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Paris (JCN^ - "Un Mar a Jerusalem" ("A Wall in Jerusalem"), a film about 50 years of Zionism, has broken all box-office records in Paris. :
There have been queues for ail pi^rformances at the ciniemas Where it is on, including weekday afternoons.
The film, which was produced by M. Jean Frydman, a French-Jewish advertising executive, uses films firoih archives all over the world and includes many sequences never seen before.
It was directed by M. Frederic Rossif^ who won fame for similar films oh the Spanish CiVU War and the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.
M, Albert Knobler worked with him, and the commentary was written by M, Joseph Kessel, of the French Academy,
The Paris pro-Arab organization directed by M. Louis Terrenoire, a former Information Minister, has stationed Arabs and other youngsters outside the cinemas showing the film. They have been handing out anti-Israel pamphlets but so far there have been no incidents.
Jerusalem (JCNS) - Hebrew-language purists suffered a setback when last week the road to Jerusalem in which the Ethiopian Church is situated, was formally changed from "Street of the; Abyssinians" to that of Ethiopia Street,
The Hebrew word for Ethiopia is Habash, the same root as Abyssinia. Some years ago when Kol Israel, the State radio, began using Ethiopia instead of Habash, it received instructions firom the then Prime Minister, Mr. David Ben-Gurion, to stick to Hebrew, that is to resume using the word Habash.
However, the Foreign Ministry having pointed out that the Government in Addis Ababa prefers the use of the term Ethiopia andEthiopian, Kol Israel and other official organs decided to use these terms.
But the little road by the church kept' its name untU just last week. Habash will now disappear into the realms of scholarship.
Tel Aviv (JCNS)-Israelis were ahead of the inhabitants of all other countries in the number of complaints they submitted to the State Comptroller, Dr. E.L Neb-enzahl, who has held the office since 1961, said in a lecture at Brenner house here.
He said the number of complaints byi. individuals continued to rise and it was already more than 3,0Q0this year. In Sweden, with more than double the populatioi^ there \were only 2,000 complaints in a year.
However, in the period preceding, during, and following the Six Day War no complaints were received by his office.
Dr. Nebenzahl pointed out that a section of his office was being organized as an Ombudsman's department to study private complaints against the authorities.
Israel is the' first country where the Comptroller combines these duties, and the advantages or otherwise are to be discussed at the next international comptroller's congress.
Complaints by Israeliis include the dirty state of some buses and railway carriages, and Dr. Nebenzahl said that people who daily go by bus had not yet "felt the results of the successful intervention on their behalf',
New York (JCNS)- Richard Yaffe, our JCNS correspondent in New York and at the United Nations, has been elected president of the Foreign Press Association, the 50-year-old organization of correspondents in the United States representing newspapers and other periodicals in some 60 countries. ■
Uvi Yaffe's election was unopposed^ He succeeds Mr. Jean-Paul Freyss, of the Agence France Presse.
Mr. Yaffe, who has been the JCNS man in America for the past 15 years, has had a long career as a journalist in the USA'and abroad. Among the posts he filled have been those of Foreign editor and war correspondr ent for the Newspaper "PM" and special Eastern European correspondent for the Columbia Broadcasting System in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary: Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Turkey.
Born in Reading, Pa., he received his highcfr education- at Boston University, and Harvard University and has been an instructor of journalism at several universities. He has covered the United Nations sliice Its inception, and is a founder of the American Newspaper Guild^ -
:TTie Canadian Jewsh News;Fri
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