Record Elsea Sales
19-E—BUSINESS PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Staunton M. Elsea announced
record January Sales for the real
TO SETTLE ESTATE
estate firm he head s. January
Sales totaled $1,498,218 in residen-
Martin near Michigan — 2 brick
tial and commercial real estate.
stores, total price $5,000. Terms.
We do sell more properties each
This represents a 35 per cent
month than any other firm in
Mich. Let us sell yours.
gain over January of last year,
making this the largest January
VI 1-1400
ELSEA
sales volume in the 35-year history
rrf the firm.
The number of young married 30-A—INSTRUCTIONS
couples buying homes for the first
REMEDIAL READING
lime has been increasing steadily
!or the past year.
17—HOUSES FOR SALE
SOUTHFIELD LUXURY RANCH
10 Mi-New Hampshire. Bldr's own
lge. rambling cust. bit. Tremen-
dous 2 bedrms. Fam. Rm. complete
blt-ins in kitch. 2 baths, garage,
many extra firs. Finest workman-
ship and materials. Expensive car-
peting, drapes. Price $41,900.
AND TUTORING
•
•
•
•
Elementary Thru College
Private and Class Instruction
Certified Teachers
Home calls if desired
MICHIGAN CENTER OF
EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
864-2066
OAK PARK
2 bedroom bungalow. Car - port. Car-
peting, finished hobby room. Built-in
range. Garbage disposal. Fenced.
$11.500.
TEPEE REALTY
25200 5 MILE RD.
KE 3-7272
FRANKLIN KNOLL
All brick ranch. full basement, 2 car
attached garage, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
tastefully furnished with carpeting,
drapes, appliances and landsc.
MA 6-3278
SOUTH F I ELD
EVERETT - NORTH 12 MI.
By owner. Contemporary ranch, 2
bedrooms, den, large kitchen with
built-ins. Carpeting and drapes
throughout. Storms and screens, large
fenced lot. Payments $105 per month.
Available May 1.
EL 7-2194
NEW MODELS
IN
SOUTHFIELD
Washington Heights
24525 Lee Baker Dr.
Spacious, Luxurious
4 bedrm., 2 story modern.
Open Sun. 1-6
Other sites available for custom
homes. YOUR PLAN OR OURS
OFFICE
MODEL
UN 4-9151
353-6377
CARS TO BE DRIVEN
To
Philadelphia, New York City,
Seattle, Florida. Utah, California,
Texas. Arizona, etc. Also drivers
furnished to drive your car any-
where.
ALL POINTS DRIVER AGENCY
9970 GRAND RIVER
DETROIT, MICH. 48204
WE 1-0621
LEAVING for Los Angeles. Passenger,
share car expenses and driving. 342-
4672.
RIDERS to El Paso. Texas. First week
of March. References exchanged. 342-
2248.
40—EMPLOYMENT
PART-TIME
SALESMEN
Would you like to work from
6 p.m. to 9 p.m. and earn up
to $200 weekly? We guaran-
tee $75.
We will train you. No can-
vassing.
All leads. Great
offer!
Be sure and call JE 9-0404
9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Mr. Hertz-
berg or Mr. Lerman.
JEWISH housekeeper to live in, plain
cooking. In care of patient with broken
hip. Good wages for capable person.
UN. 3-9130, DI. 1-6783.
DRIVER
FOR A SMALL PANEL TRUCK.
NO SOLICITORING.
FAMOUS CLEANERS
4465 BEAUBIEN
AT GARFIELD
Lou Gross Bldr•
LaMAR BLDG. CO.
COMPANION wanted by widow conva-1
lescing from fracture hip. Light house-
keeping, live-in. Palmer Park area. 345-
6328.
EXPERIENCED
17-A—LOTS FOR SALE
100' Wide
Lots
For Sale
Bloomfield Township
Sq. Lake Rd. & Lahser
Call DI 1-7210
CERTIFIED
Science, mathematics and social
studies tecahers needed for Elem.
and Jr. High School at progressive
Hebrew Day School.
Attractive Salary — Half Days
U 8-8224
TEMPORARY—Paid companion for con-
valescent woman. DI. 1-3790.
50—BUSINESS CARDS
JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.
By Hour or Flat Rate
Local and Long Distance Packing,
storage, pianos. appliances, house-
hold furnishings.
8700 West McNichols Rd.
UN 2-6047
A-1 PAINTING. paperhanging, interior.
wallwashing. Immediate service. Guar-
anteed. Reasonable. UN 4-0326 after
5 p.m.
LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable.
Free estimates. VE 5-7453.
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS SUB. — New
Jersey Avenue. 2 sites, 75x130 each.
Owner, 356-5556.
19-E—BUSINEESS PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Corner Brick Bldg. on
PURITAN NR. SCHAEFER
50x60—Parking in rear, now leased
to a public relations firm, yields
10%, and excellent investment.
ELSEA
VI 1-1400
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30—Friday, February 12, 1965
I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter
work, no job too big or small. BR
3-4826, LI 5-4035.
FOR BETTER wall washing, call James
Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005.
526 Belmont.
55 - A — MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
TURN YOUR OLD SUITS, topcoats,
shoes into cash. DI 2-3717.
56 — ANTIQUES
REFINISHING, REPAIRING, RE-
STORING of old furniture and an-
tiques. Expert work. Reasonable
prices. Pick-up and delivery.
Decore Antiques, Inc.
16527 Hamilton
Highland Park
TO* 1-5357
60—CARS FOR SALE
BAR-MITZVAH. Hebrew Bible, Yiddish. ,
English; experienced teacher. 342-9254. ! CHEVY H — 1962 WAGON. Power
steering, automatic transmission, radio.
S1300. Owner, 544-9340.
541-7332 31—TRANSPORTATION
MEUOY REALTY
50—BUSINESS CARDS
WALL TO WALL
CARPET CLEANING
We also clean upholstered furni-
ture. All work guaranteed. 42 years
experience. 35 yards of carpeting,
$15.
SAM SMALTZ
LI 2-4735
Call after 4 p.m.
LARKINS MOVING CO.
Household and
Office Furniture
LICENSED MOVERS
PROFESSIONALS
894-4587
New Yorker Starts One-Man Drive
to Support Work of Dr. King in South
Kaufman is not working through
any of the established Jewish or-
ganizations because he believes all
existing Jewish organizations are
already overburdened. He is also
not forming any new Jewish or-
ganization for the purpose of aid-
ing the Negro. "We have more
than enough Jewfsh organizations
in this country, many of them
duplicating the work of others,
and there is no need for a new
one," he said.
Kaufman appealed to all Ameri-
can Jews to heed what he termed
"A call to your consciences," by
contributing whatever sums they
can to the campaign. Checks are
payable to Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr., care of Michael Kaufman, P.O.
Box 532, Far Rockaway 11690, N.Y.
NEW YORK — A one-man cam-
paign to raise funds among Ameri-
can Jews for the civil rights drive
for Negroes in the South has been
started.
The campaign, to support the
activities of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., is being conducted by a
young New York City • business-
man, Michael Kaufman, who is
conducting his campaign in the
Jewish community at his own ex-
pense and without the aid of any
organized fund-raising appartus.
Kaufman, who resides in Far
Rockaway, New York, is active in
Orthodox Jewish causes and is a
leader of the Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of America.
Verdicts on Two Eichmann Aides
Labeled 'Rotten' in W. Germany
BONN (JTA)—A storm of pro-
test throughout West Germany
marked the Frankfurt court ver-
dicts handed down last week
against two former SS aides to
Adolf Eichmann, one of whom was
acquitted.
The two, former SS Lt. Col. Her-
man Krumey and former SS Capt.
Otto Hunsche, were charged with
helping Eichmann to send hun-
dreds of thousands of Hungarian
Jews to Nazi death camps.
Astonishment w a s expressed
over the fact that Hunsche was ac-
quitted of charges of complicity in
the murder of more than 300,000
Jews sent to Auschwitz during the
war. Hunsche also was acquitted
of charges of extorting huge sums
from the doomed and desperate
Jews.
Krumey was sentenced to five
years at hard labor. Since he has
served almost five years of pre-
trial detention, he will only have to
serve a few months of his sen-
tence.
Gerhard Jahn, a Socialist
member of Parliament, called
the verdicts astounding and said
they b o r e no relation to the
crime. He added that the ver-
dicts shamed the German peo-
ple and that they raised a seri-
ous question as to whether West
German courts could judge the
deeds of Nazism.
Dr. Fritz Bauer, the Frankfurt
public prosecutor, called the ver-
dicts "rotten and intolerable" and
"utterly incomprehensible." As-
serting that "it is as if Eichmann
himself were given five years," he
declared that his office would use
"every judicial means in its power
to obtain a revision of these sen-
tences."
Chief Prosecutor Hans Grossman
who had asked for maximum sen-
tences of life imprisonment for
both former Nazis, said he would
appeal. Krumey's counsel also said
he would file an appeal against the
five-year sentence.
Krumey was returned to prison
to await trial on another charge
growing out of his wartime activi-
ties in Zamocz, in Nazi-held Poland,
where he reportedly rounded up
Jews for transport to the Ausch-
witz camp.
Some quarters in West Germany
expressed fear that the light sen-
tences might set a precedent for
future trials of Nazi criminals ac-
cused of helping to organize plans
for murders of Jews rather than
direct participation in the torture
and murder of the victims. The
Frankfurt court made that distinc-
tion in its verdicts.
( Robert Kempner a f o r m e r
American prosecutor in the Nurem-
berg allied war crimes trials, com-
mented in Landsdown, Pa., that the
verdicts were "not understand-
able." He predicted the rulings
would step up demands for West
German action to extend the ef-
fective date of the statute of limi-
tations for prosecution of Nazi war
criminals, now due to become ef-
fective next May 8.
(He called the acquittal of
,
•
Hunsche "completely incomprehen-
sible" and said it raised "heavy
doubts about the capacity of cer-
tain members of the court to un-
derstand the murder procedures of
Eichmann and his accomplices.")
Meanwhile, government a u -
thorities here were investigating
charges made by the East Ger-
man Communist news agency,
claiming that Dr. Irwin Schuele,
head of the Central Office for
the Prosecution of Nazi War
Criminals, at Ludwigshaven, had
been a member of the Nazi
Party under Hitler's regime,
served as a judge in a Nazi court
and belonged to the SS.
The Baden-Wurttemberg minis-
try said that membership in the
Nazi Party had been compulsory
for all students under the Hitler
regime, and that Dr. Schuele was
a student at the time. In any event,
the ministry stated, Dr. Schuele's
party membership had been only
"nominal."
The State Department was
asked for comment on the re-
fusal of an official in its Berlin
re-
Documentation Center to
spond to a request for verifica-
tion of the allegation about Dr.
Schuele. Names of all former
Nazis are contained in records
in the center.
A department spokesman said
that such verification is a matter
for the West German government,
and that it would be inappropriate
for Washington to comment on the
matter.
He added that the Berlin Docu-
mentation Center is open only to
appropriate West German authori-
ties and officials of the U. S. gov-
ernment. When asked whether the
Berlin records were public prop-
erty, the U. S. spokesman replied:
"They may be public property, but
not to journalists."
Elsewhere:
In Tel Aviv, the first hearing in
Israel by a West German court re-
ceiving testimony in a Nazi war
crimes trial ended Tuesday in an
Israeli courtroom under the Israel
national emblem and in the pres-
ence of an Israeli magistrate.
The court officials, consisting of
the judge and trial attorneys, flew
to Israel from Dusseldorf to hear
evidence against 10 former person-
nel of the Treblinka murder camp.
The unique hearing, which began
Sunday, was decided on because
two Treblinka survivors, Mrs. Bron-
ca Sucko, and Yaacov Domb, were
unable to go to Dusseldorf because
of ill health. Both are receiving
medical treatment.
Mrs. Sucko testified that Kurt
Franz, the Treblinka commandant,
whipped a Jewish boy to death.
Asked by the West German judge,
H. Bach, what else she remem-
bered of her Treblinka experi-
ence, she could only reply: "I re-
member bodies. I remember the
horrible stench of burning bodies."
Domb described his "dreadful
memories" of the camp where
"arch butcher" Franz and his
aides "caused so many deaths in
,
so small a camp." An estimated
700,000 Jews were murdered in
the camp between July 1942 and
1943. He described the comman-
dant's huge dog, who, he said,
was trained to bite victims in
particularly painful places.
The court returned to Dussel-
dorf to proceed with the trial,
which began last Oct. 12. Another
21 witnesses are scheduled to
testify. •
At the war crimes trial in
Frankfurt, West Germany demand-
ed the arrest of the East German
minister for industry, Eric Marko-
witch, for allegedly shooting Ger-
mans trying to escape to the West
over the Berlin Wall. The charge
enlivened the trial, which opened
13 months ago, of leading person-
nel of the Auschwitz concentration
camp, charged with murdering
thousands of Jews.
Markovvitch had come to testify
against some of the defendants.
He had been a prisoner at Ausch-
witz and told the court that more
than 1,000 of the camp's inmates
were murdered in November and
December of 1942 because they
were no longer able to work.
Hans Laterner, a member of the
defense counsel, petitioned the
court that he be arrested because
he had ordered Germans to be shpt
while trying to escape over
Berlin Wall. The chief judge turn-
ed down that application, ruling
the Berlin Wall issue had no bear-
ing on the current trial.
A new search for hidden Nazi
documents—plus a possible
cache of gold and other looted
valuables—was scheduled to be
launched by the German govern-
ment in the Hartz Mountain area
near Hannover. The search was
to be conducted by the Pioneer
Corps of the West German army.
Information acquired by t h e
government has indicated that, in
1943, the SS Security Office in
Berlin secreted documents and
"treasures" in chalk mines in the
Hartz Mountain area
In Berlin, Baldur von Schirach,
57-year-old former leader of Hit-
ler's youth movement, was oper-
ated on for a detached retina of
the right eye at the British Mili-
tary Hospital.
Von Schirach has been im-
prisoned 18 years, with two other
Nazi war criminals, in the West
Berlin BOO-cell Spandau Prison.
His cell mates are Rudolf Hess,
Hitler's deputy, who is serving a
life sentence imposed by the
Nuremberg war crimes court, and
Albert Speer, Nazi minister for
munitions, who will complete his
20-year sentence in < October 1966,
when von Schiraeh also is to be
released.
Allied sources hint that Hess
may be released at the same time.
Spandau is a big prison to house
only one man—there is a perma-
,nent staff of 20 civilian guards to
look after the three inmates, and
the four Allied powers take month-
ly turns supplying some 30 prison
guards.
.