THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

16 Friday, July 18, 1975

•

Space Launch Draws Rally Asking Emigration Cooperation

MIAMI (JTA) — The
launch of the Appollo-Soyuz
space project at Cape Can-
averal Tuesday drew a mass
rally appealing for U.S.-So-
viet cooperation in easing
emigration restrictions for
Soviet Jews as well as coop-
eration in space. The rally.
I was sponsored by the South
Florida Conference on So-
viet Jewry.
A letter addressed to the
Soviet and American astro-
nauts from the Moscow
Jewish scientist Alexander
Druck read at the rally, said
that in view of the open ex-
change of space technology
between the Soviet Union
and the U.S. there is no
longer any pretext for the
Soviet authorities to deny
emigration visas to Jewish
scientists who had worked
on the space project on the
grounds of secrecy.

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At the same time, in New
York, a symbolic "fun-
draising" drive was con-
ducted by the Greater New
York Conference on Soviet
Jewry to denounce a tax of
30 percent from all money
sent abroad to Soviet citi-
zens:

The new tax is due to go
into effect Jan. 1, and will
impose a hardship on Jew-
ish activists and others in
the USSR who have been
deprived of jobs because of
applying for exit visas and
therefore have no income

Toon in Israel

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Malcolm Toon, the new
United States Ambassador
to Israel, presented his cre-
dentials to President
Ephraim Katzir last week in
ceremonies at the Presiden-
tial residence attended by
Foreign Minister Yigal Al-
Ion.
Both the President and
the envoy affirmed that the
common goal of their two
countries was peace.

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from abroad.

Participants collected
pennies in front of the U.S.-
USSR Trade Mission in
Manhattan, and turned
them over to the Trade Mis-
sion, along with a vigorous
protest letter.
Meanwhile,
Jewish
sources in the Soviet Union

reported growing signs of a
crackdown by Soviet au-
thorities aimed at isolating
the Soviet Jewish commu-
nity from the outside world.
Intourist, the official So-
viet travel organization, said
that "Tourist-Zionists" will
now be regarded as persons
"interfering in Soviet inter-
nal affairs."

The Intourist announce-

Judge Rebuked for Claiming
Crematoriums Were for Baking

BONN (JTA) — A retired
judge who. claimed that the
crematoriums at Auschwitz
were used for baking bread,
not e terminating people,
was strongly rebuked by a
panel of magistrates in
Hamburg and penalized by
having his pension reduced
20 percent for the next five
years.
The special disciplinary
committee of his peers acted
in the case of Wilhelm,Stae-
glich, 58, a former official of
the neo-Nazi National Dem-
ocratic Party (NPD) wile(

x

Montreal Facilities
For Elderly Jews
Seen Inadequate

MONTREAL (JTA) —
The outgoing president of
the Canadian Allied-Jewish
Community . Services,
Charles Bronfman, has
questioned in his annual
report how much longer ex-
isting communal facilities
for the Jewish elderly would
he adequate as the number
of such Montreal Jews con-
tinued to grow.
A combined 10th annual
meeting of the AJCS and
Community Conference was
told that almost 14,000 of
Montreal's 115,000 Jews are
in the age group of 65 and
ov-er, the highest proportion
of aged of any ethnic group
in Quebec._

resigned from the Bench
two years ago.
They found that an article
written by Staeglich in an
extreme right-wing maga-
zine several years ago while
he was still presiding as a
judge infringed on the regu-
lations governing the con-
duct of public officials and
constituted an attempt to
re-write history.

Staeglich claimed in the
article that when he vis-
ited Auschwitz in 1944 he
found that the inmates
lived "a comfortable camp
life" under the watchful
eyes of "considerate SS
guards."

He denied that prisoners
were gassed and cremated.

Service Group
Names Director

ment followed an article in
the Soviet weekly
"Nedelya" which warned
that the Soviets would
deal firmly with American
Jews who come to the
USSR to meet local Jewish
activists and distribute
"Zionist literature."

In Washington, Rep. Wil-
liam M. Brodhead (D-Mich.)
and 26 others sent a letter to
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz demanding that any
wheat deals with the Rus-
sians or Arab nations be
made "in the best interests
of the American consumer."
The letter to Butz said,
"We believe it is possible to

Help is Asked
for Protestors

PARIS (JTA) — The pres-
ident of the Representative
Council of Jewish Institu-
tions of France (CRIF) sent
a telegram to the French
Ambassador to Bonn, Oli-
vier Wormser, requesting
that the Ambassador inter-
vene in behalf of six French
Jewish militants impris-
oned in Cologne, Germany.
The six students were ar-
rested by German police for
their participation in a dem-
onstration held June 24 out-
side the office of former SS
officer Kurt Lischka. The
demonstration protested
Lischka's seeming immun-
ity to trial for crimes com-
mitted during World War
II.

double or triple the price of
grain to Russia and the
Arab nations. We should
trade them grain for oil . .
barrel for bushel. For us to
continue selling cheap grain
abroad and buying high-
priced oil is an absurd pol-
icy."

Lectureship Set
at Hebrew U.

NEW YORK—Hadassah
and Sidney Musher of New
York have established the
Jeremy Musher Memorial
Visiting Lectureship at the
Hebrew University in mem-
ory of their late son.
Sidney Musher, president
Israel Endowment Funds,
explained that this • memo-
rial will provide for an an-
nual lecture at the Hebrew
University by a scientist in
theoretical chemistry or
chemical physics:

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NEW YORK — Matthew
Penn has been appointed ex-
ecutive director of the Na-
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Conimunal(Service. Penn
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Executive Director of
NCJCS in the 77 year his-
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He has served as its exec-
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years..
The NCJCS, with a mem-
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