Press Hails Auschwitz Court for 'Fairness' (Continued from Page 1) at the Frankfurt trial, said he would appeal the relatively light sentences given by the court to two of the defendants, both of whom had been deputy comman- dants of the Auschwitz camp. They are Robert Mulka, who was sentenced to 14 years' imprison- ment, and Karl Hoecker, whose sentence called for seven years at hard labor. The Germ an press, on the whole, praised the court for its 'fairness," the lack of a "show atmosphere, and the fact that, in pronouncing sentence, Judge Hofmeyer rejected the de- fense claims that the mass mur- derers of 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 Jews at Auschwitz had "acted under orders of their superiors." The sentencing on Aug. 21 brought to an end the largest and longest trial of Nazi war criminals in West German legal history. The defendants were charged with murder and com- plicity to murder in the killing of between 3,000,000 and 4,000,- 000 inmates, most of them Jews, between June, 1940, when the camp was opened in occupied Poland and January 1945, when the camp was overrun by Soviet troops. The trial lasted 21 months. During the 180 sessions of the in at least 12 cases, one of which involved at least 1,000 victims; Stefan Baretzki, 46, former block leader, convicted of murder in at least five cases and of complicity in at least 11, of which one in- volved some 3,000 victims, five in- volved at least 1,000 each and the other five involved at least 50 vic- tims each; Josef Klehr, 61, former SS ser- geant, found guilty in at least 475 cases of murder and complicity in at least six cases which involved some 1,000 victims; and Emil Bednarek, 58, a prisoner turned trusty, convicted of murder in at least 14 cases. Robert Mulka, 70, former as- sistant commandant, was sen- tenced to 14 years, the longest of the lesser terms. Time served before and during the trial will be deducted from the sentences. Many of the convicted defendants are expected to appeal. They have a week to do so. The defendants sat stiffly up- right as Chief Judge Hans Hof- meyer rejected their pleas that they had only obeyed orders, declaring that they were as guilty as Hitler himself. He said that "it would be a mis- take to say these men are not as Face Life in Prison trial, the court of three judges and six jurors heard the testimony of 360 witnesses, 100 written state- ments and the arguments of seven prosecutors and 18 defense attor- neys. The witnesses described de- tails of atrocities so monstrous that spectators became ill. A long and grisly record was entered of how the defendants beat, kicked, trampled, whipped, starved, tor- tured and froze their victims to death. The 20 defendants maintained they were innocent because they had only carried out orders from "higherups." Some had already been convicted of similar crimes and were serving sentences or had been released. The six men given life sen- tences — the severest sentence under West German law and one only occasionally meted out in the scores of Nazi war crimes trials to date—were: Wilhelm Boger, 60, former SS sergeant, convicted of 114 mur- ders, joint murder in at least 1,000 cases and complicity in murder in at least 10 cases; Franz Hoffmann, 59, former SS captain, convicted of murder in at least one case and complicity in at least 30 cases, three of which involved at least 700 victims; Oswald Kaduk, 59, former SS sergeant, found guilty of murder in at least 10 cases and complicity Councilman BLANCHE PARENT WISE Experienced and Preferred • Vote Sept. 14 • 150 on the Ballot • I strongly urge all Detroiters to vote for Blanche Parent Wise whose services are so urgently needed in the Council. ALFRED A. MAY Two of the six former Hitler henchmen sentenced at Frank- furt to life in prison are Ges- tapo torturer Wilhelm Boger (upper) and Oswald Kaduk (lower), said to have giggled as he broke prisoners' necks. 9 Treblinka Nazis Plead Guilty of Murder; 'Ghoul' Insists He's Innocent (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) DUSSELDORF—Nine of the 10 former SS officers and guards in the Treblinka death camp pleaded guilty Tuesday to charges of mur- der and complicity in murder in the deaths of 700,000 Jewish vic- tims. Former SS Lt. Kurt Hubert Franz, the deputy camp command- ant who was called "Ghoul"- by prisoners for his sadistic treatment of them, pleaded not guilty. He told the court which had twice traveled to the United States to take testimony from survivors there, "Believe me I am innocent." The Dusseldorf court will issue a verd- ict on Sept. 3. During the 10-month trial, wit- nesses told how Franz used his pistol and whip against them at every opportunity and forced pris- oners to climb trees so that he could use them for target practice. Franz admitted that Treblinka was a death camp which was razed by SS troops at the end of 1943, when all remaining inmates were mur- dered, and a large farmhouse was built on the site to hide all traces of the camp's murder program. Yeshiva University to Hold Central East Torah Seminar ' guilty because they were only small cogs in the machinery. About 100 teen-agers from five Their guilt is as great as those states including Michigan, will at- who sat behind the desks." tend the Central East Torah Lead- Erich Kassner, 52, a former ership Seminar sponsored by Ye- officer of Hitler's SS, told the shiva University Monday to Sept. Oldenburg Criminal Court at the 5, at Camp Shor in Aurora, Ind. opening Monday of his trial on Rabbi Sidney Green of Beth charges of participating in the murder of 11,000 Jews in 1942 Joseph Center, Rochester, N.Y., coordinator, made the an- in Kowell, a Ukrainian city, that seminar nouncement. he considered himself still bound by his "oath to Hitler" and, therefore, could not testify on any of the details of his wartime activities in Kowel. Kassner and Fritz Mathei, 67, also an ex-Nazi, were accused of killing the victims in a few months during the German occu- pation. Sixty witnesses, including many from Israel and the United States, are scheduled to testify that the two Nazis killed many of the victims with their own hands. Kassner also said, in his prelim- inary statement to the court: "I have only tried to be a faithful son of the German nation and, as such, I have always blindly obeyed orders without discussion." Israel's Flag Raised in Cologne Ceremony 3 American Nazis Fined for California Agitation GLENDALE, Calif. (JTA) — Three admitted members of the American Nazi Party were fined $200 each, with the alternative of 40 days in jail, on charges of disturbing the peace in connection with racist agitation. The three were Walter E. Gould, 20; Frederick E. Harry, 23; and Robert Giles, 20. Gould and Harry said they live in the Nazi head- quarters here, while Giles gave an address in Artesia, Calif. They informed Municipal Judge Kenneth A. White they would ap- peal the sentences. Bond was set at $550 for each of the men. The case arose from a disturbance caused at a supermarket here by the Nazis last May. IF YOU TURN THE T•Cl• (1 •IL M I UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T FIND A FINER WINE THAN Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich. Deal With the Leader "Big Chief Woody" BECAUSE . . NOBODY UNDERSELLS WOODY PONTIAC "AND DON'T EVER FORGET IT!" TWINBROOK 1-1600 12140 JOS. CAMPAU at CARPENTER Half Mile South of Davison (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) BONN—The blue and white flag of Israel was raised on German soil Tuesday for the first time as Asher' Ben-Nathan presented his credentials as Israel's first am- bassador to West Germany. The presentation was made to acting West German President Georg Zinn in a brief and simple ceremony set by West German protocol. Israel's flag was raised over the temporary Israel Embas- sy in Cologne. Representatives of German Jewry attended the flag- raising ceremony and later, Ben- Nathan laid a wreath at the monu- ment in the Cologne synagogue for the 6,000,000 Jewish victims of the Nazi holocaust. The ambassador was driven to Villa Hammer-Schmidt for the presentation ceremony in Presi- dent Heinrich Luebke's limousine. In the cavalcade of accompanying cars were West German officials and members of the Israel embas- sy staff. Ehrenfreund von Helle- hen, the Bonn chief of protocol, went to Cologne to accompany the Israeli envoy to Bonn for the cere- mony. Ben-Nathan made a short ad- dress in which he expressed the hope that Israel and West Ger- many would now enter on normal relations and a happy future for both. The acting president recipro- cated the sentiments in his reply in which he added that he hoped the future would "shine" for the two countries. Dr. Zinn and the envoy then had a short conversation about Israel's development and the affairs of the world in the presence of the West German and Israeli representa- tives. West German officials sought to avoid overemphasis on the signifi- cance of the occasion but wide- spread public interest was evi- denced by the presence of some 40 correspondents of West German television and other news media as well as the press. Wide cover- age was given both to the pres- entation ceremony and the raising of Israel's flag in Cologne. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 27, 1965-7 Know This Metropolitan Millionaire -1 DAVID J. STEINHARDT Metropolitan Insurance Consultant Chances are good you know this man — bought your life insurance from him — because he sold over a million dollars of life insurance during 7964. David J. Steinhardt, a graduate of Wayne State University, has earned high distinction as a capable and conscientious advisor in the insurance affairs of his clientele. His pro- fessoinal services in 1964 place him in the foremost ranks of company representatives as a member of the Metro- politan Millionaires' Club. METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 7303 W. 7 Mile Rd. Detroit Michigan, 862-2129 Announcing the opening of Detroit's newest care and treatment center for the aging 4low and convalescent Reservations now being taken for . NORTHLAND GERIATRIC CENTER 21630 HESSEL Near 8 MILE and LAMER ROADS Featuring these facilities for patient comfort and well being: ■ KOSHER KITCHEN ■ SYNAGOGUE Supervised by the Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Detroit on the premises on 24-hour duty watching color TV ■ PROGRAMMED ACTIVITIES ■ PHYSIO-THERAPY DEPT. ■ X-RAY LABORATORY ■ AIR CONDITIONING throughout building ■ DAY ROOMS for socializing, reading or • REGISTERED NURSES Care of each patient is under the supervision of patients own family physician. .Staff physician available on call. Phone: KE 4 - 8400 or write to Helen W. Beeman, R.N., Dir. • • • 21630 Hessel • Detroit, Michigan 48219