Hickel Foresees an Arab Stranglehold on U.S.
Economy if Fuel Consumption Continues .
NEW YORK (ZINS) —
Former U.S. Interior Secre-
tary Walter J. Rickel, writ-
ing in the New York Times
on the "impending energy
crisis," has warned that a
continuation of present
trends in fuel consumption
will soon create a situation
where the Arab oil countries
- could paralyze the American,
European and Japanese eco-
nomies.
in opposition to the interests the first firm to sign an
of the Arab world, and this agreement with Egypt for
will undoubtedly a f feet using the projected Suez-
Israel's position adversely." Mediterranean pipeline. Un-
it was announced Monday der the agreement, the
that Continental Oil Co. is American company will
transport 2,500,000 tons of
crude oil annually for 10
years. Mobil Oil and two
French companies have pre-
liminary agreements f o r
using the line.
Wiesenthal: Nazi Booty in Swiss Banks,
10 Million Ex-Party Members Alive
In Bonn, Israeli diplomats
GENEVA (JTA) — Nazi
hunter Simon Wiesenthal said Israel has never waived
was quoted in a newspaper its right to restitution from
interview as saying that un- East Germany. The question
identified banks in Switzer- of East German restitution
By 1985, the anticipated land, Lichtenstein and Tan- has again arisen in view of
import requirements will giers were "treasure houses" pending international diplo-
amount to $30,000,000,000 an- of bullion and other booty matic recognition of the
nually. This is in contrast to looted during the war and regime.
1971 when America Imported
Roman Catholic sources in
held by thousands of Nazis
only $3,000,000,000 of crude still at large.
Munich again have denied
oil from V la to sup-
that
the Catholic church
According to the Tribune
plement her own resources.
de Geneve, Wiesenthal said
If nickel is correct, the im- that 10,000,000 Nazi Party
Yad Vashem Cites
port requirements of oil will survivors were still alive —
jump tenfold in the next nine 5,000,000 in West Germany, 2 Dutch Couples
years.
1,500,000 in East Germany
"and environs," and 500,000 for Saving Jews
Considering that the United
in Austria. The rest are scat-
JERUSALEM—Two Dutch
States already suffers from
tered in other countries.
couples Gerrit and Hendrika-
a substantial trade deficit
Wiesenthal said he saw Jacoba Kuijlenburg, and
amounting to billions of dol-
lars annually, the new crisis with his own eyes "lists of Johan and Johanna Kuiper,
bank
accounts in Switzer- recently planted trees in the
will have a devastating effect
on U.S. international trade land, Lichtenstein and Tan- Avenue of the Righteous
giers . . . where huge funds Gentiles at the Yad Vashem
accounts, he said.
in gold and loot have been Martyrs' and Heroes' Remem-
Accumulation of American
cached."
brance Authority and re-
currency by the oil-produc-
But, he said, "nobody is ceived commemorative med-
ing countries will put the
seriously concerned with als and certificates of valor
U.S. dollar in great jeopardy.
this" in a world that is for their wartime rescue of
"It will be extremely dif-
"growing weary of the war Jews.
ficult for any nation," writes
on war criminals."
Kurjlenburg, a retired
nickel, "to maintain a policy
Wiesenthal announced in school principal, and his
Vienna a campaign to have wife, a music teacher, were
the governments of seven surprised by the appearance
European countries demand of Tom Furstenberg, 36, who
reparations from East Ger- had come especially from
many for those who suffered Belgium to be with his foster
under Nazi rule.
parents on this occasion.
• Selected fine jewelry
Launching the drive in his
Warned one night In 1951
and Diamonds
capacity as the head of the that the Gestapo was about
Large Selection of
Austrian League of Jewish to arrest them, the elder
Fine Opal Jewelry
Persecutees, he said that Furstenbergs, who were Ger-
Watch rood Jewelry Repair
West Germany had so far
man refugees handed their
paid some $13,500,000 to
LI 7-5068
son Tom 5, and his 6-year-
various countries and inter-
old sister to the Dutch under-
Neer Pest Office
national institutions and
ground.
13720 W. 9 Mile
funds for use as indemnifi-
That organization passed
cation for victims of Naz sm.
the youngsters on t o the
Kuijlenburg family, who
brought them up together
with their own four children.
The Kuipers, who lived in
a small village near Eind-
hoven, were asked by the
underground one night in
With Attractive
1943 whether they would be
willing to shelter a Jewish
baby. They agreed without
Easy insert & removal for cleaning
hesitation.
Itosaketial a Commercial glazieg
A year after they accepted
3-month-old Ann', the Kuip-
1 5 724 W. 7 Milo
Rick Schwartz
ers,
childless for many years,
Daily 8 - 5
435 - 5600
had a daughter born to them.
Ann! Kater, 28, also was
on hand to celebrate with her
foster parents. Her parents
survived the war hidden in
Holland and she was reunit-
ed with them afterward. She
has been living in Israel for
six years and is a nurse at
Hadassah Hospital.
According to Hickel, by
1980 the United States will
have to import oil to the tune
of $20,000,000,000 a year.
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RAMAT GAN— Mr. and
Mrs. Nessint David G11011 of
Geneva, Switaeri•nd, s•eent-
ly prosesSed 31 schoisralips
411 IL SAM (BIM) to•* be
tear-flee tlaimesIly •larlaits
sf Omitentle aria& Last poor
Me, pemorloi • eimiller maw
Mir el mbeismaips.
At Om prematatiam ewe-
mum Ma team, 1711. 109-
mine Levi ILsedert. ma-
Ambled Hat Sait•Ilma
this highest prasisHasit at hew
Ashhaaismi aAststRls d r ige
ti.il
ii, - ' ,K91604
helped Martin Bormann, Hit-
ler's wartime deputy, to flee
Germany at the
end of
World War II.
Documents belonging to a
former Hitler aide Voktor
Brack sought to prove that
Bormann had enough funds
to escape and did not need
the help of the Roman Cath-
olic church. The documents
indicate that Bormann and
his brother Albert escaped
via Spain in May 1945.
Bonn police detained for
several hours Beate Klars-
feld, her husband, Serge, and
10 other members of the In-
ternational League Against
Racism and Anti-Semitism
when they staged a sitdown
In front of the Bundestag
distributing pamphlets pro-
testing the failure of West
Germany
and
France to
ratify an agreement on the
extradition of Nazi criminals.
Under the agreement, West
German courts would have
the right to try and condemn
Nazi criminals sentenced in
absentia by courts in France.
The Hamburg court trying
the former Gestapo chief in
Warsaw, Ludwig Hahn, is
cross-examining witnesses in
the Polish capital. Hahn has
been on trial since May for
the murder of an indefinite
number of Jewish and Polish
inmates of the infamous
Pawiak prison in Warsaw
between the winter of 1941
and August 1944.
A Darmstadt court has
sentenced three former Nazi
prison guards to a total of
2454 years prison for abetting
the murder of Jews during
World War II. The sentenced
were George Boetting, 64,
Paul Fuchs, 61, and Alois
Reichl, 61.
In Haifa, court proceedings
have opened against a Jewish
concentration camp overseer
accused by an American of
killing his grandfather. The
accuser, Sigmund Gerson, a
merchant in Wilmington,
Del., said he promised his
dying grandfather "that if I
survived I would bring the
accused to justice."
For 30 years, Gorson
searched for Yaakov Ben.
Eliahu Relchman, 64, who
had been in charge of over-
seeing distribution of coal to
the Lodz ghetto in 1942.
Corson said he used to help
his grandfather distribute
coal to ghetto homes, but
one day Reichman caught
him stealing a few pieces
and started to beat the boy.
When the old man came to
the aid of his grandson,
Reiehman beat the old man
so savagely that the latter
ultimately died of Ma in-
juries, said Gerson.
AN Auschwitz survivor,
Gars= lo•ibt out Itaiebraa.
after the mar. On ■ visit to
brad to MI, be turd
Roisbeames same to • tel.-
/beat tat mot bitatiflott
Mat Is a pellet Hamm.
lleieboum V eopselod Is Were
Mid pollee lest year Mat be
emmetimme eased imalters
tomatrit Nolbartrise the Ger-
mseie towed ani Obey viemild
be awash Ssuesss."
16—FrIday, Dm. 22, 1972
THE DETROIT JEWISH . HEWS
Global Effort to Confront Ethnic
Stereotype Urged by Tanenbaum
B OSS E Y, Switzerland —
An appeal to religious lead-
ers and intellectuals to join
in an international effort to
combat the caricaturing and
stereotyping of religious, rac-
ial, national and ethnic
groups was made here by
an American Jewish inter-
religious leader.
as a member of the Bossey
Graduate Ecumenical Insti-
tute faculty during a study
week devoted to "Jewish-
Christian Relations." Rabbi
Tanenbaum, who is co-secre-
tary of a joint Vat ic an-
International Jewish Consul-
tative Committee and of a
similar liaison body with the
World Council of Churches,
is in Europe to participate
in meetings with the Vatican
and the World Council. He
also is meeting in Jerusalem
wit h Israeli governmental,
university, and religious lead-
ers of various faiths.
Delivering four lectures be-
fore the graduate school of
ecumenical studies of the
World Council of Churches,
Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum,
national interreligious affairs
director of the American
Jewish Committee, urged an
assembly of scholars and
About 150 scholars, theo-
postgraduate students to logians, a n d post-graduate
"take seriously the responsi- students from Asia, Africa,
bility of demythologizing the Latin America, North and
variety of negative, distorted South America and Western
and often hostile group im- Europe attended the institute.
ages that abound in the world
A number of students from
today.
Indonesia, Kenya, India, Ni-
"The overcoming system- geria, Japan, Fiji Islands
atically of the myths and and elsewhere in the third
stereotypes that many West- world asserted that their
erners hold of the Eastern meetings with Rabbi Tanen-
world, and vice versa, and baum were their first contact
that Jews, Christians, Mus- with Judaism and with a
lims, Buddhists, Hindus, Con- Jewish leader.
fucianists, and others fre-
quently hold about one an-
other with fantastic tenacity
is an essential precondition
to the building of a harmoni-
ous world community," he
said.
4600 COOoDGI oWv
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served
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