. Earlier attacks were aimed at field workers in the Shaar Hagolan area and at fishermen on the lake. The Prime Minister pointed out to General Bull that, until Sunday, the Syrians had not recently used machine guns and recoilless rifles on the set- tlements and added that Israel would not countenance repeat- ed aggressions without reply. (In Damascus, the Syrian au- thorities charged that Israeli jet planes fired rockets this weekend into a Syrian border village near Lake Tiberias and that an Israeli boat had shelled a Syrian outpost.) * * * UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., (JTA)—Syria complained to the United Nations that Israeli jet planes fired machine guns and rockets against a Syrian village near Lake Tiberias Sunday but Israel immediately replied that "there is not the slightest proof" to the allegations. In a letter to Secretary Gen- eral U Thant, Selah el Din Tarazi, Syria's permanent repre- sentative here, alleged that two Israeli jet planes flew over Syrian territory Sunday morn- ing firing machine guns and rockets, "with which they bom- barded the village of el Douga." A few minutes earlier, accord- ing to the Syrian complaint, an Ishaeli armored vessel on Lake Tiberias shot automatic fire and mortar shells at Syrian positions at el Douga, "causing the Syrian positions to return fire." A spokesman for the Ishaeli delegation here declared: "On Friday last and again on Sun- day an Israeli police boat carry- ing out routine patrols on the Lake came under fire from Syrian fortified positions near the shore. These cases of illegal and unprovoked armed attack by Syrian forces on Israel vessels within Israel territory are a serious danger to the peace. There is not the slightest proof to Syrian reports that Israel planes and rockets were used, or that the firing was initiated by the Israel police boat." The Syrian letter did not re- port a meeting of the Security Council, but asked only that the contents be circulated to all members of the United Nations. * Israel farmers in the region of Tel Katzir in Northeast Israel and at Israeli patrol boats on Lake Tiberias. "The culpability and respon- sibility of the Syrian govern- ment," Comay declared in the note, "cannot be evaded by put- ing out false and unfounded stories." The letter, which drew the Secretary General's attention to "the • constant harrassment of Israel fishermen on the lake and the constant Syrian incur- sions onto the lake,"- noted that 18 such incidents had occurred during the recent fishing sea- son. Comay also listed five inci- dents in which Syrian fire was directed at Israeli farmers in the Tel Katzir area and noted that "on numerous occasions representations have been made to the Syrian government by UN authorities in an attempt to bring a halt to this aggressive and provocative behavior and to allay the tensions to which it gives rise." Moroccan Jew Seeks Rights in Parliament CASABLANCA, (JTA)—Mey- er Obadia, a leader of the Mo- roccan Jewish community who was named to parliament in the country's recent elections, told a Jewish Telegraph Agency correspondent that he would work in parliament to make the views of Moroccan Jewry un- derstood and to have their rights and interests safeguard- ed. He said the latter included freedom of movement. Declaring that the Moroccan Jewish community had elected him and that he would do everything to defend their in- terests, he emphasized that he would strive to "remain faith- ful to my God, my King and my country." Israel's Mapam Party Agrees to Unification (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV — The left - wing Mapam Party agreed Tuesday night to join the other three labor parties on unification. The decision followed lengthy talks between Mapam and Ach- dut Avodah during which Ma- pam was induced to agree to join in the talks. It was learned that while Map am leaders agreed to join in such talks the issue of Mapam's return to Is- rael's coalition government was considered impractical at the present time. DAMENU Iran Suspects Nasser Ordered Riots in Teheran LONDON, (JTA)—Anti-Israel overtones in the rioting against the modern reforms instituted by the Shah of Iran indicate that Egyptian conspirators were involved, it was reported here from Teheran. 'ranks and jeeps were used by the government against the demonstrators who poured into Teheran, some of them shout- ing that Iran break off "all links with Israel." Iran grant- ed Israel defacto recognition more than 10 years ago but has no diplomatic representation in Israel. Gen Hassan Pakravan, Teheran's security chief, hinted at a news conference that Presi- dent Nasser was behind the riot- ing. - 15,000 Professionals Go on Warning Strike for Wages in Israel TEL AVIV, (JTA) — More than 15,000 professional em- ployed in public and govern- ment institutions called a two- hour warning strike June 6 for changes in their pay. They included doctors, engineers, laboratory workers and techni- cians. Despite a warning from the Histadrut, Israel's Labor Fed- eration, that it opposed the strike and that its members should ignore it, only a small number of the professionals re- mained on the job. The profes- sionals struck to win an in- crease in grants for profession- al literature and a rise in the "high cost of living roof," a ref- erence to the index to which wages are linked. The strikers held- protest meetings in various institutions, including hospitals and clinics. They warned that a longer strike might be called if their demands were not met. Hista- drut officials warned of the possibility of penalties against the strikers. Jewish Agency Tests Techniques in Hebrew NEW YORK, (JTA) — Mod- ern methods of teaching Hebrew, ranging from the use of an elec- tronic Language Laboratory to the Ulpan method, were sur- veyed in a recent • all-day sem- inary workshop sponsored by the Department of Education and Culture of the American Section of the Jewish Agency for Israel. Some 50 educators teaching He- brew in high schools, colleges and adult education centers at- tended the workshops. BY HENRY LEONARD1 hCS (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Ambassador Michael S. Comay, Israel's permanent representa- tive to the United Nations, Wednesday branded as a "frivo- lous untruth" Syrian allegations that Israeli planes attacked the Syrian village of El Douga last weekend. In a letter to Secretary Gen- eral U Thant, which Comay asked be circulated among the members of the Security Coun- cil, Ambassador Comay stressed the gravity of the situation cre- ated by the "pattern of .aggres- sion and harrassment" of Syr- ian army positions firing on "And all our rooms come with hot and cold running water, plus a complete sat elf th e Babylonian Talmud!" Copt. )963, Dayenu Productions ,26.21t S.l. IL 0. -