THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 16 Friday, March 9, 1919 Appeals to FreeEx-Nazis Rejected AMSTERDAM (JTA) — Dutch Justice Minister Jacob de Ruiter has rejected an appeal for the release of the last three German war criminals still in prison in Holland. The appeal came in the form of an ,open letter sev- eral weeks ago from Isaac A. Diepenhorst, a Calvinist Senator and law professor who is chairman of the In- terchurch Commission for Prisons. Diepenhorst argued that the continued imprisonment of the three men serves no useful pur- pose after 30 years. The three are Franz II I: \\ SAVE! SAVE! BUY DIRECT f. f FROM THE I M PORTER SEYMOUR KAPLAN and Co. If' IMPORTER AND CUTTERS OF FINE DIAMONDS 30555 Southfield, Suite 100 445.200 ■ -.1•0# c. / 4- , GIN • 10 1 ,4 "4 AN 7:1 t FORESTS that bear your name Long after you have gone, forests in Israel , renewing themselves in the cycle of sea- ' sons, will keep your memory ever green. When making your Will, provide that a forest in Israel be planted in your name or in that of someone dear to you, handing down your last wish from generation to generation. A bequest to the J.N.F. is a bequest to the entire Jewish people. linking the name of the Testator with Israel in perpetuity. For information and advice in strict confidence apply to Jewish National Fund .27308 Southfield Rd., Southfield, 48076 (557 6644) - Fischer, who was in charge of deportations from The Hague; Ferdinand aus der Fuenten, who had the same post in Amsterdam; and Joseph Kotaella. Meanwhile, de Ruiter told Parliament last week that the government has rejected a request from Israel that millionaire art collector Pieter Menten be extradited to face war crimes charges there. He said that under the 1957 European Treaty on Ex- tradition, The Nether- lands could not extradite Dutch citizens. Israel wants to try the 79-year-old Menten for al- leged murders of Jews and others in the former Polish village of Podhorodze and Urycz in 1941. The- Dutch Supreme Court is scheduled to hear an appeal by the public prosecutor of a of a ruling by a Hague court which said that Menten could not • be tried on war crimes because he had been promised immunity in 1957 by the then justice minister. In Rome, the military court of La Spezia has re- jected an appeal for freedom by Walter Reder, a former. Austrian SS commander serving a life sentence for the mass, murder of the population of the town of Marzabotto in northern Italy during World War II. Reder, 70, is the last war criminal still incarcerated in an Italian prison. Reder is held responsi- ble for the deaths of 1834 people, mostly women and children. Meanwhile, Joseph Luns, secretary general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has vigorously denied allega- tions that he belonged to the Dutch Nazi Party (NSB) during his student days in the 1930s. Luns, who served as - BUY YOUR NEW 1919 BUICK FROM MICHIGAN'S BIG BUICK DEALER TaMaRCIFF Buick Opel Honda TELEGRAPH JUST SOUTH OF 12 MILE 353-1300 Immediate Delivery Open Mondays and Thursdays TiI 9 p.m. CUSTOM LEASE PLANS AVAILABLE Stop in during Purim for your complimentary Shallach Monos packages foreign minister of The Netherlands from 1956 to 1971, issued his denial from NATO headquarters in Brussels. The allegation was made by Prof. Louis de Jong, di- rector of The Netherlands State Institute for War Documentation. He said that documents in the Insti- tute's archives showed that. a Joseph Luns was a member of the NSB from the spring of 1933 untilthe middle of 1936 when he res- igned. Luns, --now 67, said there was a misun- derstanding and planned to meet with-de Jong. The NATO official, a Roman Catholic, entered the Dutch diplomatic service after completing his law studies. Last November, de Jong disclosed that a prominent member of The Netherlands Parliament Willem Aant- jes, had been a member of the Nazi Party as a youth. Aantjes, who was chairman of the Christian Democratic Party's parliamentary fac- tion, was forced to retire from political life. In Bonn, "David," a film about a rabbi's son in Nazi Germany, an adaptation from an autobiographical novel by Joel Koening, won the "Golden Bear" Award for the best full-length film at the Berlin Film Festival. In Vienna, the first episode of the NBC-TV film series "Holocaust," screened on state-owned television, drew a mixed reaction from viewers. -- Police threw a security cordon around the televi- sion studios during the broadcast to prevent threateried right-wing demonstrations but no inci- dents were reported. In Graz in the south of Austria, leaflets were distributed, presumably -by right-wing organizations, calling the Holocaust "the biggest lie in history." Laws to Reduce Soviet Bars to Emigration Under Attack WASHINGTON (JTA) — Henry Jackson (D.:Wash.) Two laws overwhelmingly on the trade law and, ac- adopted by the Congress in „cording to Jackson aides, the mid-1970s to help loosen the President has not Soviet restrictions against indicated alternatives. 4 any of its citizens — Jewish The Jackson-Vanik and non-Jewish — who wish Amendment bars MFN to emigrate now face a fresh treatment for "non-market” legislative_ assault that (Communist) countries as •=4 would divert them from the long as they do not provide purpose for which they were "assurances" of liberalized written. emigration practices. MFN Together with the old allows much lower tariff rates. arguments that the Jackson-Wanik Amend- The Stevenson Amend- ment to the U.S. Trade Act ment, passed in 1975, is the and the Stevenson Amend- other side of the trade coin. ment to the Export-Import It permits the Soviet Union •4 Bank Act hurt American to borrow up to $300 million business and employment in U.S. credits unless Con- 4 and does not help emigra- gress allowas a higher level. tion anyway are two new This law also limits export contentions — opening the of energy-related equip- door to the China trade de- merit and technology to the mands equal trade rights USSR to $40 million in cre- tol for Moscow and Peking to dit that requires Ex-Im avoid Soviet charges of dis- backing. It also requires a crimination by Washing- Presidential determination ton and, furthermore, with that a U.S. loan - of $50 mil- Soviet emigration reaching lion or more to a Communist an all-time high the Krem- country in a single transac- lin should be rewarded with tion is in the U.S. national softer commercial meas- interest. ures. Sen. Adlai Stevenson (D- Marshalling their Ill.), who authored the strength to bring "about Export-Import Amend- most-favored-nation (MFN) ment, now has offered the treatment and wastly Senate a bill that, in his greater governmental' cre- words, amends the Ex-Im dit to the Soviets are busi- and J-V Amendments "to ness leaders — notably provide identical require- those in the U.S.-USSR ments- for determining the Trade Council — and their eligibility of any Com- allies in the federal munist state for MFN and bureaucracy who consis- Ex-Im Bank credit, and for tently argue that the Soviet reviewing and limiting such Union should not be of- credits. Provisions in both fended for its treatment of acts which single out the its own people. USSR for special treatment would be repealed." Thurs far, the Carter His bill, Stevenson told' Administration con- the Senate would "also tinues to stand by the Jackson _ Amendment remove restrictions" in the Ex-Im Act on financ- adopted in 1974. Its lead- ing exports to the Soviet ing spokesmen and Se- Union for developing fos- nate Majority Leader Robert Byrd (D-W. Va.-) sil fuel energy resources. He would raise the loan have publicly said their 4 ceiling to two billion dol- positions are unchanged. lars and single transac- President Carter pledged tions. to $200 million. support in 1976 to Sen. Neither the present law Sephardim Start Hospital Fund Drive nor Stevenson's new bill would affect the loans to Mrs. Irma Lopes Car- NEW YORK — Plans to the Soviet Union from the rebuild Misgav Ladach dozo, chairman of the Commodity Credit Corp. 44 Hospital — the oldest American Friends, ex- for american agricultural Jewish medical institution plained that the new hos- products. in Jerusalem — were an- pital will have enlarged nounced by Mayor Teddy gynecological, obstetric Both the National Con- Kollek as a $6 million and new-born baby de- ference for Soviet Jewry and fund-raising campaign was partments, as well as a Russian Jews in nine Soviet launched by the American day-care hospital and cities oppose the Stevenson Sephardi community. out-patient clinics. measures. The Soviet re- "This hospital, built by The new Misgav Ladach fusniks told the Congress the Rothschild family in the Jackson Amendrnen Hospital is being supported 1854 and later operated by "the only legislative e by the World Sephardi Fed- Sephardim, represents a ment which, to some extei eration and the Jerusalem century of Sephardi com- at least, acts as an obstacle Foundation. munal responsibility in to the unbridled tyranny of Jerusalem," Kollek told a the Soviet authorities in special meeting of the Train Sabotaged their emigration policies." American Friends of Mis- JERUSALEM (JTA) — Rep. Robert Drinan (D- gav Ladach Hospital. "For Rail traffic between decades the hospital was the Jerusalem and Tel Aviv was Mass.), chairman of the In- mainstay of a network of brought to a halt briefly ternational Committee for Sephardi-operated charita- Sunday morning following the Release of Anatoly SO ble institutions in the Old detonation of an explosive Shcharansky, notes that City." at the western outskirts of "weakening the Jackson- The hospital, destroyed in the capital. -- Vanik Amendment now 1948, was relocated in The mine exploded un- would send precisely the Katamon in cramped and derneath the engine of a wrong signal to the Soviet inadequate facilities serv- train which was en route Union and would be taken as an indication that our ing the immediate from Jerusalem to Beit neighborhood as well as Shemesh. There were no in- firm resolve on this critical many of Jerusalem's Arab juries and the train was not hunan rights question is crumbling." residents. derailed. .0E-1 - • ,