46—Friday, March 27, 1970 ' THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 50—BUSINESS CARDS CARPENTRY WORK, all kinds.exterior, interior Free °estimates. I. Schwartz, BR 3.4826, LI 5-4035. 2,000 Professors Sign Petition for Air Safety WASHINGTON (JTA) — Some Household and Office Furniture 2,000 university professors have Local and Inter-state Also storage. 894-4587 signed petitions sent to President Nixon asking him to act to make air travel safe for the academic LARKINS MOVING CO. mankind." The petitions we r e forwarded ACCURATE watch repairing, quick service. Call 543.1647. from nine universities to Deputy Undersecretary of S t a t e Elliott Richardson by Dr. A. Clifford 56—ANTIQUES Barger of Harvard University. His ATTEND THE 52nd brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. E. Richard Weiner- PRESENTATION of THE man, were two of the 47 persons DETROIT ANTIQUES killed in the sabotage of a Swissair SHOW plane in Zurich on Feb. 21. at Detroit's Show Place Dr. Barger said he did not solicit the signatures. "Some friends call- THE MASONIC TEMPLE ed from all over asking me what Temple at Second I was going to do and we decided April 2, 3, 4, 5 on this." The petitions were signed 1 P.M.-10 P.M. by faculty members at Yale— where Dr. Weinerman was a pro- Sun. to 6 P.M. fessor of public health — and at ' Finest dealers from Harvard, Columbia, Johns Hopkins. Coast to Coast" Michigan, Pittsburgh and Califor- nia Universities. The petition from 57—FOR SALE—HOUSEHOLD Harvard said that the United GOODS AND FURNISHINGS — — States must take "the lead in in- KITCHEN SET, 5 pieces, chrome chairs, suring that resolute measures are table. formica top. Practically new, $40. taken to deal with this growing 399.9130. menace." The message also said that "the lack of firm international 60 — CARS FOR SALE action against air piracy and sabo- 1970 CHEVY Nova, 2 door, Mist green, tage and against governments har- black vinyl interior. Will sacrifice, boring, assisting and encouraging 52,195. 541.5724, after 5 p.m. those responsible has resulted in this tragic episode in Zurich." 87—PETS DOG BOARDING HOME STYLE Tender loving care at reasonable rates New LP Dramatizes `Living Story of Israel' Dramatizing events in modern Israel with its mixture of people who have "come home" after 1,900 years of wandering, "The Living Story of Israel," a long-playing , stereo album, will be released 1 this month. "The Living Story of Israel" Two sons of Jewish immigrants captures the spirit of a determined to the "Goldene Medina" have !nation and its achievements within been named to top positions at 22 years. major universities in North Amer- 1 With special materials recorded ica. by the Israel Government Tour- Almost simultaneously with the ist Office, "The Living Story of announcement that Abraham Sam- Israel" highlights many notable uel Goldstein had been named events and presents a recreation (lean of the Yale Law School of the scholarly and religious came the report that Ernest Sir- atmosphere of Jerusalem, the luck has been appointed president gaiety of Tel Aviv and the charm of the University of Manitoba is of Haifa. Winnipeg. Listeners hear Kibbutzniks lift- Canada's second Jewish univer- ing their voices in song, a Yemen- sity president, Sirluck, 51. will re- ite celebration, military attacks sign his twin posts as dean of grad- against Israel in defiance of UN uate studies at the University of rulings, a Middle East market- Toronto and graduate vice presi- ' . place. the military taking their dent to accept the presidency of commands in Hebrew just as they the University of Manitoba. did in the days of King Solomon Himself a western Canadian and Jews returning to the Western by birth and a graduate of the Wall in 1967. university he will now head, Dr. Sirluck taught English literature Booming Staten Island at the University of Chicago be- fore he entered university ad- Causes Center Woes ministration. NEW YORK (JTA)—The Staten He is the son of a Russian Jew- Island Jewish Community Center, ish immigrant who farmed in west- anticipating a doubling of the ern Canada and before that in Jewish population of the island Argentina. borough by 1980, is polling its Goldstein, 44, son of a Ukrainian 1,200 member families for their immigrant who became a pushcart views on expansion of the center's peddler on New York's-Lower East jammed facilities, center officials Side, is a former trial lawyer who reported. joined the school in 1956 as an They said that the center build- associate professor, becoming a , ing, erected in 1929 and enlarged full professor in 1961. six years ago by 20 per cent, was "succumbing to the population ex- Ben Jacob, Owner plosion. The building is literally overflowing people, and the of Bottle Distributors facilities are with swamped by the BEN JACOB, president of M. needs of the membership." Jacob and Son Co., bottle distrib- A study by a center committee utors, 10101 Lyndon, died last Sat- reported that for lack of space, ui day at age 78. some programs had been canceled. Mr. Jacob, 30960 Glenmorra, Southfield, was a member of Cong. Waiting periods of up to two years for enrollment in the center Shaarcy Zedek and City of Hope, as well as Harry B. Keidan Lodge nursery school have been report- of Bnai Brith. He was a native ed. Detroiter. The officials reported that since Surviving are a son, Martin; a 1929, the Jewish population of brother, Sam; a sister, Mrs. Herb Staten Island had tripled to its ert (Reeve) Sobel of Chicago; five present 21,000 and that, in the past grandchildren and one g r ea t- four years, membership in the grandchild. center had increased 45 per cent. It was estimated that by 1980, the Never cut what you can untie.H borough's Jewish population will reach around 35,000. Joseph Joubert. Call evenings 399-2253 or 398-6507 Universities Name Immigrants' Sons Pro-Arab Imbalance of UN Assailed NEW YORK (JTA) — Yosef Tekoah, Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, said in a broad- cast Monday morning that the UN's record of achievement in the Middle East was "disappointing." that it has projected a pro-Arab "parliamentary imbalance" instead of a "blanced consensus," and that it has "not even been able to censure the murder of Israelis" or enforce its own cease fires. Tekoah, who has criticized the world organization and Secre- tary U Thant in the past, de- clared that of the "countless resolutions" on the Mid East in the Gener Assembly, "al- most all are ro-Arab," because members with that attitude out- number Israel by "40 or 50" to "only one;" and that five of the current 15 members of the de- cision-making Security Council were anti-Israel. The UN's record, he charged, has fallen short of its "lofty ideals." Tekoah was heard in an inter- view recorded recently in Israel by Arnold Forster. general coun- sel to the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith, and broadcast on WMCA Radio. The ambassador. who previously represented Israel in Brazil and in the Soviet Union, asserted that a Mid East solution must result from Arab-Israeli negotiations, because "no war in the world" has ever been settled without direct talks between or among the parties involved. The attempt of the Big Four to impose a settlement, he charged, was "circumventing, de- laying and undermining" the search for peace. But Tekoah did not recommend that the UN be replaced. Though it needs "a change of attitude" by hostile members to be effective in matters of warfare, he commented, it "continues to be useful" in economic, social and legal areas. ambassadorial f u n c tions as Swedish envoy to Moscow. A United Nations spokesman said Monday that Dr. Jarring was continuing his consultations here and had no present plans for leaving New York. But Dr. Jar- ring's meeting last Friday with Ambassador Charles W. Yost of the United States completed his round of talks with the Four Powers and made it clear to him that there had not been and was not likely to be soon.. any Four Power agreement on new "guide- lines" for his mission. Meanwhile informed sources confirmed reports that the Soviet Union has agreed to re- talks on the bilateral sume Middle East. They are expected to begin in April between Joseph Sisco, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin. The source said the Soviets had agreed "in principle" to the new talks because of the failure of the Four Power deliberations con- ducted in New York between the UN representative of the United States, Russi a, Britain and France. They said the White House was also believed to feel that the Four Power talks had reached an im- passe. But it was reliably reported that the Soviets had approached the U.S. regarding resumption of the two-power approach. President Nixon has stated in the past that the U.S. was tired of making proposals that the Soviets constantly rebuffed and that the next move was Moscoicis. The Four Power meeting sched- uled for Thursday was postponed until next Tuesday at the request of Lord Caradon, the British repre- sentative. Lord Caradon gave a speaking engagement as the rea- son for his request. Observers said the Four Powers thought it advisable to defer their further talks in light Washington Wednesday between Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin. State Department spokesman Carl Bartch announced Tuesday that Rogers and Dobrynin would meet "within the next few days," but other sources said their meet- ing would take place Wednesday as an immediate followup to Secre- tary Rogers' announcement Mon- day that the sale of more war- planes to Israel was being held in abeyance. Officials said the U.S. is inter- ested in determining whether the Soviets are willing to talk about an agreement to limit arms ship- ments to the Middle East. There have been hints from the Kremlin that it would keep to a minimum the delivery of new weapons to Egypt. The Russian- made SAM-3 antiaircraft missiles recently delivered to Egypt are regarded by the U.S. as purely de- fensive and not a danger at the present time to the Mid East military balance. According to administration of- ficials, the Soviets are exercising restraint in arms shipments to Egypt and are resisting Cairo's demands for larger deliveries of "offensive" weapons. `Fiddler' to Be Filmed in Zagreb By HERBERT G. LUFT (Copyright 1970, JTA, Inc.) HOLLYWOOD—"Haim Topol will project on the screen a Tevye with dignity and strength." director Norman J e w iso n -emphatically stated to your JTA columnist in an Reports Say Dr. Jarring exclusive interview at the Samuel May Soon Return to Moscow: Goldwyn Studios in Hollywood. We Talks With Big Four Completed were discussing the forthcoming UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—Dr. motion picture production of "Fid- Gunnar V. Jarring, the United dler on the Roof" to go before the Nations special envoy for the Mid- cameras in August in Zagreb. dle East, has completed a fruitless Yugoslavia, and not Romania as two weeks of consultations here previously announced. Lloyds of on the possibility of resuming his London would not insure for dam- peace-seeking mission in the Mid- ages in Romania or Czechoslovakia. dle East. two countries regarded too risky Informed sources here said that for this $8,000,000 production of Dr. Jarring had exhausted about the Mirisch Co. all the possibilities and has ex- Jewison says that he found out- plored every possible avenue side of Zagreb the village of Ptni without receiving any encourage- resembling the Anatevka in the ment 'that a renewal of his ef- district of Kiev at the turn of the forts to bring the Arabs and century, with its dreamy-eyed, Israelis together for negotiations sleepy straw huts and cobble-stoned would have any chances of suc- alleys. Here, the world of Sholem cess. He was consequently de- Aleichem will come to life anew. scribed as ready to return to his The Yugoslav segment of produc- Beersheba a 1st-Prize Community The Beersheba Town Center megastructure pictured here is one of the buildings that have earned for the Negev city the second R.S. Reynolds Memorial Award for Community Architecture. The center contains stores, offices and apartments on different levels. The archi- tects and planners of Beersheba will receive the international award, which confers $25,000 and an original sculpture in aluminum "for the dessign of a community in which architectural planning and design have made a most significant contribution," according to the Amer- ican Institute of Architects, which administers the program spon- sored by Reynolds Metals Co. The award will be presented at the AIA annual convention in Boston on June 25 to a representation of the Israel Ministry of Housing, which administers the new towns program. The $25,000 will be used for study grants in urban design under the administration of Technion, Israel's technical university. "The jury believes Beersheba to be of international significance in the evaluation of town planning," the judges' report said. "It rep- resents the full spectrum for community evolution. It is, in the totality of development of new and old, an outstanding symbol of a national urbanization policy." Lion will be shot in cooperation with the Yadran studios of Zagreb, the very same studio where the Russian sequence of "Isadora" was duplicated two years ago. "Fiddler on the Roof" will be in production for a period of four months with photography of the elaborate dance sequences to commence later in fall in the studios of London where the best singers and dancers for the mass scenes can be found. Josef Stein, who adapted the Arnold Pert dramatization of the Sholem Aleichem yarn for the stage musical, has also written the screen play, leaving the basic frame of the story very much intact only enlarging the physical scope of the setting now extended from the hamlet of Anatevka to reach out into the vast pale of settlement in the Czarist Russia of yesteryear. At the end, when the Broadway musical somehow declines, the motion picture ver- sion adds a special touch with a grand exodus of the oppressed Jews of Poland now representing a mass of humanity streaming out of the old country to reach a new world of freedom and reli- gious liberties. In Hollywood since 1962, Jewison made his debut with a non-too- successful screen comedy, "10 Pounds of Trouble," starring Tony Curtis. Two run-of-the-mill Doris Day pictures followed, "The Thrill of It All" and "Send Me No Flow- ers;" and "Art of Love," starring James Garner, Dick Van Dyke and Elke Sommer. When, in 1965, the Steve Mc- Queen, Edward G. Robinson star- rer, "The Cincinnati Kid," hit the screen, audiences and critics for the first time took notice of a great new directorial talent, Nor:, man Jewison. Ex-Nazi MD Charged With 15,314 Murders BONN (JTA)—Horst Schumann, a former Nazi doctor, has been charged in Frankfurt with 15,314 counts of murder in connection with concentration camp deaths during 1940-41, plus additional charges of fatal sterilization and X-ray experiments. The accused, 63, was extradited from Ghana in 1966.