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

April 19, 1974 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-04-19

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

16—Friday, April 19, 1974

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Veterans of Jewish Legion to Gather

BALTIMORE — The vet-
erans of the Palestine Jewish
Legion of Yorld War I will
gather in May in Israel to
observe the 57th anniversary
of the formation of the Jew-
ish Le gion of 1917-1918.
Former members of the le-
gion, now in Israel, will host
guests from the U.S., Canada,
England, Australia and other
countries.
For those unable to attend,
a widespread effort was
made throughout various
media to contact former le-
gion members, and in the
case of a deceased member,
the next of kin.
Members who could not at-
tend were urged to submit
articles, stories, anecdotes,
greetings or memorial notices

Israel to Benefit
From Paris Art Sale

for the souvenir journal to
be published for the occa-
sion. The journal will be
printed in Hebrew, Yiddish
and English and will be avail-
able' from Bet Hagdudim,
Avi-chail, Israel.
More than 100 replies have
been received, and many of
them paid tribute to the late
David Ben-Gurion who also
was a member of the legion.
F o r information, write
William Braiterman, mem-
ber of the presidium of vet-
erans of Judean battalions,
Box 1633, Baltimore, Md.,
21203.

Polish War Criminal
Gets Death Sentence

BONN— A Warsaw court
has passed the death sen-
tence on Henryk Matuszkowi-
ak, a member of the camp
police at the Nazi concentra-
tion camp of Litomerice, Cze-
choslovakia, on charges of
having murdered 10 camp in-
mates, of having tortured
others and having applied
special cruelty at the concen-
tration camps of Maidanek
and Gross-Rosen.
Matuszkowiak was identi-
fied in July 1969 in a street
in Poland by a former in-
mate of the Litomerice camp.

PARIS (JTA) — A collec-
tion of some well-known art
works is to go on sale for
the benefit of Israel in the
plush Paris Georges V Hotel,
it was announced here.
Some of the works have
been offered personally by
the artists who have fixed
the prices themselves.
One work by Marc Chagall
has already been sold to a
collector for $200,000. The or
ganizing committee includes
Children whose parents are
the wife of Israeli Ambassa- addicted to nagging are
dor Asher Ben Natan and really entitled to lost of sym-
Mrs. Alix Rothschild.
pathy.

Israel Names Mordehai Gur Chief of Staff

JERUSALEM (JTA)—Maj.
Gen. Mordehai (Motta) Gur
was named Israel's new
chief of staff. He was simul-
taneously promoted to the
rank of lieutenant general.
The 44-year-old Jerusalem-
born career army officer
was serving as Israel's mili-
tary attache in Washington
when the Yom Kippur War
broke out Oct. 6 and headed
the Israeli delegation at the
opening of the Middle East
peace talks in Geneva last
December. He has since

been commander of the
northern front covering the
borders with Syria and
Lebanon.
Gur was recommended for
chief of staff by Defense

Cabinet Secretary Michael
Arnon indicated that • ap-
proval of Gur was preceded
by a lengthy debate.
Gen. Yitzhak Hofi, who has
been serving as acting chief
of staff since Elazar resign-
ed two weeks ago, is ex-
pected to resume his former
post as chief of operations at
general headquarters.

Rabbis to Confer
at Concord Hotel

NEW YORK -- Judaism's
reactions to contemporary
and futuristic ethical issues
will be examined in depth at
the 74th annual convention of
the Rabbinical Assembly, the
international association of
Conservative rabbis, May 5-
9 at the Concord Hotel.
Rabbi Judah Nadich, pres-
ident, announces three initial
sessions, "Grappling with a
Theology for Our Lives," will
provide a framework for all
subsequent discussions.
The organization of 1,100
rabbis will confront aspects
of dilemmas raised by bio-
medical ethics, behavior
modification, genetic engi-
neering, hallucinogens, e n -
vironmental control, euthan-
asia, birth control, abortion
and the nuclear family In fu-
turistic Jewish communities.

Minister Moshe Dayan and
was approved by the care-
taker cabinet. He succeeds
Lt. Gen. David Elazar who
resigned following release of
the Agranat committee's par-
tial report which held him
responsible for Israel's lack
of preparedness on the eve
of the war.

1 CARS TO BE DRIVEN .
- •



To any ,state. Also driven furnish- •
ed to -drive your car anywhere.
Legally insured and I.C.C. licensed

DRIVEAWAY SERVICE
9970 Grand River
Detroit, Mich. 48204
,
WE 1-0620-21-22

WANT TO BUY YOUR HOME?

EXCLUSIVE
MATCHSERXER
BROKER

CALL 559-8333

AETNA REALTY CO.

24469 Greenfield Rd.
Southfield

MI MEI MI INN EMI EMI 1111111 11111111111111 1111111

Silver facts

I

. . . .
MORDEHAI GUR

Swiss Donate Milk
to Israel, Pay Freight

NEW YORK — A contribu-
tion of 220,500 pounds of
powdered milk by the Swiss
government was reported by
Samuel L. Haber, executive
vice chairman of the Joint
Distribution Committee. The
milk has been shipped to Is-
rael, Iran and Yugoslavia
where it will be used in JDC
feeding programs, Haber
said.
The Swiss government has
also paid the costs of pack-
ing, inland freight and half
the surface shipping charges,
thereby increasing the total
value of the Swiss contribu-
tion to $226,333, Haber said.

Always hope for the best
and make the most of what
you get.

NE I= Ulla EN

During the same period of time silver grew 147% - February
15, 1973 to February 15, 1974, the average stock in this
country declined 28.03%. That means $1,000 in silver would
have grown to $2467.40. Stock during the same time would
have returned $719.70 on your original $1,000 investment.
Liberty Metals offers serialized, registered bars, immediate
delivery, $50,000 bonded representation and FREE infor-
mation for the asking. Write or call. 3 I 3/557-2606
Liberty Metals Inc.

=I

1

Ns ow on um
an
on um
----
lia . 00000e4Yaoaciaoo00300000000000000

We Make Our Own Glasses: a

HEADQUARTERS FOR
• LATEST DOMESTIC AND
IMPORTED FRAME FASHIONS

• PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES
ACCURATELY FfLLED



Immediate Repair

• Reasonably Priced

ROSEN OPTICAL„SERVICE
13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE . '

OAK PARK, MICH.

LI 7-5068;

Hours: -Daily and Saturday 9:30 .m. to 6 p.m.

Closed Wednesday

..............••••••••••••••••




In 50years styles have changed.

Fabrics have changed. But our undivided

attention to service and manufacturing

details has not. We're very proud of our

products and of the hard work

our employees put in to make our con-

tinued success possible. See for

yourself. We are now showing our cur-

rent ideas in men's suits, sportcoats,

shirts and slacks.

• • •
,
• .
, .,„ ,
,






• •


For

• •

IRV • • •
• •
• •

BEHRMAN •

:Highest
Trade-Ins & The Best Deals:
••
IRV








1430 Griswold
(Bet. Grand River & Clifford)
WO 1-8751 or WO 1-7956
Major Credit Cards Honored
Free Parking at any
Miller lot.

SEE

• •
10% DISCOUNT •

See

for Your Discount Card

On Parts & Labor on Any Car



1130B SAKS OLDSMOBILE' •

478-0500

35300 Grand River at Drake Rd., Farmington, Mich. 48024



0.01/00000000000000011100411100000114

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan