so_Fdr i iy,Mittry i " ji ~ IfISM :MEWS Housi LEAVING COUNTRY 642-0243 3/4 CARAT consistory diamond ring. 5420243. DICTATING equipment. Norelco dictating unit and transcriber tapes. Must sublease. 542- . 3 6—ANTIQ U E S COLLECTORS SALE A Conoisser's lifetime collet-ion of art works and fine antiques consisting of Waxes, Oil Paint- ings, Miniatures on ivory, Bronzes, Chino, Porcelain, Plaques, Woodcarvings, Ivories, Teo Caddies, Copo-Di-Monte, Crystal, Barometers, French Clocks, Tureens, etc. for$100-Millioni Dulzin Power Balance Shift Analyzed in Congress Study By Appt. Only 353-4945 57—FOR SALE—HOUSEHOLD GOODS 1. FURNISHINGS SCANDINAVIAN Order tine contemporary furni- ture from Denmark, Sweden at savings of 25%. Mr. Koloff, 557- 4748. ROME (JTA)=A commission of inquiry was established here to investigate how to save what is left of Jewish catacombs in Italy. Rome's chief rabbi, Elio Toaf, and government and technical ex- perts will participate in the work .,:pf the commission. Their immediate problem is how to deal with Paragraph 33 of the concordat between the Italian state and the Vatican which gives the Vatican complete authority over all the catacombs which are the old- est in Europe. In the past, Vatican experts have often removed objects from the Jewish catacombs and kept them in the Holy See's private museums. Winnipeg Jews Organize to Improve Education WINNIPEG (JTA) -- A 63-mem- ber bOerd of Jewish education has been. set up in Winnipeg as an umbrella agency to coordinate and stzengthen both informal and for- mal'Jewish education activities. It was created under sponsorship of the Jewish Welfare-Fund.of Winni- peg and the western region of the Canadian Jewish Congress, with ' the cooperation of the Midwest region of the Federation Zionist QDrganization, of Canada, local Jew- ish schoolit-; the YIIHA and the Bnai Brith-11114.1 Foundation. n WASHINGTON—A congressiona document dealing with the foreig policy consequences of the con tinning Soviet military buildup wa issued by Sen. Henry M. Jackson's subcommittee on national security and international operations. Sen. Jackson pointed out that "the dramatic alteration in the balance of international military power has come about so rapidly that political commentary has been lagging behind strategic develop- ments." Sen. Jackson added: "Today the Soviets can be confident of overall nuclear equality with the United States—and they are even ahead of us in some nuclear weapons areas. They can also count on a growing capacity to project naval forces and other elements of their military power into key parts of the world. "Given this situation, it is only prudent to assume that the Soviet leadership will be more vigorous In the assertion of what it re- gards as Soviet interests; it will be bolder in trying to advance them, and adopt a harder bar- gaining position in negotiations. Such a stance can Introduce new elements of danger and turbu- lence into international affairs." Hong Kong Jews Active Calling for more tough-minded Despite Lack of Numbers analyses and appraisal of the po- litical and diplomatic implications HONG KONG (JTA)—The Jew- ish school here resumed its acti- of the shifting U.S.-Soviet power vities with an enrollment of more than 60 children, a slight increase over last year. The school, directed by Rabbi mug clan s' nifINtri tribrftlilt lessons in Hebrew, Jewish history and the Bible. The school is part of the community center next to the city's synagogue. There are some 170 Jewish fami- lies residing permanently here. Most of the residents are from the U.S., Australia, South Africa, Is- rael and Western Europe. The synagogue has 200 places but there were more than 500 wor- shipers during the high holidays. -68 of -the , Antique burled walnut buf- fet. 11 pc. walnut modern twin bedroom set Kettle grill. Formica pedestal table, 5 chairs. Persian broadtail coate. Italians Try to Save Jewish Catacombs Retired AccOUnitant' Gelman, al retired Benjaniris wag- certified public accountant, died Ijithiraty- tcPetOit1-,lindrtikttroit College of Law. Borne-in Russia, Jan. 6 at age 68. TEL AVIV (JTA)—Leon Dulzin, • children at 'institutions and kibut- Mr. Gelman. 28680 Streamwood, be lived in, the DetvOit area 50 Jewish Agency treasurer, dis- zim and that some 500 settlements years. He bad bees retired since closed that the government will - receive support from the Jewish 1964. rt immediately on the construc- Agency. He noted that 57 new Axel Larsen, 74; Backed start A member of Cong. Shaarey tion of 6,000 new housing units at settlements were established since Israel in Danish Go*. - Zedek, be is survived by hisi wife, a cost of $100,000,000 to meet . the the Six-Day War. Annette; a son, Dr: -1Joyd of Boul- COPENHAGEN (JTA)--Israel's heavy influx of . immigrants ex- According .t• • Jewish Agency oldest friend in the Danish Parlia- der, Colo.; two daUghterii; Judy pected during 1972. report prepared for the 28th ment, Axel Larsen, died Jan. 10 and Mrs. Frank (Ruth.) Abrahams Dulzin said at a press confer- of Stanford, IC.onn.;, sister, Mrs. ence here that half of the sum will World Zionist :Congress, 40 per at 74. Mr. Larsen represented the cent of the immigrants who ar- Social Folk Party, the leftist party Saul (Rebecca) Friedman; and two be covered by the Jewish Agency rived n. novo grandchildren. .since 1968 came in Denmark. through loans and fund-raising freer UM. 12, richest countries of During World War II he was a drives abroad. the -werld.and even those from member of the Danish under- Harry Jacobson, 76, Dulzin stated that the Agency's the poorer Mandries represented ground. Caught by the Nazis, he over-all expenditures singe the ioeune,,odnested, more affluent was sent to Neugamme concentra- Ex-Steel Producer 1967 Six-Day War totaled Stage strata-at society. Harry Jacobson;_ former presi- tion camp where he stayed until 327,000. He said the Jewish dent -a Mark and Harry Jacobson The report said that one-third war's end in 1945. Agency at present looks after Co., producers of stainless steel, After the liberation, Mr. Larsen 25,108 immigrants in 22 hostels, of all newcomers were college died Monday at age 76. five student hostels, 28 absorp- and university graduates and pro- was a cabinet minister in Den- Mr. Jacobson was a former treas- tion centers and four nlpanim fessionals such as engineers, phy- mark's first national coalition gov- ernment. He visited Israel and urer and director of Franklin sicians, chemists and lawyers. — Hebrew study centers. Hills Country Club. He also be- made contact with its leading left- Dulzin added that the Agency's More than 60 per cent were longed to - Temple Beth El, Youth Aliya department was under 26 and only 6 per cent over wing faction, Mapam, as well as Lakes Club and. Standard Great City taking care of more than 11,000 65. The report said that since the with Histadrut, the labor federa- Club. last Zionist Congress in 1968, tion. A native Detroiter, Mr. Jacob- 30,000 immigrants came from son leaves his wife, Sophie; a son, North America. The total immi- Writer Bernard Ullman Ivan; and four grandchildren. gration since then was 105,000. Knighted by Pompidou 55—MISCELLANEOUS 94 plus ISrAlek:9501.• to 7C1tOng,trOCU , 4000 - :New ' balance, Sen. Jackson expressed the hope that the subcommittee publication would serve as a point of departure and stimulus for seri- ous students of international poli- Survivors of Nazism Fete Resistance Leader PARIS (JTA)—Bernard Ullman, a prominent French journalist who has written for the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency, was named a Knight of the French Legion of Honor on President Georges Pom- pidou's New Year list. The 53-year-old Ullman was born a Jew, but by his own account became personally interested in Jewish affairs only after the Six- Day War which he covered for Agence France Presse, the French worldwide news agency. Although in great demand, he offered to contribute his services to the JTA, for which he covered last year's attempted coup against King Hassan II of Mor- occo. Ullman holds the title of deputy chief editor of the AFP. He was formerly the AFP's bureau chief in Peking and 'Moscow. French television has described Ullman as "the ideal foreign cor- respondent." NEW YORK (XTA)—Abba Kov- ner, the underground partisan turned poet, was feted here by the World Federation of Bergen-Belsen Associations and given its sixth an- nual "Remembrance Award" of $2,500 "for excellence and distinc- tion in literature relating to the Holocaust and its legacy." In making the presentation, Federation general secretary Sam E. Bloch said Kovner's poetry and prose "revive a nightmare of events ...from which neither the poet nor the reader could or should escape." Bloch himself is a survi- vor of Bergen-Belsen. Kovner's sixth and most recent collection of poems was "Little Sister of Mine." He has won the Shlonsky Prize for Literature the Cultural Prize of the World . Jewish Congress and the Bren- ner Prize. Acknowledging his latest citation, United Israel Appeal Nets Kovner told the audience of 200 Over $100 Million in '71 persons: "Of all the literary awards JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Keren which I received, the Remem- Hayesod-United Israel Appeal brance Award — which is given raised over $100,000,000 in 1971, a on behalf of those who died in the 30 per cent increase over the death camps — is of the most amount raised in 1970. mighty significance, as if a prize The results of the campaign in is given to a man for being human. 69 countries was contained in the He added that for him, "poetry summary of a report by Keren is not merely an esthetic experi- Hayesod chairman Ezra Shapiro ence but an enduring experience to be submitted to the forthcoming and attempt to turn the ashes into World Zionist Congress. an eternal light." Kovner, 53, was The report noted that the 1971 a leader of the underground re- campaign raised the most funds sistance in Wilna, Lithuania. Born since the Six-Day War. It also said in Sevastopol, Russia, he went to that advance pledges for the 1972- Israel in 1945. 73 campaign indicated a further _ increase in response to Israel's _ , e i' ,,, . --Me Changing Power Balance: Selected Comment," the collection is part of a multi-year study of interna- TEL AVIV (JTA)—The Weiz- tional negotiation being conducted mann Institute of Science at Reho- under Sen. Jackson's direction. vot, which this year has a record 101 foreign scientists on campus, 1st Residence Club has announced the establishment of four new professorial chairs Begun in Jerusalem through the donations by American philanthropists. for Overseas Buyers They are, according to Prof. Al- JERUSALEM — A new concept in housing here will rise in Jeru- bert B. Sabin, Institute president: salem in the form of a "Residence The Henry and Bertha Benson Club" in the capital's new Ramat chair in mathematics, to which Eshkol district of ISRALOM, Is- Prof. Samuel Karlin of New Or- leans, La., has been appointed; rael Homes and Real Estate Corp. the Norman D. Cohen chair. in Construction began . list week on computer science, to be filled • by Prot Smil Ruhman of the Insti- the project which will include 59 tute's applied mathematics depart- studio and one-bedroom units plus ment, creator of the "Golgro"., various public and - recreational Vectronic--devige;, the i George W. facilities _ --:. - Dunne Chair in -eVeinleal ''Physies, This apartment innovation. here to be filled by Prof.-Shneier Lifson, is being offered for _sal ...id Aeon = head 7of.the'chemical •'physics de- dominium basis, studio apartments partment; and the Joseph Meyer- from $20,000 and one-bedroom hoff chair in biochemistry, to be units from approximately $35,000. filled by Prof. David Elson, dean Occupancy is estimated for mid- of the faculty of biochemistry and , 1973. Physics. Added to Rehovot _ sorption: - 'Artificial' Father Has Responsibility to Child, Haifa Beth Din Rules TEL AVIV (JTA)--=The rabbini- cal Beth Din in Haifa issued a decision said to have no precedent in Jewish jurisprudence — that fatherhood through artificial in- semination is equivalent to natural fatherhood, and involves the same paternal obligations. The decision was handed down in the case of a man whose wife gave birth to triplets—two girls and a boy—after artificial iD- gemination with the husband's - own sperm following years of cluldiessness. Soon afterward, -- -411e` knish . *MIAMI Aordkeree4 ,:;:-. The *rife: novi 28,'"alieed„ , vided he2,pitid..-for the ebildreres refused' on -gionid.s that he was not the legal father. The Beth Din decided otherwise, advising the man that if he Wanted a divorce, be must pay for the children's upbringing. ; • Prof. Hanokh_ Albeck, Talmudic Authority JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Prof. Hanokh Albeck, a leading talmudic authority, died here Jan. 9 at age 82. His most famous and popular work was the first complete edi- tion of the Mishna with vocal signs, making it understandable to persons without a strong knowl- edge of Hebrew. Prof. Albeck was born in Lowicz, Poland, in 1890 and was ordained as a rabbi in 1907. He re- ceived his PhD from the Univer- sity of Vienna in 1921 and mi- grated to Palestine in 1936. His talmudic professorship at Hebrew U. began in 1936, and he headed that department for many years. William Katzman,, 21, Killed in Mountain Hiking Accident in East William A. Katzman, a 1968 graduate of the Cranbrook School and a senior at Yale University. was killed in a mountain hiking accident in Connecticut Jan. 5. He was 21. Mr. Katzman, 26054 Huntington, Huntington Woods, was a native Detroiter. His family belongs to Temple Emanu-El. Survivors are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Barney Katzman; a brother, Richard; a sister, Jane; and his grandmother, Mrs. Rose Soifer. Women's ORT Founder NEW YORK—Mrs. Jennie Klat- sky, a founder of Women's Amer- Mrs. Klatsky was a national vice president of Women's ORT, which today numbers nearly 100,- 000 •members in 750 chapters throughout the U.S.; she served as a member of its national exec- utive committee for over 25 years. Among the various offices she held were those of national treas- urer, national financial secretary and national budget chairman. Mrs. Mike Silver, 92 Anna Silver, mother of Wayne County Commissioner Paul Silver, died Sunday at age 92. , Widow of Mike Silver, who died in 1944, Mrs. Sliver liver at 19777 Rutherford. She was born in Russia and lived in this country for . 80 of.thent iDetrott. leisiirdiiteiteis; Paul, Dr. Pavia ftiri ;Albert; Aviti. ilaughters. 7 (Cele7- Zimmerman Of North Miami Baia and Mrs. Barney (Min) Ross; -a sister, Mrs. Yetti Swittel -: of -New York; 11 - grandehildren and 16 great grand- children. - :>!!, A