18—Friday, March 31, 1967 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS LA Jewish Population S ees Intermarriage Fall LOS ANGELES (JTA) — Inter- marriage within Jewish households has decreased since 1959, according to a Jewish population study com- pleted by the Jewish Federation- For Some of the best buys on new Pontiacs and Tempests ASK FOR Council's Research Service Bureau. Current percentage of intermarri- age per Jewish household is esti- mated at 5.4 per cent as compared to 6.3 in 1959, when the United Jewish Welfare Fund-supported bureau undertook its previous Jew- ish population study. The current report submitted by bureau director Fred Massarik gives an intermarriage breakdown ac- cording to residential community. , Intermarriage in 1951 was esti- mated as averaging 4.8 per cent of ' Jewish households in the Greater Los Angeles area. Beth Abraham Synagogue SAUL BERCH DIAMOND JUBILEE CONCERT AT Packer Pontiac Sunday, April 2nd — 8:15 p.m. $3.00 Donation 18650 L1VERNOIS 1 block South of 7 uN 3-9300 LOSING MONEY IN THE STOCK MARKET! I have a quarter million dollars in personal stock market accounts made from small original investments! I will advise you fore a fee of $5 yearly per 51,000 scaled down to 1/10th of 1% on larger amounts. Contact: Dr. William Schuman REGISTERED INVESTMENT ADVISER P.O. Box 3752 Oak Park, Michigan — 48237 Vlnewood 3.7930 NO ACCOUNT TOO SMALL! Send $5 for my next recommendation There is no guarantee of profit, implied, oral or written GET ON THE PE tor Goldberg No Candidate for Senate Against Javits WASHINGTON (JTA) — The prospect of two Jewish candi- dates contesting for a U.S. Senate seat next year in New York was dimmed Tuesday when the State Department issued a statement asserting that Arthur J. Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Na- tions, would not run for the Senate,,, In response to published re- ports that leading Democrats expect Goldberg to run against Sen. Jacob K. Javits, New York Republican, the State Depart- ment issued a statement by Goldberg asserting that "I am not a candidate" for the Senate from New York. New Editor Appointed to London Newspaper, the Jewish Observer LONDON (JTA)—The board of directors of the Zionist Review, Ltd., publishers of the Jewish Ob- server and Middle East Review, ap- pointed Maurice Samuelson, assist- ant editor of the publication, as acting editor. Earlier this month, Jon Kimche, editor of the weekly, was dismissed from his post in a dispute over his insistence on the publication of an article on Israeli unemployment. Dr. L. Schaller, who had served as acting editor since Kimche's dismissal, has been named manag- ing editor. TO A BETTER SOUTHFIELD ABILITY • EXPERIENCE • LEADERSHIP VISION Mr. Perinoff's Platform • Establish uniform and equitable ,t a x assess- ments. • Free Assessor's office from Political influ- ence. • Preserve city manager type government. • Create committee for developing cultural growth of city. • Re-establish harmony a n d cooperation be- tween the various de- partments of city and other units of govern- ment. Associate Municipal Judge Southfield Councilman Chairman of the Zoning Board Member Zoning Board of Appeals Oakland County Supervisor Oakland County Plan Commissioner Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission ELECT ALEX C. PERINOFF PoL Adv. Votes for Public Defense (Continued from Page 11) in accordance with protocol, the men- tion of any country by name, Jus- tice Cohn continued: "I refer not to physical but to the cultural suppression of a peo- ple. You may prevent discrimina- tion in social and economic fields and still vi o I a t e fundamental rights and freedoms—by not allow- ing a people to develop their own culture, speak their own language, practice their own religion, main- tain their own schools, and by , pursuing a policy of forcible as- ! similation to the culture, language and irreligion of the majority. The propaganda is generally so formi- dable that what results is not per- suasion but fear; not conviction but panic; not voluntary self- determination but a coerced self- denial under duress. "We must, in this commission, find ways and means to bring home to all nations, even the most powerful and prestigious among them, that the rights and freedom of religious and racial minorities are being watched and taken care of by the international community. The establishment of the office of a High Commissioner for Human Rights may perhaps lead to the solution of these problems." 3,000,000 Jews, but avoiding, At the night session, the Ameri- can point of view was pressed Marc Lavry, Israel's The appointment of HARRY Noted Composer, Dies WEINTRAUB as manager of the HAIFA (JTA) — Marc Lavry, Midwest region for Mercer Alloys, Inc., and Stalco International Corp. leading Israeli composer and con- ductor, died here Saturday night has been announced by J. H. of a heart attack Filner, president of both corpora- at age 63. His tions. musical creations Included operas, symphonies, ora- torios and other major works. Born in Riga, Mr. Lavry stud- ied music in that Latvian city and served as con- Lavry ductor of t h e Berlin Municipal Symphony Or- chestra and the Riga Opera before emigrating to Palestine in 1935. He later served as conductor of the Palestine Folk Opera. WAGO Alex C. Perinoff, as an attorney, has the qualifications that the Mayor of Southfield needs to properly fulfill the responsibil- ities of the Mayor's Office. Mr. Perinoff for nine years has faithfully served the citizens of Southfield in the following of- fices: U. N. Commission on Human Rights VOTE MONDAY, APRIL 3rd . by another member of the U.S. delegation, Roger W. Tuby, who said that the High Commissioner would help "to lessen abuses committed on racial, religious or other grounds." The idea for the establishment of a United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights was first broach- ed publicly by Jacob Blaustein, honorary president of the Ameri- can Jewish Committee, in an ad- dress at Columbia University, in New York, on Dec. 4, 1963. Later, the matter began taking form and, in 1966, Costa Rica proposed that the Human Rights Commission form a special work- ing group to study the matter. As a result, a nine-member group was formed and met at UN Headquar- ters in New York earlier this year. The working group adopted a set of guiding principles for a High Commissioner who, as a global ombudsman, would be the UN's human rights watchdog. The group,. however, left open, for the full commission's determination, the basic question as to whether or not such a post as High Commis- sioner for Human Rights was to be created. At the United Nations, N.Y., Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, chief U.S. delegate to the UN, warmly endorsed on behalf of his government the draft Inter- national Convention on the Elimi- nation of All Forms of Religious Intolerance, adopted in Geneva by the UN Commission on Hu- man Rights. He also voiced the Washington administration's "co m m i t me nt" to ratification of the UN Genocide Convention, which was adopted in 1948 but has not yet been ratified by the U.S. Goldberg made his statement dealing with all human rights at the annual meeting of the Confer- ence of United Nations Represen- tatives of the United Nations As- sociation-U.S.A., attended by more than 100 representatives of nongov- ernmental organizations accredited to the United Nations. At its meeting, the conference re-elected Dr. William II. Korey to a second one-year term as chair- man. Dr. Korey is the UN repre- sentative for the Coordinating Board of Jewish Organizations, comprised of Bnai Brith and the Board of Deputies of British Jews.. Abraham Paull, 79; In speaking of the Human Rights .Com mission's action on religious Headed Pinsker Aid freedoms, Ambassador Goldberg Abraham Paull. vice president ' lauded Abram as "one of the prin- of Peoples Store Fixture Co., 3000 ciple authors of the religious-free- Gratiot, and past president of doms document. His skill and per- Pinsker Progressive Aid Society, suasiveness had much to do with the unanimous adoption of the con- died March 23 at age 79. vention in the 32-member Human Mr. Paull, 18438 Prairie, was on Rights Commission." the board of Hebrew Benevolent Society. Born in Russia, he lived in Detroit 53 years. Survivors are his wife, Fanny; two sons, Harry and Ben; and four grandchildren. U.S. Aide on Desalination Project Closes Shop Before Taking Up New Viet Post WASHINGTON (JTA)—A review of the projected $200,000,000 joint United States-Israeli nuclear de- salination program was held here Monday at a meeting between Ells- worth Bunker and Gen. Ephraim Ben-Artzi, Israel coordinator for the experimental project. The meeting reviewed pending ques- tions and aspects of the plan. Bunker, who has been serving as President Johnson's personal envoy on the joint project, has been named U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam and is terminating his assignment on the desalination program. Government sources said that no decision had been taken on a re- placement of Bunker in the de- salination project, which will seek to determine the technical and economic feasibility of the appli- cation of nuclear energy to the desalting of brackish water. MIZRACHI TOURS TO 7 SRPIEL Special PESACH and YOM ATZMAUT Tour Apri 22—May 16, 1961 Alt I glu t ii. ludel • Ito und trip flight via Jet • Strictly kiaber meals F in es fa irc St h • hoSat M eireSrU le lMs • Independeneg Day Celebration grandstand tickets • Guided tours throughout Israel with tn°•°:;11Atreafrirtitat.illarigin ir ' 15.000 setlettW Wrists to lint"( Sand build bu rOChurs listing 0 group flights to hp and Europa at $531. criUrzw, ug g , IV: Detroit Mizrachi Office 18033 Wyoming DI 1-0708