EWISH NEWS Reviews of Important Jewish Books A Weekly Review See Page 4 VOL I4—No. 13 2114 Penobscot . Bldg.—Phone WO. 5-1155 of Jewish Events Detroit 26, Michigan, December 10, 1948 Pe ce T es R Bennett Cerf's Humor Column: 'Try and Stop Me' —on Page 20 34 4:00, 22 $3.00 Per Year; Single Copy, 10o t in kr el; Deld Appeal to Reason and Justice How U. S. Backed Israel in the UN Excerpts from Speech of Dr. Philip C. Jessup, United States Del- egate on UN Security Council, urging immediate admission of Israel as the fifty - ninth m ember of the United Nations It is well known that the United States fully supports and will vote affirmatively on the application of the State of Israel for membership in the United Nations. It is our hope that the Security Council will shortly approve this application so that the State of Israel can attain favorable action by the General AsS'embly and may be admitted as the fifty-ninth member of the United Nations before the end of the Assembly's present session. The Charter of the United Nations in Article 4 specifies that membership in the United Nations is open to "peace-loving states which accept the obligations contained in the present Charter and, in the judgment of the organization, are able and willing to carry out these' obliga- tions." My Government considers that the State of Israel meets these Charter requirements. The first question is whether Israel is a "State" as that term is used in Article 4 of the Charter. Under the traditional definition of a state in international law all of the great writers have pointed to four qualifications: First: There must be a people. Second: There must be a territory. Third: There must be a government. Fourth: There must be capacity to enter into relations with other states of the world. So far as the question of capacity to enter into relations with other states of the world is concerned, I believe that there would be unanimity that Israel exercises complete in- dependence of judgment and of will in forming and in executing its foreign policy. No one doubts that Israel has a government. I think the world has been particularly impressed with the way in which the people of Israel have organized their government and have established a firm system of administration and of lawmaking under the most difficult con- ditions. Although they still modestly and appropriately call themselves the "Provisional Gov- ernment of Israel," they have a legislative body which makes laws; they have a judiciary which interprets and applies those laws; and they have an executive which carries out the laws and which has at its disposal a considerable force which is responsible to its will. • Nobody questions' the fact that the State of Israel has a people. It.,,Is_ an extremely homogeneous people; a peoplefull of loyalty and of enthusiastic devotion to the State of Israel. The argument seems chiefly to arise in connection with territory. One does not find in the general classic treatment of this subject any insistence that the territory of a state must be exactly fixed by definite frontiers. Historically many states have begun their existence with their frontiers unsettled. Let me take as --one example my own country—the United States of America. Like the State of Israel, it had its origin in certain territory along the seacoast. It had various indeterminate claims to an extended territory westward, but in the case of the United States, that land had not even been explored and no one knew just where the American claims ended and where French and British and Spanish claims began. To the north, the exact delimitation of the frontier with the territories of Great Britain was not settled until many years later. And yet I maintain, Mr. President, that in the light of history and in the light of a practice and acceptance by other states, the existence of the United States of America was not in question. The reason for the rule that one of the necessary attributes of a state is that it shall possess territory, is that one can 'not contemplate a state as a kind of disembodied spirit. Historically, the concept is that there must be some portion of the earth's surface which its people inhabit and over which its government exercises authority. No one can deny that the State of Israel responds to this requirement. Similarly, Mr. President, it is the view of my Government that Israel is a peace-loving nation. The Jewish community in Palestine which created the State of Israel expressed its wil- lingness and readiness a year ago to accept the General Assembly partition resolution of No- vember 29, 1947, and to cooperate loyally in carrying it out. The Provisional Government of Israel has extended its cooperation in the implementation of proposals made by the Security Council or by the Mediator. Since that date, representatives of the Provisional Government of Israel have repeatedly made clear in this forum, and elsewhere, their willingness to seek a settlement, through the processes of negotiation and with appropriate assistance of United Nations mediatory or con- cilliatory bodies, of all outstanding problems between Israel and other governments and authorities. As to the third of the Charter requirements, the State of Israel in the terms of its appli- cation for membership has indicated its acceptance of the obligations contained in the Charter. There is no reason for the Security Council to question the solemn assurance of Israel that it does accept the obligations of the Charter. It is clear to me that, judged by whatever standards of political and social organization. the State of Israel is able to carry out the obligations of the Charter of the United Nations and to assist the United Nations in achieving the high purposes set forth in the Charter. There is one other point to which I should like to refer since it is a matter which arises in consideration and in debate on questions involving applications for membership. The matter to which I refer is the relationship between action by the Security Council or by the United Nations upon application for membership and the problem of recognition of a Government or state. We are dealing here with a desire of a people who have laboriously constructed a com- munity, an authority and finally a Government operating in an independent state to see the state which they have thus arduously built take its place among the members of the United Nations. The United States has watched with sympathy and interest the birth of the State of Israel and- the developments of its 'political and social institutions. We are looking toward the first general elections to be held by the State of Israel early in the New Year. We shall await with anticipation the . full development of the State of Israel, of political institutions and prac- tices in the best of the democratic tradition. Surely, Mr. President, it is of great importance, it is of great value, that in reaching that final adjustment, a peaceful settlement of the Palestinian question, that Israel should take its place among the members of the United Nations, equally bound by the Charter, equally responsible to the obligations of the Charter. (Direct Teletype Wires to The Jewish News by JTA. and by Our Special Correspondents) Peace in Israel appeared a certainty this week as a result of direct Arab-Jewish negotiations. But in Paris, the Security Council's membership committee on Tuesday voted, on Canada's suggestion, to refer Israel's application back again to the Council. Canada argued that the fate of the General Assembly decision is uncertain and, together with France, was reluctant to vote. Russia charged that the delay is aimed to block action on the application. The United States delegation supported Canada. Israel's delegation con- tinues to believe that despite the delay there remains a possibility of Israel's admission to the UN at this session. In Jerusalem, Col. Moshe Dayan and Lt. Col. Abdullah El Tel, commanders of the Israel and Arab Legion forces in the Jerusalem area, met for the fourth time Tuesday to discuss cease fire problems, under the sponsorship of the UN truce observers. Discussions centered around three main problems: 1: Arabs be allowed to return to Katamon Quarter, Israeli authorities to guarantee their lives and property, in return for which Jews will be permitted to return to the Jewish Quarter of the Old City with similar guarantees from the Arab Legion; 2. Jews shall supply electric power to Old City in return for access to the Wailing Wall; 3. Negotiations shall be started Immediately to open the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv railroad, with Is..aeli forces lifting the siege of Latrun for this purpose. Dayan refused to discuss the last point, insisting that his jurisdiction did not extend to Latrun, but offered to arrange a meeting between El Tel and proper Israeli corn- (Continued on Page 3) - Tribute 4o Mrs. Wise: These are the children who recently disembarked from the Israeli ship "Negba" at Haifa. They will be housed at a youth hostel hi Israel to be estab- lished as an American Jewish Congress memorial to Louise Waterman Wise, the wife of Dr. Stephen S. Wise, president of •the Congress and one 'of American Jewry's outstanding leaders. Women Aid. Hebrew 115: ' me training of teachers and the improvement of teaching methods in the State of Israel was undertaken by the National Council of Jewish Women through an agreement which provides for the support and expansion of the Department of Education at the Hebrew University in Jeru- salem. Under The terms of agreement with the Hebrew University, announced by MRS. JOSEPH M. WELT (center) of Defroit. NCJW president, the organization assumed sponsorship of •the department, the central non-partisan institution in Palestine •For the development of teachers and teaching techniques. Present at the announcement of the agreement in New York were DR. ALEXANDER DUSHKFN (left), executive vice-president of the Jewish Education Committee of New York, and DR. DAVID W. SENATOR (right), administrator of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem,.