40—EMPLOYMENT. WOMAN. General office work - 40 hour week. 2690 W. Davison. WE HAVE Day Workers, Housekeepsr (Live. in). Convalescent Care, Child Care, Baby-Sitters. Bonded — Licensed. BONDED PERSONNEL AGENCY 10932 Grand River 933-0522 WANTED — Steady babysitter for Sat- urday evenings and occasionally dur- ing the week. References or an inter- view required. Palmer Park area only. 1021 Covington. UN 4-2605. HOUSEKEEPER WANTED for elderly gentleman. Free room and board. WAGES. Pleasant home. Call UN 4-8867. EXPERIENCED PRIVATE SECRETARY For executive, Jewish Institution. Expertly qualified in secretarial skills and human relations. Write letter to arrange interview. BOX 750 THE JEWISH NEWS 17100 W. 7 MILE DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48235 Torczyner Protests German Deferment NEW YORK (JTA) — "Shock and chagrin" at the decision by the West German Bundestag, upon the recommendation of the cabi- net, to defer indemnification pay- ments to Nazi victims over the next two years, was voiced by Jacques Torczyner, president of the Zionist Organization of Ameri- ca, in a telegram sent to Dr. Heinrich Knappstein, West Ger- man ambassador in Washington. The Zionist leader termed this action as "a flagrant violation of Germany's moral obligations to the survivors of the Nazi horror who have been counting upon this indemnification for their con- tinued survival." He pointed out that the recent developments "are very disturbing, occurring as they do on the eve of the visit of Chan- cellor Erhard to the United States." 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED MATURE reliable woman. Babysitting, convalescent care`-Northwest area. UN 2-4944. 50 — BUSINESS CARDS A-1 PAINTING, paperhanging, interior wallwashing. UN 4-0326, UN 2-3873 after 6:30. FOR BETTER wall washing, can James Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. DECORATING, interior, exterior paint- ing. Small carpenter work. Clean and quick service. Call Bill Powell. 542-3270. LARKINS MOVING CO. Household and Office Furniture LICENSED MOVERS PROFESSIONALS 894-4587 I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work. no job too big or small. BR 3-4826, LI 5-4035. JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO. By Hour or Flat Rate Local and Long Distance Packing, stor- age, pianos, appliances, household furn- ishings. 8829 Northend—Ferndale UN 2 - 6047 543 - 4832 TILE AND linoleum floors, basement and kitchen, machine scrubbed, waxed and buffed to a beautiful shine. KE 2-1692. PAINTING, wall washing. Neat work. Reasonable. References. LI. 2-6051. 55—MISCELLANEOUS with full Jewish Alphabet with 15 inch carriage. New. List $325.00 1 only at $235.00. 5 year guarantee. 18050 James Couzens. Nine to five or by appointment. 342- 2211. TYPEWRITER with 8 EXTRA characters. Choice of Language, Math., Engineer- ing, etc., for sale or rental. 18050 James Couzens, nine to five or appointment. 342- 2211. STUDENTS—Typewriters 55-A—MISCELLANEOUS WANTED than Premier Kosygin and Recent events in the Soviet' a personage sss e.s, official d a publications t hs n Union have raised "guarded hopes" 14a 1Ci a. 1; most as development of recent months5; at the Soviet government is nificant th Seen in its context, however, it was changing its policy toward the Jews "not principled or based on morality nn a0. ' ee a ategic tnt g narso rounds" and that the situation of Soviet but on tactesicoa htehe dcSoostr nvt ■ , cyt MMES - Hebraic Chair in Finland HELSINKI (JTA)—A chair in Hebraica was established at the University of Abo. Scholars from all Scandinavian countries at- tended the opening ceremony. World Book Lore 56 — ANTIQUES TRUDY'S TALLY-HO. Antiques and re- sale. Womens designer's clothing, beau- tiful long gowns. 4310 N. Woodward, Royal Oak. Tues.-Sat. 11-4. 549-4993. Mrs. Jesse Asinof Dies THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 38—Friday, December 24, 1965 B-G Resumes Davar Articles TEL AVIV (JTA)—A small thaw in the freeze between Mapai and the dissident. Israel Workers List (Ran) formed by former Pre- mier David Ben-Gurion emerged with the disclosure that Be( Gurion planned to resume Hit, Jewry is undergoing fundamental Neelertnmeilegs the report holds, as regular weekly contributions h improvement. But closer analysis be taken a2. seriously, ime that s anti-Semitism made to Davar, the organ of tht shows that the Soviet aim is still favor. i.c ed is balanc a osri. At same Histadrut, Israel's labor federa- ,-----/—' against the successful Soviet maneuver the assimilation of Russian Jewry, h rhe hc ce inat . tion, before the split. litei the e U o npitreedverl t;"aati ons:,,cp during which continues to be denied the weeks to enuncia- an e of anti-Semitism from being in- Last Friday's issue of Davar also cultural, cultural, religious, educational and tion o v r neinstioor ininatjorn natoi of n a l "Cr cinud carried for the first time since communal institutions and facilities o the inEl Eli the Rafi-Mapai split an article by whereby it. might perpetuate its Racial Discrimination." distinctiveness. The report concludes that the Rafi leader and former Deputy These are the central conclusions "Soviet leadership is sensitive and Defense Minister Shimon Peres. of an "interim report," "Soviet troubled. Moscow is vulnerable; it Jewry Today," issued by the Amer- is susceptible to the pressure of ican Jewish Conference on Soviet world opinion- it does move in Shazar Invites DeGaulle Jewry. , response to it." to Make State Visit In a statement accompanying the (Direct JTA Teletype Wire • The Conference, which has spear- to The Jewish News) headed a campaign of exposure of report, the organizations compris- JERUSALEM—President Shazar Soviet anti-Semitism since its crea- ing the American Jewish Confer- tion a year and a half ago, observes ence on Soviet Jewry renew their has invited President Charles De Samuel Tolkowsky, that Moscow has made "some token pledge not to rest from their ef- Gaulle to make a state visit to concessions, some promises, and forts to keep world opinion focused Israel. The Invitation was contained Israeli Agronomist some real changes." But it says on the plight of Soviet Jewry until in President Shazar's telegram of TEL AVIV (JTA)—Samuel Tol- these have been exaggerated by it has been accorded the rights and congratulations to Gen. De Gaulle kowsky, a noted Israeli agrono- "sophisticated" Soviet propaganda. privileges available to other na- on his election. mist and a pioneer of the citrus Israeli sources speculated that Detailing and analyzing the "con- tional-ethnic-religious groups in the industry in this country, died here cessions, promises and changes', Soviet Union. the French leader might not want Monday at age 79. A famed auth- that have been introduced into "Civilized World opinion will ex- to visit Israel at the present time or and scholar, Tolkowsky had Soviet Jewish life, the report notes: pea more than meager lifting of because of the French effort to im- also served as Israeli's minister Halting of the campaign of prosecu- ; restrictions and denials," they ob- prove relations with the Arabs, to Switzerland. tion of Jews for alleged economic serve. "It will expect the establish- but that if he does, he has the crimes, which had resulted in frequent Born in Antwerp, Mr. Tolkow- sentences of death, and been accom- ment of the communal institutions invitation. sky studied agriculture in Bel- panied by vituperative anti-Semitic arti- necessary to assure the continuity (In Paris, it was reported that the cles in the controlled Soviet press, gium before settling in Palestine. came only after worldwide denuncia- and secure the future of Soviet invitation met a "warm and posi- tions. These protests were supported by Jewry, so as to permit them self- After his arrival in this country, such prominent personalities as Betrand tie" response from French official he pioneered new strains of citrus Russell, Rev. Martin Luther King, and realization as Jews, as citizens and sources, who said that Gen. De fruit and served as chairman and Norman Thomas. In itself, the halt in as human being s: schools; text- Gaulle would "attentively study" Prosecutions represents no shift in the later president of the Citrus Mar- basic Soviet policy of attrition of books; rabbinical seminaries; teach- the possibilities of accepting the ers institutes; centers of advanced invitation.) Jewish group identity. keting Board. He was the founder Permitting the limited baking and learning; research institutes; of the Israel Maritime League sale of matzoth for Pesach 1965 in and remained its chairman until Moscow, Leningrad and a few other courses and classes in Yiddish, He- cities still left most of the Jewish brew and Russian for the study of Mexican Jews Ask his death. masses outside the large cities without Jewish H i s t o r y, literature and of the Pesach observance. In the years prior to the Bal- - this staple the cities. those purchasing values; a publishing house; a pro- Payments Be Made , four Declaration, Tolkowsky lived nEl'alnzottin wd e rteo raevgaiisltae:i.e BI- fessional theater; newspapers and fore 1957 matzoth e MEXICO CITY (JSA) — The in England, where • he acted as tate stores rather than only in syna- journals; a nationwide religious State - secretary to Nahum Soko- gogues p — but even a reversion to that center social-cultural centers in Central Committee of the organ- low, the famed Zionist leader. practice would eliminate only one of all the urban areas of Jewish popu- ized Jewish community of Mexi- the many discriminations and depriva- co asked the West German Ambas- Among his•published works are tions to which the Jewish community, lation." sador here to pass on to the Bonn a history of the port of Jaffa and secular as well as religious. is subjected. The American Jewish Confer- government a request that indem- Enlargement of the single_ Yiddish a history of the citrus fruit. periodical published in the Soviet Union, ence on Soviet Jewry, a coopera- nification payments due in 1966 Sovetish Fleimland, inclusion in it of articles on Jewish history and Jewish tive association of 24 national to certain groups of victims of literature, and increased frequency of American Jewish - organizations Samuel Drasnin, 75 Nazism, including about 150,000 its publication (from bi-monthly to seeks to bring about removal of Jews, should not be deferred. The also publication of several Drasnin, one-time manu- monthly); S volumes of Yiddish literature, including the restrictions and deprivations facturer of rainwear here and ac- a novel in Yiddish for the first time imposed upon Jews in the Soviet envoy said he would forward the 1948 — all this is welcome but does request to the authorities in Bonn. tive in educational movements, since not obscure the "paucity and slowness" Union through an intensive and died Wednesday night at age 75. of the publication program. "The appear- sustained program of information Similar requests have been sub- ance of a handful of books cannot be Mr. Drasnin, 18442 Freeland, mistaken for a real publication pro- and interpretation designed to ex- mitted by Jewish groups in a gram," says the Conference report, served with the United Hebrew "notwithstanding the efforts of Soviet pose those restrictions and de- number of countries during the Schools and the Zionist Organi- apologists at home and abroad to so privations to the world and thereby last days, according to reports - re- interpret it; nor can it obscure the fact zation . of America. The son ,in- that a genuine cultural institution — to bring an outraged world public law of the late Rabbi Ezekiel a Jewish publishing house of the kind opinion to bear upon the Soviet ceived by the Jewish Telegraph used to abound in the USSR — has Aishiskin of Cong. Bnai David, that Agency. government to redress them. neither been promised nor planned." he headed the Tal-Tane Um- Promises to the rabbi of Moscow's main synagogue that the publication of brella Co. 10,000 prayer books in Hebrew would be Mr. Drasnin was born in Vi- permitted, that 15 to 20 students would be admitted to the Moscow Yeshivah tebsk, Russia, and lived in Detroit (which has been virtually shut down since 1962), and that matzoth would be 55 years. freely available in Moscow for Pesach Surviving him are two sons, 1966 were accompanied by "a curiously SA sad note," the Conference remarks. Akivah and Mayer; a daughter, "Silence has prevailed about them in Mrs. Percy (Sarah) Kaplan; and the Soviet Union, although they were ING DRUMBEATER broadcast by Radio Moscow on its seven grandchildren. LORI ANN WAGNER, 5 of MILWAUKEE — overseas transmission." Even if the Services 1 p.m. today at Nusach promises were to be fulfilled, the report 1966 NAT7 ON4L M9RcH ocINMESR,STER C101.0 goes on, it would not remove the dis- IS A MUSICAL MISS WHO. PLAYS PIANO, Hari Cemetery. crimination to which the Jews alone, TURN YOUR OLD SUITS, topcoats, shoes into cash. UN 2-3984. NEW YORK (JTA)—Mrs. Jesse Asinof, an active worker on behalf of numerous Jewish causes, died here Dec. 17 at the age of 61. Born Evelyn Harris in D allas, Mrs. Asinof was a life trustee of the Federation of Jewish Philanthro- pies and a director of its women's division. She was also active on behalf of the Joint Defense Ap- peal, the Council of Jewish Feder- atons and Welfare Funds and the American Jewish Committee. `Soviet Jewry Today' Report Notes USSR 'Sensitive' to World Opinion, Finds Token Changes, No Improvement An old English drinking song about a Greek poet was adopted as the music for "The Star-Spangled Banner." The tune originally was titled "To Anacreon in Heaven." SOLTROIN WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA of all religious groups in the USSR, are subjected — the denial of a central religious organization structure which provides for publications the production of reli7ious facilities and articles, and the maintenance of communication and contact among congregations within the country and with coreligionists abroad. A gala performance in Moscow of the Shostokovitch Thirteenth Symphony, in- cluding a choral rendering the Yevtu- shenko poem Baba Yar, was in contrast to two years ago, when both the sym- phony and the poem were virulently denounced and withdrawn from the Soviet repertoire. This is seen as sug- gesting the possibility of .a reversal of the Soviet policy of silence about the Jewish victims of the Nazil holocaust, were it not for the notable failure of Soviet authorities to break this silence even in the inscriptions on monuments to Nazi victims. Such a monument, de- signed by a Soviet Jewish sculptor, was erected only recently at Rodina, near Smolensk, but while it was dedicated at the old Jewish cemetery in the area, and Soviet propaganda has made much of the Jewishness of the sculptor, the inscription on it makes no mention what- ever of Jewish martyrdom, and it bears no Yiddish or Hebrew language, as do similar monuments on Auschwitz, War- saw and elsewhere outside Russia. At Ponar in Lithuania, the Yiddish inscrip- tion on a memorial was torn down by vandals more than ten years ago and never has been restored. In the Ukraine, Lithuania and Moldavia, where popular anti-Semitism has been more virulent, this official silence about the tragedy of the Jews can only serve to suggest official toleration of the popular bigotry. The report of the American Jewish Con- ference on Soviet Jewry concludes that Soviet propaganda about Soviet respect for Jewish martyrdom under the Nazis is largely a myth. The "public and authoritative con- demnation of anti-Semitism" by no less DRUMS AND SINGS BEAUTIFULLY. HER FATHER IS A BANDLEADER. • BLUE-EYED, STRAWBERRY BLONDE LORI HAS LEG-PARALYZING BIRTH DEFECT OP OPEN SPINE. SHE WALKS WITH FULL LEG BRACES • _• LORI SYMBOLIZES THE 250,0 00"AMERICAN BABIES BORN EACH YEAR WITH SERIOUS BIRTH DEFECTS.. c. SHE HAS TWO NORMAL, HEALTHY V: YOUNGER BROTHERS, HER MOTHER IS A MARCH of INMES VOLUNTEER WORKER.