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September 19, 1952 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1952-09-19

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

---4 1111111MIMPIIIIW

McCarran Tries to Expand
On America's Racist Laws

By MILTON FRIEDMAN

Copyright 3952, Jewish Telegraphic
Agency, Inc.

WASHINGTON—Sen. Pat Mc-
Carran, apparently not content
with controlling immigration to
the United States, is advancing

a new bill by which this country
would unilaterally control the
movement of migrants between
the old world and the countries
of the Western Hemisphere. Mc-
Carran would now like to say,

Sincere Best Wishes for
A Happy New Year

HENRY FORSTER

Florist

101 Fisher Bldg.

TR. 5 4050

-

A Happy and Prosperous New Year

SCHWARTZ DISTRIBUTORS CO.

IRVING MARCO, Mgr.

8750 Linwood

Detroit 6, Mich.

Best Wishes to the' Community
For A Year of Health and Happiness

C M. HARMON COMPANY

Mortgage Loans

2266 Penobscot Bldg.

WO. 2-2565

Our Very Best Wishes
For a Happy New Year

DETROIT FRUIT AUCTION

7201 W. Fort Street

Holiday Greetings

ASH & COMPANY

3939 GRAND RIVER

38-THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, September 19, 1952

for instance, whether Canada or
Brazil may admit a Jew from
Poland.
Five staff members of McCar-
ran's Senate Judiciary Commit-
tee and Senators Alexander
Wiley, Willis Smith and Robert
C. Hendrickson, are now in Eur-
ope, ostensibly to probe security
matters and problems involving
escapees from Communism. Ac-
tually, they are on a fishing ex-
pedition for data to back Mc-
Carran's contention that Amer-
ica should control the interna-
tional movement of refugees.

The European probing is
evidently in preparation for
the next session of Congress
when McCarran hopes to push
through a bill which Arthur
Greenleigh, executive director
of the United Service for New
Americans, warned "would
serve not only to sabotage
United States participation in
international programs, but
has the audacity to announce
to the world that one country,
and one country alone, is pre-
suming to dictate to all other
countries of the Western
Hemisphere whom they may
admit as potential citizens and
under what conditions.
"We need, as a nation," Green-
leigh added, "to regain our

moral and spiritual leadership,
which at this moment can be as
significant as our industrial and
military pre-eminence. We must
cease preaching one kind of de-
mocracy and practicing another.
Any regressive trends in our in-
ternational relations must be re-
versed. The United States must
recognize and 'help other nations
recognize the enormity of the
world-wide refugee problem."
At the Brussels Conference of
December, 1951, the United
States and 23 other nations I
formed the Provisional Intergov-
ernmental Committee for the
Movement of Migrants from
Europe (PICMME). The United
States gained international ac-
claim for taking leadership but
McCarran soon fixed that.

He sabotaged PICMME and
antagonized the free govern-
ments formerly encouraged by
America's efforts. McCarran,
aided by chairman Francis E.
Waiter of the House Immigra-
tion Subcommittee, blocked
the Provisional Committee's
plans to appoint the man
President Truman and many
other national leaders wanted
as executive director.

He was Donald Kingsley, the
distinguished former director
general of the International Re-
fugee Organization. Kingsley
was known to McCarran as a
man who stood against religious
discrimination and who proposed
projects to aid Hitler's victims
(which benefited many Jews).
The next step by McCarran
against PICMME was his bill to
replace it with an American or-
ganization which would tell
other countries what to do.
Greenleigh said the bill might
be called a "sleeper" because it
did not reveal all the hidden
"booby traps." .
McCarran's assertions on the
floor of the Senate, however, in-
dicated some of his intent. "This
plan of operation," said McCar-
ran, "would mean that the
United States of America would
be in a position to protect our
vital interests in the type of peo-
ple who would be moved to the
underdeveloped areas of the
Western Hemisphere.".

Greetings on
the New Year

AETNA
SMELTING
& REFINING

PFEIFFER BREWING COMPANY • DETROIT AND FLINT, MICHIGAN

1826 ILLINOIS

Casablanca Chief Rabbi
To Discuss Moroccan Jews

Better is little with righteous-
ness
Than great revenues with injus-
LONDON, (JTA)—Chief Rabbi
tice.
Toledano of Casablanca and
—Proverbs, 16:8.
Isaac Elmaleh, vice-president of
the Casablanca Jewish Com-
munity, have arrived here for a
series of discussions on the reli-
Greetings
gious and economic position of
Jews in French Morocco with re-
BROWN DRUG
ligious and lay leaders of the
STORE
Anglo-Jewish community. They
will also meet with Chief Rabbi
12th
8901
Israel Brodie of Britain.

-

Sincere Best Wishes for The New Year

R. H. BRENAMAN

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