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June 28, 1974 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-06-28

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

10—Friday, June 28, 1974

THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS

11 ■ Willweelmasm

W. Germany Urged:
Let Nazi-Hunter Go

C 3)Loian,

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Nine women MKs cabled the
president of the West Ger-
man Parliament, Mrs. Anna
Maria Ranger, urging her to
drop legal action against
Nazi hunter Beate Klarsfeld.

Israeli Troops Leave
Kimeitra, Hermon Peak

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Israel
completed Tuesday the with-
drawal required by the Is-
CUSTOM FURNITURE &
raeli - Syrian disengagement
CARPET CLEANING
agreement as Israeli troops
pulled out of Kuneitra and
ON LOCATION
the Rafid Junction area, held
since the Six-Day War of
On your vacation trip drive 1967, and the peak of Mt.
Phone
carefully — you may want to Hermon captured during the
get away from it, but not out Yom Kippur War.
549-7170
of it.
The orderly withdrawal

was marred when four Aus-
tian officers with the United
Nations Disengagement Ob-
server Force (UNDOF) were
killed when their jeep hit a
mine as they were moving
from Syrian territory to Mt.
Hermon.
Before leaving the peak,
at
Israel held a parade which
included the Golani Brigade,
paratroop units, the engi-
neers corps and the armored
next to Crowley's
corps, all of whom contribut-
ed to the Israeli capture and
liolding of the Hermon peak.
The positions on Mt. Her-
mon that Israeli forces hand-
ed over to UNDOF will re-
a
main under UN control as
part of the buffer zone be-
tween Israel and Syria.
The Syria civilian adminis-
all fellows of mericon -lcarleno- of Optoini,try
tration took over Kuneitra
Wednesday and will be al-
18300 1! .
\ Owls
280 1. II owlicord
lowed only a police force
Detroit
Birminghain
for security. There will be
6.16-17;7
5.31-829(1
no armored units there, ac-
cording to the disengagement
accord.
The units are positioned

11101•110

ANNOUNCEMENT

Opening of 2nd Office
IN BIRMINGHA ill
.
280 A. 6t 001) A R D



646-4777
ERNES' 1' M. GA YNES, O.U.
MA. M. HONE} MA N, D.
ROBERT H. SHORR, O.D.

.

WHY MEN
ARE LEAVING .
SOUTHFIEL

They've discovered nine Canadian and
Eturopean.clothing stores right here in America
In fact, even closer than that. Right here in
Warren, Utica, Birmingham, Pleasant Ridge, Mt.
CleMens, and the Eastland shopping center.
Stores where they can buy clothes with more
flattering, close-to-the-body tailoring. Stores where
they can talk to people who really understand-
what fine clothing is supposed to be. Why don't
you leave Southfield, too? Tell your wife you're
going to Europe for &couple of hours.

&

Gothiers

Nike
for Men

&

along the narrow buffer
zone which runs from the top
of Mt. Hermon to the Jor-
danian border. During • the
pullout, a 500-man Syrian
sapper unit entered the buf-
fer zone to clear it of mines
before civilians are allowed
to return to their homes
abandoned during the Yom
Kippur War. This was being
done with Israeli consent.
Syrian forces, meanwhile,
have withdrawn from the
"Fatahland" region of south-
east Lebanon where they had
been entrenched since the
war of attrition on Israel's
northern front. They left be-
hind sophisticated weapons
including the SAM-7 anti-air-
craft missiles.
Israeli sources said that
the long-term aim of its
bombing of terrorist bases in
Lebanon was to convince the
terrorists that the price of
war is high and that they
should try to solve the Pal-
estinian issue through poli-
tical means. A short-term
aim was to get the terrorists
to abandon the refugee
camps.
It was reported Monday
that the terrorists have cut
back their operations in coun-
tries outside the Mideast and
are concentrating on acts
within Israel by specially
trained units. One reason
given for this is that they
have been blocked abroad by
the Israeli intelligence serv-
ice together with other in-
telligence services.

Technion Gets
U.S.-Israel
Science Grant

HAIFA — The Technion-
Israel Institute of Technology
will receive research grants
totalling IL 1,184.000 ($281,-
905) from the U.S.-Israel Bi-
National Science Foundation,
it was announced by the of-
fice of the vice president for
research at Techriion.
The funds will be distribut-
ed among 18 projects, con-
ducted in 14 Technion de-
partments. This is the first
year that research grants by
the foundation are being
made.
Three of the projects, ap-
proved by the foundation,
will receive more than IL
100,000 f$23,809) e a c h.
These projects are headed by
Prof. Ya.acov Eckstein and
Dr. Eytan Ehrenfreund, of
the physics department, and
Prof. Baruch Givoni, of the
building research station.
Nine of, the projects will
receive sums between IL 50,-
000 to IL 100,000, while six
of the projects will receive
up to 50,000 each. '
*
*

First Ziegler Prize
Awarded at Technion

Threat of Violence by Holocaust
Survivors Stops Wagner Concert

TEL AVIV (JTA) — The
Israel Philharmonic yielded
to threats and pressure from
Nazi survivors groups Mon-
day and dropped three works
by Richard Wagner from its
Wednesday evening concert
at the Mann Auditorium.
Daniel Benyamini, a viola
player,. who is a member of
the orchestra's executive
committee, said the decision
to cancel the Wagner works
stemmed from fear that the
performance would be dis-
rupted by hostile elements if
they were included.
Benyamini said the orches-
tra had learned that a quan-
tity of tickets sold for the
Wednesday performance to
be conducted by Zubin Mehta,
were purchased by people
who intended to create a
commotion in the hall. "It
would be impossible to play
if there are disturbances,"
Benyamini said.
The performance was to
have broken an unwritten
taboo observed since World
War II. While diplomatic #
trade, 'sports and other rela-
tions between Israel and
West Germany have gradual.
ly normalized, the Israelis
stuck to their ban on music
by Wagner and Richard
Strauss.
The works of Wagner and
of Strauss, have been banned
since the "Crystal Night" in
1938 which marked the be-
ginning of all-out persecu-
tion of Jews by the Nazis.
Wagner, who died in 1883,
was seen as a virulent anti-
Semite who had been chosen
by the Nazis as a symbol of
their ideology, while Strauss
was said to have been asso-
ciated directly with the Nazi
regime.
Mehta said he personally
was broken-hearted over the
decision to cancel, but he
added, "If one fanatic jumps
on the stage and breaks a
cello . . ." he shrugged with-
out completing the sentence.
In a statement, the orches-
tra expressed understanding
for the emotional reaction of
survivors of the Nazi Holo-
caust but said this should not
limit the freedom of artistic
expression by the orchestra.
In deference to part of the
public, the Wagner works had
not been included in a sub-
scription concert but in a
special concert so that only
those who wanted to hear
them need buy tickets. Ad-
cance sales were brisk and
the outlook had been for a
sellout. The orchestra said
prices of tickets will be re-
funded.

Abe Cohen, the orchestra's
general secretary, said mem-
bers of the ensemble had
been sounded out before the
decision- had .been taken to
play Wagner, and only one
musician said he would rath-
er not play. He was excused.
Several music authoritie-
argued in favor of lifting
Wagner ban. They noted tha.,
many composers — for ex-
ample, Chopin — were anti-
Semitic but their music was
well-received in Israel.
Beethoven, said one critic,
was a hit in Israel but or-
chestras used to play his
music inside the extermina-
tion camps.
If Wagner was banned, said
another, the thousands of
Volkswagens in Israel should
be taken off the roads.

IT COULD BE
Take it for what it's worth,
but according to scholars,
giving too much advice is
what made Poor Richard
poor.

Flowers For
Every Occasion
... Or An

Occasional Flower

Call

Fern Kumove

Manager

Phil Henshaw

Designer/Decorator
from New York

Jerry Mickowski

Birmingham's leading florist

DETROIT'S MOST
CREATIVE TRIO

• WEDDINGS,

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• SHOWERS
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MI, 6-7272

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MAROF

BUICK-OPEL-HONDA

IS STILL

Eie
OUR BEST BUYS _

HAIFA — The first Reu-
ven Ziegler Medical Re-.
search Prize for "an original
contribution of a young medi-
cal researcher" was awarded
at a ceremony held at Tech-
nion's medical school.
So. of 12 Mile De
Dr. Shlomo Raz of the Ok
urology department of Had-
Across from The TEL-12 MALL
assah Hospital won the IL 30,
EH!
3,000 ($750) prize for his
t•
experimental work in urology

bt;

concerning neural control of 74Ft; 11,W112;4•14...."41W 112:;1
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the lower urinary tract.

2 85 85 TELEGRAPH

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in Warren, Utica, Pleasant Ridge, Birmingham, Mt. Clemens, and
Eastland. Van Dyke Formal Wear in Warren. (Call 556-7248 for
location closest to you.)

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353- 1 300

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