Enroll as a Worker in the 1950 Allied Jewish Campaign THE JEWISH NE Editorial, Page 4 A Weekly Review of Jewish Events Around the World • • • Summary of Jewish Happenings Everywhere On Page 3 VOLUME 16—No. 26 708-10 David Stott Bldg.—Phone WO. 5-1155 Detroit, Michigan, March 10, 1950oierik. 7 Goldmann, Warburg, Glazer to Address MC Rally March 20 $3.00 Per Year; Single Copy, 10c . UNPlan Deadlocked; Jordan Crisis Delays 'p eace Pact Adoption All chances for a compromise on the Jerusalem internationalization issue were lost at Geneva this week when the United Nations Trusteeship Council yielded to the demands of . Dr. Fadhil al-Jamali, Iraqi delegate, and was forced after days of postponement to state that it could not leave a loophole in the definition of an internationalized area as ruled by the UN General Assembly. Thus, the efforts of some members, notably Pierre Ryckmans of Belgium, for the EDWARD M. M. WARBURG DR..NAHUM GOLDMANN Outstanding leaders in American Jewry will participate the official opening of the Detroit Allied Jewish Cam- in paign on Monday evening, March 20, at 8:30, in the main auditorium at Temple Beth El. • Utilizing the occasion for the presentation of reports to Detroit •Jewry on the progress made in Israel and in pro- viding help for survivors from Nazism, and on problems ahead for the United Jewish Appeal, this meeting, which will be open to the entire community, will be addressed by Dr. Nahum Goldmann, chairman of the American section the Jewisjk Agency; Edward M. M. Warburg, chairman - Contnaitteep and other guests, pos- sibly Lirew Pearson, the noted news and radio commentator. Arranged through the cooperation of Temple Beth El, this rally will be utilized for the presentation of plans re- . ga - rding the forthcoming Allied Jewish Campaign. Dr. B. 13enedict Glazer will be one of the local speakers. There will be no solicitation of funds. - of adoption of a plan to which Israel and Jordan would agree, failed. It is believed that the entire issue now must be returned to the UN General Assembly for further study. While UN circles believed, On the basis of information -regarding deliberations for a non-aggression pact between Jordan and Israel, that peace would be concluded within a matter of. weeks—possibly early in April—negotiations were deadlocked - as a result of the new Jordan cabinet crisis. Abdullah's attempt to reinstate ex-Premier Tewfik Ab- dul Huda, who resigned last week, is considered a concession to the group that opposes peace with Israel. Spokesmen for Israel and UN leaders remain confident, however, that • peace is possible not only with Jordan but also with Egypt and Lebanon. An earlier re- port that Israel-Jordan peace talks were held in Abdullah's palace appear to indicate that the negotiations always were in a serious mood. The issue involving shipment of arms to Arab states by Great Britain and Israel's request for arms from the U. S. and Britain remains a major problem. In London it was stated that Britain would consider selling arms to Israel if the Jewish state and its neighbors settled the major points of conflict. London quarters said there is no danger of resumption of hostilities. In Washington, the battle in support of Israel Daniel Frisch's Death requests for arms from this country is being: carried on in both Houses of Congress. A strong, Mourned by U.S. Jewry plea for cessation of arms shipments to the Mid- News of the death of Daniel dle East by Britain and for a UN investigation of Frisch, president of the Zionist the entire arms situation in that part of the world Organization of America, on was demanded in the Senate by Sen. Herbert H. Tuesday _morning, came as a Lehman of New York. In the House of Represen- shock to Jewish communities tatives, Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachu- everywhere and to his co-work- setts asked Secretary of State Dean Acheson to ers in Detroit. Leon Kay, presi- extend to Israel an equal opportunity to buy arms. dent of the local Zionist organi- Azzam Pasha Says Arabs Don't Want War zation, paid tribute to the mem- TEL AVIV-7-(ISI)—The Arabs want peace ory of Mr. Frisch and announc- and not war and they consider the Armistice ed plans for a memorial meeting agreements signed with Israel as the first step here in April, after Shloshim, towards Middle East settlement, Azzam Pasha, the 30-day period of mourning. secretary-general of the Arab League, was quoted Story on Page 7 as saying by the Beirut Arabic Radio-. JDC Brings 42,000 Yemenite Jews to Israel' Thousands of Yemenite Jews continue to reach Israel each month on 1.'Op- eration Magic Carpeef planes chartered by the Joint Distribution Commit- tee which already has brought 42,000 of them to the Jewish state. At JDC's . Hashid Reception Center in Aden, an undernourished youngster (below left) gets a medical examination to make sure he can make the journey. The refugees are shown waiting for a plane. (below right). Because the average adult weight 80 pounds, four Yemenites share a seat (left) - on the 1,600 mile flight to Israel, . Launch UJA: At the conference in Miami last week, 600 leaders from 39 states, including Michigan, launch- ticl the 1950 United Jewish Appeal with advance gifts of 6,400,000. They heard: HENRY MORGENTHAU, Jr., gen- eral UJA chairman, and U. S. Attorney General J. HOWARD (./IcGRATH (seated, left to right) and (standing) MISS PEARL BOYAR of Los Angeles and DREW PEARSON, newspaper columnist and radio broadcaster, in appeals for unprecedented -giving this year. Miss Boyar, 19-year-old daughter of Lou BOyar, big gifts chairman of the Los Angeles drive, announced the largest sum of the conference—$200,000 in behalf of father and his business associates. Among the pace-set- her tit:4g gifts announced at the conference was the $45,000 pledge of Joseph Holtzman of Detroit. •