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July 11, 1980 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-07-11

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

12

Friday, July 11, 1980

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

°D POL ADV

VOTE — AUG 5TH

PATRICIA A. KELLY

State Representative — 6Dth District

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Controversial Jerusalem Bill U-D Law School Unveils
Won't Be Rushed in Knesset Samuel Ackerman Library

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Knesset Speaker Yitzhak
Berman said Tuesday that
the controversial bill af-
firming united Jerusalem
as Israel's capital will not be
rushed through the Knesset
unless the government de-
clares that it is urgent.
The cabinet on Sunday
did not go along with a de-
mand by Transport Minis-
ter Haim Landau that it
supports the bill.
Geula Cohen, of the
ultra-nationalist Tehyia
faction, who introduced the
private member bill as an
amendment to Israel's basic
law, met with Berman to
urge him not to delay the
legislative process. The bill
was sent to the Knesset
June 30 by its legal commit-
tee and officially reached
the chamber Tuesday.
According to Cohen,
Berman said he would do

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NEW YORK (JTA) — In-
tensification of an effort by
the National Jewish Com-
mission on Law and Public
Affairs (COLPA) to obtain a
Sabbath protection
amendment to the planned
Truth-in-Testing law was
announced here by
Howard Zuckerman,
COLPA president, follow-
ing approval by the New
York Legislature of such an
amendment, the first such
state law.

nothing to delay nor
speed up the bill. He said
if the government did not
indicate the bill was ur-
gent "it would take its
place in the queue" for a
first reading.
The government is repor-
tedly eager to bury the bill.
The only member of the
governing coalition sup-
porting it is the National
Religious Party. The Knes-
set is due to take its summer
recess at the end of the
month and not return until
October.

Meanwhile, Shulamit
Aloni, the civil rights
movement MK, asked the
law committee to begin the
entire legislation process
anew since she was absent
last week when the commit-
tee sent the bill to the Knes-
set. Her request was re-
jected.

Menten Gets Prison Term, Fine
for Murder of Jews During WW II

AMSTERDAM (JTA) —
A Rotterdam district court

NY Law Aids
Shomer Shabat

imposed a 10-year prison
sentence and a $50,000 fine
Wednesday on millionaire
art dealer Pieter Menten
after he was found guilty,
for the second time, of par-
ticipation in the mass mur-
ders of Jews and others in
Podhorodze Village in Po-
land while serving with the
Nazi SS during World War
II.
Menten's second trial
began in May. He had been
convicted in an Amsterdam
court in December 1977 of
the same crime, but that
verdict was overturned by
the Supreme Court and sub-
sequently a new trial was
ordered.
Menten, 81, had pleaded
not guilty. The prosecution
demanded a 20-year-
sentence, but presiding
Judge' Pieter Schipper pro-
nounced a 10-year term in
view of Menten's advanced
age.

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Attending the unveiling of a plaque designating
the Samuel Ackerman Real Estate Library at the Uni-
versity of Detroit School of Law are, from left: Peter C.
Schanck, library director; Carl M. Selinger, dean, U-D
Law School; Irving B. Ackerman, son of the late Mr.
Ackerman; and Alan T. Ackerman, grandson of the
late Samuel Ackerman.

The University of Detroit
Law Library has estab-
lished the Samuel Acker-
man Real Estate Library as
a memorial to the father of
Detroit attorney Irving B.
Ackerman and the
grandfather of Alan Ac-
kerman, also a Detroit at-
torney. The library has ac-
quired an extensive collec-
tion of materials on real
property law, with an em-
phasis on eminent domain,
from funds donated by the
Ackermans.
A memorial plaque de-
signating the Samuel Ac-
kerman Real Estate Li-
brary was unveiled in a
ceremony at the University
of Detroit School of Law last
month.
Samuel Ackerman's chil-

Israelis Kill
Double Agent

TEL AVIV (JTA) — A
young Arab wanted for the
murder of an Israeli secu-
rity agent was shot and kil-
led by an Israeli patrol in
NabluS last week. The sus-
pect, Besam Mouhammed
Habash, 21, who lived in the
Balta refugee camp near
Nablus, had worked for the
Israeli secret service, Shin
Bet.
But he turned against Is-
rael and killed his Israeli
control agent, Moshe Golan,
and stole his gun. The mur-
der touched off a massive
manhunt for Habash. The
Balta camp was put under
curfew and a house-to-
house search was conducted
without results.
An Israeli patrol in Nab-
lus noticed a man acting in a
suspicious manner. When
approached and asked for
identification, he pulled out
a gun and fired. The patrol
returned the fire, killing
him.
Habash had been em-
ployed by Shin Bet for some
time and was credited with
providing information that
led to the capture of at least
one terrorist gang. It is not
known why he turned
against Israel and killed his
control.

Israel played host to
1,176,000 tourists in 1978.
They occupied 54 percent of
the available hotel space
and spent a record $550 mil-
lion.

dren include Mrs Mol
lie Littky of Palm Beach,
Fla., CharleS K. of Dear-
field, Fla.; and Irving of De-
troit. There are 10
grandchildren.

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