High Court Upholds Acquittal of Ex-Nazis in Murder of Jews BONN (JTA) — The Federal Supreme Court at Karlsruhe upheld a decision of a local court at Freiburg which last summer acquitted two former members of a German police battalion. They were accused of participating in the murder of more than 3,000 Jewish women, children and aged Jews behind the eastern front in the summer of 1941. The Freiburg public prosecu- tor, who had demanded sen- tences of up to five years at hard labor for the two defend- ants, appealed the Supreme Court decision. The court ruled that the de- fendants had acted under com- pulsion, fearing they might 'themselves be executed if they tried to disobey orders. In sustaining the verdict, the Supreme Court held that possi- bly another court might have come to a different assessment of the evidence than did the Freiburg court but that on the legal aspects of the case within the Supreme Court's jurisdic- tion, there were no grounds for overturning the lower court verdict. Toronto Labor Will Seek Law Requiring Names on Anti-Semitic Material TORONTO, (JTA)—The To- ronto Labor Committee for Hu- man Rights intends to ask the Ontario Provincial Government for a law that will force pur- veyors of anti-Semitic material to identify themselves on their propaganda, G. Eamon Park, chairman, said. He told the Toronto Labor Conference on Human Rights that the proposal stemmed from the appearance in To- ronto of thousands of copies of a pamphlet which said that President Kennedy was as- sassinated "by Marxist Lee Oswald, who was silenced by Jew Jacob Rubenstein before he could expose that com- munism is .iewish." He said one of the problems in dealing with such material was the anonymity of it and that "we should act now to end the secrecy behind the sources of this scurrilous literature." He added that there were precedents for such a proposal citing federal and provincial election laws requiring political parties and candidates to state the issuing source and authority for printed election materials. MONTH Jan. 15 - Feb. 15 GRACE YOUR FAMILY CELEBRATIONS • Anniversaries • Weddings • Other Family Occasions BY ... • Birthdays El Planting Trees Ea Filling Your JNF Box Redeeming Dunams of Land Inscription in the Golden Book Inscription in the Sefer Hayeled El Inscription in the Sefer Bar-Mitzvah 18 1'`4 WYOMING Phone UN 4-2767 Gets 'Heart Award' otw- t100- Vice Admiral H. G. Rick- over has been named for the Heart-of-the-Year A w a r from the American Heart As- sociation at the White House. President Lyndon B. John- son, who in 1959 received the first award, will make the presentation. The award is conferred annually upon a distinguished American for faith, courage and achieve- ment in meeting the person- al challenge of heart disease. Rickover, called "father of the nuclear submarine," suf- fered a heart attack in July, 1961. Ex-SS Colonel, Heyde, Will Be Tried Feb. 18 in 'Mercy Killings' LIMBURG, W. Germany (JTA) — The Limburg public prosecutor's office said that Prof. Werner Heyde, 61-year- old former SS colonel, would go on trial here Feb. 18 on charges of murdering 100,000 mental patients and Jews in the Nazi euthanasia program. Prof. Heyde, mastermind of the Nazi "mercy killing" pro- gram, is charged with multiple counts of murder. Dr. Hans Hefelmann and Dr. Freidrich Tillmann are codefendants with him. He was arrested in 1959 when police found him working under an alias as chief medical advi- ser to the Schleswig-Holstein state welfare court. Jewish League to Aim at Curbing Zionists' Political Ties in Israel ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (JTA) The American Jewish League for Israel, at a two-day con- ference here, reaffirmed its objective as the abolition in Zionist groups outside of Israel of partisan affiliations with the political structure of the State of Israel. The conference, held under the chairmanship of Samuel H. Daroff, shaped plans for a pro- gram of conferences in various cities "intended to lead to a rational reorganization of the Diaspora Zionist structure." The program will be pre- sented to t h e forthcoming World Zionist Congress sched- uled to be held in December this year. Participants in the discussions included Judge Louis E. Levinthal, Dr. Simon Greenberg, Dr. Arthur Lelyveld, Eleazar Lipsky, Jacob M. Al- kow, Louis A. Falk and Jerome J. Shestack. New Story by Singer Religious Study Witnesses of Nazi Crimes Sought World Jewish Congress head- that the Institute will carry on With Inadequate quarters in New York is tracing this task and expressed the witnesses in connection with hope that all persons who may Jewish Content almost 200 cases of Nazi crim- be able to help in this connec- Explanations of Orthodox, Conservative, Reform and Re- constructionist principles and evaluations of Jewish organiza- tional activities in this country are included in the volume "Religion in 20th Century America," by Herbert Wallace Schneider, originally issued by Harvard University Press and now published in a revised paperback edition by Atheneum Books (162 E. 38th, NY16). While the author expresses the view that traditional lines among the major Jewish reli- gious groups "are beginning to weaken, chiefly because of the common problems created for all Jews_ by the Nazi persecu- tions and by the creation of the Homeland of Israel," the author is under the impression that the attempt to unite all groups un- der the Synagogue Council of America "has met with little success." This viewpoint is not fully substantiated by United Synagogue spokesmen. Assimilation is described as having had the "inevitable re- sult that the learning of Hebrew, the observance of the Jewish `sacra,' and the study of Torah lost some of the religious ur- gency which they possess for the Orthodox," But the author adds: "With the growth of secular Jewish nationalism and Zion- ism, and with the disillusion- ment over the general program of assimilation, there grew rapidly during the last two decades a demand, even on the part of secularist Jews, for a revival of the knowl- edge of Hebrew, of the Torah, and of the peculiar institu- tions of Judaism." Why the questionable term "peculiar?" Those who are ac- quainted with Jewish traditions will surely challenge the au- thor, who also stated: "The cultivation of these in- stitutions now seemed educa- tionally important whether they were religiously essential or not. These schools did not raise the church-state issue since they were willing to accept the 'wall of separation,' but they raised the question of their relevance to American culture." The author of this evaluative work on religion maintains that "for Jews the family is still the primary center of religious ob- servance." He makes several references to Zionism. It it regrettable that an other- wise meritorious work should have blundered in resort to terminology and interpretation that are subject to question. —P. S. inals who are either being in- vestigated or about to be tried by the West German authori- ties. The search for witnesses had been under the direction of the late Dr. Nahemiah Robinson, director of the Institute of Jew- ish Affairs of the WJC, who died suddenly two weeks ago. Samuel Bronfman, chairman of the North American Execu- tive of WJC. has announced Isaac Bashevis Singer, noted Brooklyn JNF to Set Up American Yiddish writer, has Galilee Settlement a new short story in the current NEW YORK, (JTA)—A new, issue of Harper's Magazine. five-year program for the estab- Titled "A Sacrifice," Singer lishment of a frontier settle- tells the folk tale of a small ment, Kirvath Brooklyn, in Is- village and what happens when rael's Galilee region was voted an elderly couple, still seem- at the 15th annual dinner of the ingly very much in love, decide Brooklyn division of the Jewish to get a divorce. National Fund. (p) 0060000e ( 2., In Kaunas it's u■ %T. Jersey Yeshiva Buys Land for High School © 6 -, h ■ ;:.9 4 LAKSINIAI L- ) In JERSEY CITY (JTA) — The Yeshiva of Hudson County has purchased a parcel of land be- © longing to Cong. Sons of Israel (e-:)) and the Five Corners Talmud g Torah for the contruction in the near future of a high school © building. The congregation is planning to construct a new synagogue building on land adjacent to the (n) property acquired by the ye- shiva. I O Madrid it's But in Detroit it's NOODLES 00 0 0 Make meat loaf tastier with Kasha/ AS MAN, THAT'S A DISH, FREE KASHA COOKBOOK EASY New recipes and menu ideas for modern meals TO and entertaining with Kasha. Address request SERVE! to: Phyllis Wolff, Penn Van, New York - • lea-fresh flavor tender, moist meat world's finest quality PILLAR ROCK fancy white UNA 'VOW In pure vegetable oil to bring out the finest flavor and tenderness. , Jewish Firms Report Damages in Panama NEW YORK, (JTA) — Many Jewish businessmen suffered "considerable material damage" through vandalism and rob- beries in Panama during the recent outbreaks of conflicts there in connection with dis- putes between Panama and the United States, according to a report received by the World Jewish Congress. The report, from Moises A. Mizrachi, president of the Se- phardic Jewish Community of Panama, added, however, that there were no Jewish casualties in the recent rioting there. The total Panamanian Jewish population is 1,800. Most of the Jews live in Panama City, and there is a smaller community at Colon, Mizrachi reported. tion should communicate with the Institute of Jewish Affairs, World Jewish Congress, 15 E. 84 th Street, New York 28. and delicious! SPAGHETTI SAUCE WITH MEAT Now in frozen food counters at quality food stores PREPARED BY CHEFS OF INTERNATIONALLY FAMOUS MARIO'S RESTAURANT STORE OUT OF STOCK? CALL TE 3-4800