100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 14, 1971 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-05-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



Israelis Sock It
to S. Koreans in
All-Asia Games

JERUSALEM—Herds of sheep I
in various kibutzim are being ex-
amined in a research project being
carried out at the Hebrew Univer-
sity's faculty of agriculture in
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel's Rehovot, which is using sheep as
National Youth Soccer Team models to throw light on the de-
emerged all-Asian champions after velopment of cancer in man.
Heading the project is 40-year-
defeating South Korea in a cliff-
hanger final game in Tokyo by a old Prof. Kalman Perk, associate
professor of animal anatomy and
1-0 score.
The winning goal was scored dur- physiology, who explains that he
ing the final minute of play by was interested in determining
outside left Shalom Schwartz, ac- whether virus particles existed in
cording to a telephone account human cancer tissue, and their
from Tokyo. Israeli captain Yehiel etiological significance.
He wanted to find experimental
Salem received the tournament vic-
models in which the viral agents
tory cup.
The game was furiously fought, contributed together with addi-
and spectators were not denied the tional factors such as immunol-
fighting that accompanies almost ogical changes and stress factors
to create a situation where the
every soccer contest.
Three minutes before the final virus would cause the disease.
whistle, an injured Israeli player
Prof. Perk feels that sheep
was dragged off the field by the with lung cancer are excellent
South Koreans without first aid. models to contribute explana-
Israeli teammates coming to his tions to the development of can-
rescue were assaulted by Korean
reserve players. But order was
quickly restored.

\

LBJ Recounts
Hot Line Incident

The tense moment in history—
June 10, 1967—when the hot line
was reinstituted between the White
House and the Kremlin was re-
counted by former President Lyn-
don B. Johnson on the CBC-TV
program "Sixty Minutes" Tuesday
evening.
Johnson called the beginning
of the Six-Day War "the toughest
time" he spent in the White House.
Summoned at 8 a.m. June 10 to
the "situation room," Johnson used
the hot line to talk with Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosygin. "Kosygin
said they had reached a crucial
decision and were prepared to do
what was necessary, including
military," if Israel continued with
her operations, Johnson recalled.
He said Kosygin specifically
used the words "crucial moment,"
"grave catastrophe" and "mili-
-- tary."
While the situation was being
reviewed, said Johnson, he ask-
ed Defense Secretary Robert
McNamara where the Sixth
Fleet was presently situated
and how fast it could move.
McNamara replied that it was
300 miles off the Syrian coast
and could travel 25 knots.
Standing orders were for the
U.S. fleet to come no closer to
shore than 100 miles.
"I asked Secretary McNamara
to change the orders from 100
miles off the Syrian coast to 50
miles off the Syrian coast," said
▪ Johnson, adding that he knew the
Soviet Union was monitoring every
movement.
The former President said his
order was "the signal that the
U.S. and its government were pre-
-
pared for the situation" and would
intervene if necessary.
The interview was in connec-
tion with the dedication of the
Johnson Library in Austin, Tex.,
which houses the President's let-
ters and papers of his entire ca-
reer as a public figure.

;54
.4
• • '

*,

•t

gir

•,....:•••• ■•■■•
4 4
. t, 4, 04 go ...4417:4
e L4S
Tfef

• •



• • •

t
4:0 ► if, • 4 •
• • , • 4 P • 'it
.•
iv . 44 •
• 44 .04
..04AL
M11 ra.
•■■■ WO:AA

HENRI

Spectacles
With a Spectacular Guarantee

4 •

Window Guards
Folding Gates
Ornamental Iron Work
Residential or Commercial

Sales, Service, Leasing

PRESCRIPTION OPTICAL CO.

26001 Coolidge

543 3343

16650 JAMES COUZENS

-

TRUST DEPARTMENT

CNB

CITY NATIONAL oBn


"V4
4 • **4
*44 4
• 4 s • 4V.
• 4• •••
I ■ • 4
N.. '41, v•
■ ••
■•■
,

ALEX

International Security Alarm

You always told her to
look both ways and cross at the corner.
You're concerned about her,
her future, your family's future.
And of all the things you worry about,
your estate is surely
one of the most important.
It's the dollars and cents reality
of your family's future.
It's all the things you own,
all the things they'll own.
It needs special attention.
The kind of attention that only a growing,
innovative bank can offer.
At CNB our trust department
is made up of professionals who
take a personal full-time
interest in your interests and those of your
beneficiaries, and see that you get
the attention that most other banks
just talk about. So, when you're ready to find out
about the benefits of trust services,
find out from a bank
that knows what they're all about.
Call Don Levitt in our trust department
at (313) 965-1900 Ext. 356.

Member FDIC

I

r i 4 °4 ■ V 4
.4

v • • v
.

BURGLAR
ALARMS

FIRE
ALARMS

SMOKE •
DETECTION
EQUIPMENT

LET US WORRY ABOUT THE THINGS YOU'RE WORRIED ABOUT.

Ex-Nazis Go on Trial
for Crimes at Babi Yar

BONN (JTA) — Three former
Nazi police officials, charged with
having organized the massacre of
33,771 Jews at Babi Yar in the
Ukraine are on trial in Regens-
burg. The defendants are Maj.
Engelbert Kreuzer, 57; Maj. Mar-
tin Besser, 79; and Sgt. Fritz For-
berg, 65, all of the 45th Police
Battalion.
Rene Rosenbauer, 82, regiment
commander. was declared physi-
cally unfit to stand trial.
The three were charged with
having organized the , ,ixecutions in
1941 and with personally having
killed some of them. The trial is
expected tc last three months.

cer in man.
The Hebrew University is en-1
gaged ien many joint projects with
the National Cancer Institute in
Bethesda, Md., and Prof. Perk him-
self is working in close contact
with colleagues in the United
States and in England. However,
this sheep study was performed
on a very modest budget.
He says that everyone is inter-
ested in trying to encircle the can-
cer problem, and his research is
another approach which gives
greater horizons in cancer biology.
The first part of this sheep study
was published recently in the Jour-
nal of the National Cancer Insti-
tute in Bethesda.

Friday, May 14, 1971-13

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Sheep Used in Cancer Research at Hebrew U. 1THE

CALL 341-3434

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan