30—Friday, February 28, 1969
Desert overtone stemming from
a Bible theme were heard at the j
Masonic Temple Saturday night, at
the concert given by the Israel,
Chamber Orchestra under the di-
rection of Gary Bertini. The desert
.theme was well executed in the
presentation of Mordecai Seter s
"Daughter of Jephtha."
This selection, for chamber
orchestras, was commissioned by
the Bathsheba Foundation for the!
Bathsheba .Dance Company. Seter
chose the Bible drama about Jeph-1
tha's daughter for his theme, with
MISS BARBARA BECKER
Vow, Lament and Sacrifice as the
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Becker of three dramatic moments. The
Los Angeles announce the engage- French horn and trumpet pre-
ment of their daughter Barbara Jo i dominate here and the antiphony
to Alan David Mills, son of Mr. of instruments introduces a unique:
and Mrs. Max Mills of Echo Val-' interpretation.
The 28 members of the orches-.
ley Rd.. Farmington.
tra, four of them women, and
Miss Becker attended Valley .
their director were enthusiastic-
College. Her fiance attended Val-1
ally acclaimed for their rend/.1
ley State College and is presently
Lion of Ibert's Divertisement,
a student at Wayne State Univer-
Mozart's Sinfonia and Handel's
sity .
Concerto, in addition to the Jeph-
An Aug. 24 wedding in Bel Air,
tha work. The prolonged cheers )
Calif., is planned.
at which Messrs. and Mesdames
Louis and Samuel Hamburger were
hosts, Bertini told of the enthus-
iasm of the members of the Israel
Chamber Orchestra. He said the
average age of these musicians
was 25, that most of them studied
on America-Israel Cultural Foun-
dation scholarships, that the or-
chestra has appeared in border
settlements in Israel defying dan-
gers from Arab snipers.
At Kiryat Shmone, he said, the
orchestra's concerts, for children
in the afternoon followed in the
evening for adults, the concerts
took place immediately after a
severe attack by Arab guerrillas,
and in spite of heavy losses the
settlement insisted that the plan-
ned functions should not be can-
celled.
Gideon Paz, the cultural founda-
tion's vice-president, and M. Kroch-
mal, its midwest director, intro-
duced the orchestra members at
the reception.
Good nonsense is good sense in
—Josh Billings.
disguise.
MISS TERI LUTREN
Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Lutren
of Pearson Ave., Oak Park, an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter Teri Lee to Mark Good-
man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Goodman of Briarcrest Ct., Farm-
inton.
The bride-elect is a senior in the
I Wayne State University College of
I Education. Mr. Goodman is a grad-
uating senior at WSU.
The couple plans to wed in De-
cember.
to note that he does not aban-
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1
that history 'is often a bad
teacher.' He was convinced that
there was no possibility of a re-
vival of Nazism in West Germa-
ny, and that its political leaders
LORD RUSSELL
don hope and he declares: "A
strong ray of hope emanates
from a certain new freedom in
the land. The traditional Ger-
man reverence for authority
(they even have a word for it:
Obrigkeit) seems to be vanish-
ing. Today's youth is 'kicking
over the traces,' and in this re-
spect the young Germans are no
different from the young every-
where. Their parents are
'squares,' too. The older genera-
tion may shake their heads in
disapproval, but there is some-
thing to be said for this general
rebellion. And Germany, above
all, needs young rebels such as
this new breed, for between 1933
and 1945 their elders certainly
did not set them a good exam-
ple."
While there is hope on the heart
of a battler for justice and against
Nazism, the account given by Lord
Russell presents in all its fullness
the existing conditions in Germany,
the emergence of the new Adolf
von Thadden-led party of extrem-
ists who have been branded neo-
Nazis, the inheritance from the
Hitler era.
So--in this volume we have ana-
lyses of history, reveiws of current
conditions — and warnings of pos-
sible emergence or re-emergence
of what had occurred.
Lord Russell, the fearless figh-
ter against bigotry, states bluntly
in his introduction:
"'The Federal Gemini Repub-
He Is presently a fall and loyal
member of NATO, and it is,
therefore, important that the
other members of this organiza-
tion should do all in their power
to support the present democra-
tic regime, for should it break
down, history will surely repeat
itself. Mr. George Brown, the
former British Foreign Secretary,
said in 1967 just before he left
London for a visit to Moscow
(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)
CARACAS, Venezuela — A West
German judge visited a survivor
of the Treblinka death camp here
to take testimony in the war
crimes trial of former camp cap-
tain Franz Stengel.
Judge Haag Schedersky of Dus-
seldorf made the trip in order to
speak to a former Polish Jewish
inmate of the camp who was too
ill to come to Germany. The in-
mate, who requested anonymity,
escaped from Treblinka in 1943
after losing his family there.
and bravos brought an encore,
Haydn's Finale.
At a reception for the musicians
Lord Russell's Warnings of Resurgent Nazism
BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Now Booking - - -
Mingle With Hope for Emerging Liberal Youth
There are challenges from the
extreme right and dangers have
not evaporated in Germany, as a
legacy from Nazism, but Lord Rus-
sell of Liverpool expresses the
hope, in "Return to the Swastika?",
published by David McKay Co.,
that the younger generatitn in
Germany, their country's trustees,
will exert a wholesome influence.
He sees encouraging signs that
"Germany's young -people will
emerge from their schools and uni-
versities with a fuller realization of
past errors. So equipped, they can
be counted on to work more whole-
heartedly for the good government
that democracy means."
Because he does deal with "the
rising threat of resurgent Naz-
ism in Germany," it is important
German Judge Interviews
Survivor in Venezuela
Teri Lee Lutren to Be
Mrs. Mark Goodman
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Barbara Becker of LA
Betrothed to Alan Mills Israel Chamber Orchestra Given
Enthusiastic Audience Acclaim
were convinced and genuine
democrats. That remains to be
seen. True, history does not al-
ways repeat itself. Nevertheless,
German history has done so
more than once."
In this fashion, we have an au-
thoritative presentation of facts, a
study of what is occurring now, a
warning against what may happen
if the democratic forces are not
on guard and if German youth is
not properly prepared for rejection
of the horrors of the past.
Lord Russell of Liverpool is the
grandson of the late Lord Russell
of Liverpool, formerly Sir Edward
Russell, the well-known journalist
and dramatic critic. He began his
career, which was to alternate be-
tween the military and the law,
during World War I, when he was
commissioned in the King's Regi-
ment and was awarded the Mili-
tary Cross three times. After the
war he continued to serve at home
and in India with the King's Regi-
ment and later in the Indian Cav-
alry.
In 1929 Lord Russell resigned his
commission and returned to Eng-
land, where he read for the Bar
and practiced in London and on
the Oxford circuit until 1934 when
he joined the Office of the Judge
Advocate General.
On the outbreak of war in 1939,
he was appointed to the staff of
Field Marshal Lord Gort and
served in France with the British
Expeditionary Forces. He served
in North Africa under General
Eisenhower and in the Middle East.
In June 1946 1 he occupied the
post of head of `the Judge Advo-
cate General's department in the
Milne. During MS tenure of this
appointment he was legal adviser
to the commander in chief in re-
spect of all trials by British Mili-
tary Courts of German war crim-
inals. During this time he worked
in close cooperation with the
French occupation forces in Ger-
many for which he was made an
Officer of the Legion of Honor.
In May 1951 he returned to the
office of the Judge Advocate Gen-
eral of the Forces in London but
resigned in August 1954 when an
attempt was made to prevent the
publication of his history of Ger-
man war crimes, "The Scourge of
the Swastika," which became a
world best seller and was trans-
lated into 17 foreign languages.
Since then Lord Russell has writ-
ten nine other books.
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