Stancrl Capture to Be Followed by Others? Arrested in Brazil, Nazi war criminal Franz Stang', 59, was flown from Sao Paulo to Brasilia pending extradition to Austria on charges involving the World War II deaths of some 700,000 Jews in Polish concentration camps. The No. 3 man on the list of most-wanted Nazis is shown (left) in a photo from his documents, and (right) at the time of his arrest. * * * (Continued from Page 1) prepared to testify when Stang' comes to trial, he added. The cost of the entire Stang' operation, conducted by Wiesen- thal's documentation center, was said to have been $45,000. Wiesenthal's "wanted" list of Nazi war criminals still includes 22,000 names. Wiesenthal revealed that there is in existence now an organization Of former Nazi war criminals whose aim is to protect wanted war criminals. He said the group is known as "Odessa" — which stands for Organization der SS An- gehorige, referring to those who had been members of Hitler's SS. Later Wiesenthal said that he expected the arrest of another "important Nazi" in South Ameri- ca soon. He said also that he sus- The Brazilian Federal Police is especially interested in finding out if he knows about other former Nazi war criminals possibly hiding in Brazil. Stangi had lived quietly with his wife and two daughters in Brazil, under an assumed name, since 1951. He worked as an auto- mobile mechanic in a Volkswagen plant in Sao Paulo. Stang', who fled from an Aus- trian prisoner-of-war camp in 1948, is on a list of missing war criminals issued by the Austrian government in 1962. Evaristo de Morais Filho, a Brazilian lawyer retained by Treblinka survivors now living in Israel, will assist Austria in the extradition proceed- ings. The extradition request must be considered by the Brazilian Su- preme Court within 60 days. Un- der Brazilian law, a prisoner can be kept in custody for that period. Officials indicated there were no legal barriers to extraditing Stang'. Brazil does not have capi- tal punishment. Its laws stipulate that a prisoner cannot be extra- dited unless the requesting nation agrees it will not apply the death penalty to the prisoner. Austria also has no death penalty. The Brazilian file on Stang' in- dicated he had been born in Austria on March 26, 1908, and that he had been an Austrian police officer when the Hitler regime took control of Austria. He joined the Gestapo and rose from informer to captain in charge of construction of concen- tration camps. He supervised the building of the camps at Treb- linka and Sobibor and later com- manded both camps. Stangl's arrest was announced by the governor of Sao Paulo State, who said: "The genocide, Franz Paul Stang', who made mar- tyrs of the Austrian people and is responsible for the death of 700,000 Jews, has been detained by the Department of Political and Social Order and transferred to federal authorities for the process of extradition." He said Stang). ranked only be- hind Martin Bormann, Hitler's deputy, and Lt. Gen Heinrich Mul- ler, head of the SS, on the list of "most wanted" Nazi criminals. Noted Writer and His Works 7 "*k:.;::, .5. • THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 10, 1967-7 Jewish Music Festival Theme Stresses the Contribtuion of Russian Jews "The Historical Contribution of Russian Jewry to Jewish Music" is the theme of the 23rd annual Jew- ish Music Festival to be observed by more than 2,000 religious, cult- ural, educational, fraternal and women's organizations throughout the United States. Conducted under the auspices of the National Jewish Music Council, which is sponsored by the National Jewish Welfare Board, the event will be marked from March 26 (Purim) to April 24 (Passover). The Jewish Music Festival theme was chosen in order to bring the unbelievable treasure trove of Jew- ish musical works composed by Russian Jews to the attention of a generation which should be aware of this heritage and preserve and enrich it, according to Rabbi Avra- ham Spites, chairman of JWB's National Jewish Music Council. It is also intended to keep alive the creative efforts of Russian Jews who, in the Soviet Union today, are denied opportunities for the full flOwering of their Jewish cul- ture, he said. c lnegirlatiort c hrogirtatioa c lniagkatiatt GlniagiThatiort giregiriatiati MURRY KOBLIP4 ADV. UN.1-5600 Mitchell Fishman found Phillips Northland Men's Shoe Shop. The wife of Nazi concentration camp commander Franz Stangl, Mitchell Fishman, prominent insurance agent, found us and a pair of Florsheim Plateau slip-ons. Then he looked at our rubber footwear display, and bought a pair of Totes® . . . just for insurance. Theresa Staugl, peers through the bars of a fence outside her home in Sao Paulo, Brazil, wait- ing for word from her husband. pests the organization of former war criminals "has good connec- tions with diplomats in South America." West Germany has requested Brazil to extradite Stang', a spokes- man for the foreign ministry told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in Bonn. He said the move was initi- ated by the chief prosecutor of Dusseldorf. The spokesman added that, al- though there is no extradition treaty between Brazil and West Germany, "it is expected that the request will be sympatheti- cally considered by the govern. - anent of Brazil. Stang was an Austrian policeman before World War II, but his war crimes, it was pointed out, were committed under Hitler's rule. Stang' is being held under max- imum security detention in Brasilia. The imposing stack of 22 volumes is from the 50-year literary career of Maurice Saniuel (right), winner of the Bnai Brith Jewish Heritage Award "for excellence in Jewish literature." The celebrated author, essayist, translator and widely-traveled lecturer is congratu- lated by writer and critic Mark Van Doren, his long-time friend and radio companion, who was one of several distinguished speakers at a luncheon in New York at which Bnai Brith's commission on adult Jewish education awarded Samuel the $1,000 literary prize. Van Doren, Elie Wiesel, last year's award-winner, publisher Alfred A. Knopf, Dr. Louis L. Kaplan, president of Baltimore Hebrew College, and Meyer W. Weisgal, president of Weizmann Institute, lauded the 72-year-old Samuel as an interpretive Jewish writer "who has stayed close to the source." Van Doren and Samuel have held weekly discussions on the Bible each summer on the NBC network since 1953. 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