a 5'.

14—Friday, Oct. 20, 1972

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS % -‘

'
,
n
y ruin Jewish Leaders Ask U.S. to Help in Rescue of Kin

NEW YORK (JTA) —Lead- emigrate from Syria, and the
ers of the Syrian Jewish U.S. government has re-
community in New York sponded in a positive man-
With a high recommends- publishers
announce
that have made quiet representa- ner, according to Abraham
lion from Rabbi Marvin Tok- I the author of this provoca- tions to U.S. government of- Dwek, president of the Com-
ayer of the Tokyo Jewish live book states that he is ficials in recent weeks on be- mittee for the Rescue of Sy-
half of some 4,000 oppressed rian Jewry.
Community, "The Japanese !a Jew horn in Kobe and rais-
Dwek released to the Jew-
and the Jews" now is mak- ed in Japan, and that he is Jews in Syria.
They have urged the U.S. ish Telegraphic Agency the
ing its appearance in this no longer a resident of that
country in an English trans- country. Other than these to make its position clear to contents of letters he re-
lation from the Japanese. facts, his identity remains the Syrian authorities re- ceived recently from Joseph
garding Jews who wish to J. Sisco, assistant secretary
With more than 2,000,000 an unsolved mystery."

`Japanese and Jews' Sold 2,000,000
Cables; Now in English 'Translation

copies already sold in its or- The book is introduced as
iginal version, this book is , a "double portrait of two
drawing attention because of the world's most unique
of its uniqueness and posy peoples by the author with
an intimate knowledge of
sible controversial nature.

"The Jewish-Japanese Sex
and Cook Book and How to
Raise Wolves" details the
zany and hilarious esapades
of best-selling humorist Jack
Douglas and his Canadian/
Connecticut antics in bring-
ing up a family of wolves.
Douglas's book was publish-
ed by G. P. Putnam's Sons.
Jack Douglas knew it
would be far from easy to
raise a wolf right smack in
the heart of Connecticut's
wooded suburbia. But he had
a penchant for adding bizarre
new members to his already
varied menagerie, so over
the objections of his wife
Reiko, and to the delight of
his two sons, Douglas gets
himself a wolf pup—which
the family names, appro-
priately enough, Wolf. That's
when the fun—trouble—be-
gins!
" • *

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Japanese Sect
Gives Ambulance
to Lydda Airport

JERUSALEM (J T A) —
Prof. Ikuro Teshima, the
head of the 50,000-member
Makuya sect — Christian
Zionists in Japan — arrived
in Israel to present a $10,-
000 ambulance to Lydda Air-
port as a sign of the grief
over the massacre on May
30 in which 26 persons were
killed by three Japanese ter-
rorists.
When news reached Japan
of the mass killing, the Ma-
kuya sect conducted a three-
day fast of repentance.
"We were stunned and
grieved by the senseless
murders committed by three
of our country- men," Prof.
Teshima said. We sought
some way to express our
feelings." The Makuyas, who
are not affiliated with any
Western church, call them-
selves Judeo-Christians.

.

•

•

If the animals had reason.
they would act just as ridic-
ulous as we menfolks do.-
-Josh Billings.

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1,800 Expected at CJF Assembly

NEW YORK—Over 1,800 gations from France and
Jewish leaders, representing Israel as well as participa-
every
community in the tion by other overseas digni-
Most controversial of all is bc"• . '
"The Japanese and the United States and Canada taries.
the author. The book appears
the byline of Isaiah Jews inevitably invite co
cam- with an appreciable Jewish
Fisher said that the first
p
Ben-Dasan. He is announced parison,"
Ben-Dasan writes, population, will participate in of a series of key reports of
the
41st
General
Assembly
of
by the publishers John "Because they are the
the recently complelyeeNCJF
Weatherhill, Inc., of New world's two most different the Council of Jewish Fed- Population Study—the most
erations and Welfare Funds, comprehensive census of
York, as "Mysterious." The groups."
The author compares and at the Royal York Hotel in American Jewry ever under-
contrasts the two peoples in Toronto, Nov. 8-12, it was taken—will be made at the
terms of their attitudes and announced by Max M. Fish- assembly.
responses to such vital con- er; president.
More than 150 college stu-
cerns as food, water, spirit-
Fisher said that attend- dents will participate at the
ual freedom, physical securi- ance is expected to be the Toronto Assembly as official
ty, and government with a highest in the 41-year history representatives of their re-
keen critical insight temep- of the assembly, with dele- spective communities.
ered by affection.
"To the Japanese," says
the author, "security, like
aid and water, is free. To
the Jew, it is a treasure so
precious that many other
things are willingly given up
for it."
Ben-Dasan won the Second
Soichi Oya Nonfiction Prize,
the Japanese equivalent to
the Pulitzer Prize.
Rabbi Tokayer says "Mr.
Ben-Dasan is a writer who
combines an intimate knowl-
edge of the Japanese with
a remarkable understanding,
admiration, and respect for
the Jews.
• • •

WE
MADE
IT!!

of state for Near Eastern af-
fairs, and John Richardson
Jr., acting assistant secre-
tary for public affairs.

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