19-E--BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALE 55—MISCELLANEOUS TYPEWRITER with full Jewish W. 7 Mi. Rd.-Sorrento 2 stores. Best location for any type of business, gas ht. air cond. tiled front, plenty park- ing in rear. Full price $17,500. Ask for Mr. Kalfus. GROSS REALTY Alphabet with 15 inch carriage. New. List $325.00 1 only at The Jack Ruby case is far from $235.00. 5 year guarantee. 18050 James Couzens. Nine to ended. From all indication, the five or by appointment. 342- Dallas man who killed Lee Har- vey Oswald, the assassin of Pres- 2211. ident John F. Kennedy, may serve a jail sentence and eventual- ly be freed. Insanity was discussed, STUDENTS—Typewriters with the trial attracted world attention, 8 EXTRA characters. Choice a great lawyer, Melvin M. Belli, WHEELCHAIR for sale. 12820 Oak Park Blvd. of Language, Math., Engineer- ing, etc., for sale or rental. 18050 James Couzens, nine to five or appointment. 342- 2211. DI 2-1300 30-A—INSTRUCTIONS BAR-MITZVAH, Hebrew, Bible, Yiddish, English; experienced teacher, 342-9254. 55-A—MISCELLANEOUS WANTED PIANO teacher. Experienced. My home. 17164 Greenlawn. DI. 1-4348. TURN YOUR OLD SUITS, topcoats, shoes into cash. UN 2-3984. 31 — TRANSPORTATION LEAVING FOR Los Angeles about Jan. 7. New Continental. Wanted party to share. Call evenings. EL 6-7891, days FO 6-4444. -CARS TO BE GIVEN To Philadelphia, New York City, Seattle, Florida, Utah, California, Texas, Arizona, etc. Also drivers furnished to drive your car any- where. ALL POINTS DRIVER AGENY 9970 GRAND RIVER DETROIT, MICH. 48204 WE 1-0621 40—EMPLOYMENT SHOE SALESMAN $100 a week plus benefits. Ex- perienced o n 1 y. PARKER BROS. SHOES AND MEN'S WEAR. 9101 12th STREET. 895-9522 WE HAVE Day workers, housekeepers (live in), convalescent care, child care, baby sitters. Bond- ed, licensed. BONDED PERSONNEL AGENCY 10932 GRAND RIVER 933-0522 WANTED BOYS 12-16 to carry The Detroit News. In area bounded by Northlawn to Schaef- er, 6 to 7 Mile. Earn good money. Apply at 18025 WYOMING or call MR. SIXHEY, 861-9161. WOMAN. General office work - 40 hour week. 2690 W. Davison. TO. 9-5800. 45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES DEARBORN In Michigan Shopping Plaza— exclusive children's wear, long established, high foot traffic, parking. ELSEA VI 1-1400 50—BUSINESS CARDS A-1 PAINTING, paperhanging, interior waliwashing. UN 4-0326, UN 2-3873 after 6:30. FOR BETTER wall washing, call 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. Sports Highlights By JESSE SILVER (Copyright, 1965, JTA, Inc.) Tackle Ron Mix of the San Diego Chargers has been chosen to the American Football League's All-Star team for the sixth suc- cesssive year. Mix, who played college football at Southern Calif- ornia, is 6-4 and weighs 250 pounds. He is a member of the of- fensive team. Coach Phil Handler of the Chic- ago Bears has done an outstand- ing job this year with the Bear defense. He and a fellow coach were awarded the game ball after the Bears defeated the Baltimore Colts 13-0. It was Baltimore's first shutout since 1962. Baltimore's owner Carroll Ros- enbloom must have suffered through that loss. A millionaire businessman, Rosenbloom is his team's most enthusiastic support- er. So much so that he has said, "I don't want any yachts, and I don't want any castles. I would just like to have about 30 more championships, and then I'd be set." Mike Belkin of Miami Beach has been ranked No. 7 by the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association for 1965. This is by far his best showing; he was ranked No. 17 last year. Belkin currently attends Miami- Dade Junior College. He dropped out of Miami U. this summer to play the _ tennis circuit. Canadian born, Belkin drew a six-month suspension when he failed to fulfill tournament commitments in Canada. It is said that the only thing keeping him from the top is his "powder puff" serve. Israel will be represented at the Orange Bowl Junior Tennis Cham- pionships and Sunshine Cup which will be played in Miami, Fla. The two players from Israel will be Suri Ariely and Rafi Melion. Ar- iely is his country's National 16 and National 18 year old champion. He attended a tennis camp in Ham- tramck, Mich., last summer. Because the Israeli players will be present, the U.A.R. may keep its players home as they did last year. Eddie Herr, founder and tournament director of the Sun- shine Cup, has announced that 32 nations will participate. He said that "It would be a shame for these Arab players to miss the tournament because of political reasons." Israel is doing something to advance her standing in the rac- quet sports. A 10-court tennis facility is to be built, and the first new squash courts to be constructed in the country in 25 years have just opened on the campus of the Hebrew University. The final statistics on the 1965 swimming season only proved what everyone knew; Mark Spitz is an exceptional swimming talent. Spitz, a 15-year-old from Santa Clara, Calif., made the U. S. top 25 marks in • five long course events. 2,000 Jews in Ecuador The Jewish Community of Ecua- VIENNA furrier. Re-modeling, repairs. dor, which dates back to the turn Reasonable prices. DI 1-0462. of the century, now numbers some 2,000 persons, most of whom live THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS in the cities of Quito and Guaya- quil. 30 Friday, December 31, 1965 — Anti-Semitism Charged in Belli's Indictment of 'Injustice in Dallas' defended Ruby and later was dis- missed. But this lawyer has a story to tell, and he tells it well in an important book, "Dallas Just- ice—The Real Story of Jack Ruby and His Trial," which Belli has written with Maurice C. Carroll and has been published by David McKay. It is not a pretty picture, and Dallas justice does not emerge so pleasant. Belli charges anti-Semi- tism. He relates, for instance, an incident in a barber shop. The towel was about to be adjusted around his neck when he heard someone say ". . . and they got those Jew psychiatrists out from Maryland." "Yeah," someone else said, "those slick Jew psychiatrists with their slick Jew lawyers." And Belli adds: "Hitler had been out of power 19 years, but that was simply Nazi stuff. I swept away the towel, and, as the barber turned a startled look toward me, I stood straight up and gave the Nazi salute. `Ach- tung,' I yelled. `Achtung, Heil Hitler!' And I goose-stepped out of the place while the barber stood there open-mouthed, holding the towel in his outstretched hands. It was strange when I thought about it that they would go in for that sort of loose-lipped prejudice, be- cause by then there was the most polyglot collection of people around that courthouse that Dallas had ever seen." Referring to the actions of Bill Alexander of the Dallas DA's of- fice, Belli quotes the court tran- script and states he never could "get straight the purpose" of the line of questioning during which Alexander asked: "Well, you recognize that a Jew- ish boy like that, discussing base- ball scores with somebody from Chicago, would do it with different mannerisms and gestures than maybe a couple of colored gentle- men of African descent in South Dallas? Belli's story proceeds: "That is bad enough, a bald intrusion of racial terminology during the trial of a Jew in a city noted for aggressive white Protestant narrow-mindedness. But it is not what Alexander said. He said `Jew-boy,' which was typed up as the more eu- phonious 'Jewish boy.' "Even the transcript shows the reaction — blustering defensive- ness from Wade (Henry Wade, Dallas County District Attor- ney), smooth-it-over embarrass- ment from Judge Brown. It reads like this: "Mr. Belli: I didn't get that— `Jewish boy,' (`Jew-boy' I had re- peated) is that what he referred to? I would like to have that read. Hungary Won't Give Up Toeroek Documents BONN (JTA) — The foreign ministry of Hungary has refused to hand over to West Germany the original documents purportedly showing that Dr. Alexander Toe- roek, Bonn's chief counselor in the embassy in Israel, had been a mem- ber of the Arrow Cross, the Hun- garian Fascist Party, during the Hitler era, the West German For- eign Office declared here Tuesday. Dr. Toeroek had been accused in the Communist press of Hun- gary of having been a Nazi. Ef- forts have been made by the for- eign office here to obtain the al- leged documentary evidence re- garding Dr. Toeroek. But Buda- pest, according to officials here, has said, in refusing to hand over the documents: "It is not our affair." Philadelphia Guidebook Has Many Shortcomings Esther M. Klein, who, with her husband, Philip Klein, has been publishing the Philadelphia Jewish Times since 1946, has compiled "A Guidebook to Jewish Philadelphia, which has been published as a paperback by Jewish Times In- stitute. There is a vast amount of formation about the city, its Jewisli institutions and personalities. Indeed, Mrs. Klein does recall many of the sagas about the Qua- ker City. This 190-page book ac- counts for developments in col- onial times, tells about Nathan Levy who transported the Liberty Bell from England to this country in his own ship in 1752. Many other stories are told and Jewish institutions are evaluated. There is much in the book about the Kleins—Philip, his brothers, the rest of the family, and about their paper, the Jewish Times. And it is here that the biased view becomes apparent. The Jewish Exponent history is treated so shabbily, names such as David Gaiter's, who was a forceful figure in Philadelphia in his lifetime, and who edited the Exponent, are o- mitted. Such omissions, the re- duced space given the Jewish Publication Society and other shortcomings reduce the merits of this guidebook. "The Court: Let him rephrase it, Mr. Belli. "Mr. Tonahill (Belli's associ- ate): Is that supposed to make some difference? Is he under- taking to inject race prejudice in the case now, Judge?" "The Court: No, I don't think so (!)." "Mr. Wade: No, the word wasn't even used. Let him read it." "Mr. Tonahill: Well, do you withdraw the racial prejudice in- jection? "Mr. Wade: You and your law- yer are the ones that brought it up. He can read the question if he wants it. (Presumably he was here granting the permission to the court reporter that is cus- tomarily passed upon by the judge). "Mr. Belli: I would like to have the first part of it read. (Thereupon the portion of the question referred to was incor- rectly read back by the reporter, `You recognize that a Jewish boy . . .'). "Mr. Belli: That's all I want- ed. "Mr. Alexander: Doctor, let us rephrase it .. ." Then, Belli pointed out that Pat- rick Dean, "the man who had He who doubts nothing knows been responsible for protecting Os- nothing. wald's life had given the most dam- —Spanish Proverb aging testimony of all against Os wald's slayer." He reports in his book: "Dean concluded that Ruby had -t4 * UNDERWRITE said he wanted to kill Oswald 'be- YOUR cause he wanted the world to know COUNTRY'S that Jews do have guts.' (Solidify- ing the premeditation theme and MIGHT! appealing to the prejudice so ram- pant in white, Anglo-Saxon, Prot- estant Dallas). "We protested the anti-Semitic reference. We demanded to know if Ruby had been warned of his right against self-incrimination." In the main, Belli's book is an indictment of Dallas justice, a con- tention that Ruby did not get a fair trial. SAVINGS BONDS Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF • O NE OF THE late Adlai Stevenson's most widely quoted quips came the day he consented to be interviewed on TV by a gaggle of eager high school students. "As a man who lost two elections to Dwight Eisenhower," spoke up one of the ques- tioners, "what is the best advice you can give to youthful politicians?" "Never," replied Adlai Stevenson, "run against a war hero." * * * Gertrude Stein, no mod- est violet she, never felt that she was properly ap- preciated by the American public until her triumphant tour of the U.S.A. in the early nineteen thirties. The fuss everybody made of her on this trip tickled her so that she revised all her low estimates of America's cultural level. As Alexander Woolcott put it, "A. niche in time saved Stein." * * * Mrs. Bernstein shook a finger under a teacher's nose and shrilled, "My Clarence came home today and told me you had called him 'a scurvy elephant.' Is that a thing to call a seven. year-old child?" Mrs. Bernstein was partially appeased when she learned that her cherub hadn't gotten the message just right. What the teacher had called him was "a disturbing element." * — -10 — Nominations for the "I Never Forget a Place" Association: Oola, La.; Shapely, Miss.; Fiven, Tenn.; Tyatin, Kan.; Early, Mass.; Either, Ore.; Noahs, Ark.; Allcomeoutinthe, Wash.; and Whocouldaskforanything, Mo. * During the first intermission of an outdoor performance of "Othello," Sir Laurence Olivier was stopped at the door to his portable dressing room by a distressed lady who wanted direc- tions to the New Haven bound bus. "But why," asked Sir Laur- ence, "aren't you staying for the remainder of the performance?" "Frankly," explained the lady, "I saw it years ago in Brooklyn in Yiddish—and it hurts me to see what it loses in translation." * * Tony Randall once had a landlady who told him proudly, "Jack Dempsey was concealed and born in this very house!" C 1965, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Features Syndicate K - 1