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May 14, 1954 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1954-05-14

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



State Department and Israel Wrangle Over Public Statements by Byroade

Jordan, as a non-member state
Council to a letter of greeting of the UN, should agree in ad-
which the Council solicited from vance to accept any decision
him before its convention. Sen. the Council may take on,com- °
Martin said his letter was plaints now under discussion.
"merely a letter of greetings to He emphasized that this is
an organization but in no way provided by Article 35 of the
UN Charter.
was an endorsement of any pro-
Dr. Malik presented a draft
gram derogatory to the develop-
ment and progress of the State resolution demanding that the
Council - censure" and "con-
of Israel."
demn" Israel for the Nahalin
Security Council Opens Debate incident as a "flagrant breach"
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA) of the armistice agreement, and
—The United Nations Security asked that Israel be instructed
Council, after wrangling for over "to apprehend and punish the
a month to determine the pro- perpetrators" as well as to pay
cedure in considering cross- damages for loss of life and
complaints between Israel and property in the raid.
Jordan, finally succeeded in
adopting an agenda over the DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-17
opposition of Soviet delegate
Friday, May 14. 1954
Andrei Vishinsky and Dr. Charles
Malik of Lebanon, who speaks
for all the Arab states at the
Council.

WASHINGTON, (JTA) — Am- dispute because it seemed to be to clarify publicity given by the

IT WAS ABOUT three o'clock
in the morning when a physi-
cian friend of Dr. William White
was summoned deep in the heart
of Oak Park, where the streets
were yet unpaved, to attend a
chronic hypochondriac . . The
patient admitted he suffered no
particular pain, just had a feel-
ing that something was wrong
.. . Gravely, the doctor felt the
man's pulse, listened to his heart
• • • "Umph ." he said at
length. "Have you made your
will?" . . . The patient turned
pale, answered tremblingly that
he hadn't . . . "Better send for
your lawyer," counseled the
physician. "And who's your rab-
bi? Better send for him, too.
Notify your father—and is there
any one else?" . . By this time
the man, thoroughly terrified,
was moaning pitifully: "Oh, doc-
tor, oh, this is terrible. Do you
really think I'm nearing the
end?" . . . "Certainly not," said
the physician in icy tones.
"There isn't a thing in the world
wrong with you. But I'd hate to
be the only man you've made
a fool of on a night like this."
* * *
LOU BINDES is chairman of
the Millionaires Party being
given, May 23, by Knights of
Pythias, Detroit Lodge 55, at the
K of P Castle Hall .. . Proceeds
to be used to send underprivil-
eged kids to summer camp and
blind children to nursery school.
* * *
NOW ON THE newsstands is
the first edition of the pocket-
size book "The Court of Last Re-
sort" by Erie Stanley Gardner
. . . which tells the story of how
Louis Gross was convected of a
murder he never was proven p to
have committed, served more
than 15 years of a life %sentence,
and was finally released from
Jackson State Prison a free man
. . . thanks in no small part to
Rabbi Joshua Sperka and his
committee.

*

* *

MAJ. MAX WELL GURMAN
tells of a couple of colonels on a
mission that took them to a
good many army posts in this
country who found that most of
the men assigned to chauffering
them drove with a true soldier's
disregard of life and limb . . .
When, at Ft. Custer, recently,
where Max is public relations
director, they were assigned a
colored corporal who drove them
at a conservative 30 miles an
hour, they felt impelled to com-
pliment him . . . The soldier
acknowledged the commenda-
tion with a modest rejoinder .. .
"Well, subs," he said, "All looks
at it dis way—Ah's in diss-here
jeep too."

* * *
HERBERT HORDES has
been doing such a wonderful
job as chief sanitation engi-
neer for the Dept. of Health
in Israel, that other members
of the United Nations have
been trying to grab him for
their country . . . The Israeli
government will do anything
to keep him, however . . . It
paid his entire three-Month
hospital bill during a recent
illness from which he recover-
ed . . . plus three months' sal-
ary.

* *
DISA 'N DATA . . The new
dining room being opened by
Sam Boesky in the former super
market building on Seven Mile
and Wyoming will have stiff
competition . . . from his broth-
er . . . Harry Boesky will open
in a new building . . . just a
block away . . on Seven Mile
and Kentucky . . . Lydia and
Bill Rossen write from Israel, "It
is • truly a land of dreams and
unbelievable country. So much

bassador Abba S. Eban disclosed
he would call on Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles to de-
liver a formal protest on behalf
of the government of Israel
against the recent public state-
ment by Assistant Secretary of
State Henry A. Byroade which
called upon Israel to give up
large-scale immigration into the
Jewish State in order to allay
Arab fears.
The Byroade speech, delivered
in Philadelphia before the
American Council for Judaism,
was the second expression by
the American diplomat of criti-
cal views on Israel within a
short period of time.
Mr. Eban, accompanied by
Reuven Shiloah, Israel minister
plenipotentiary, called on Mr.
Byroade and, in a 45-minute
discussion, sought to familiarize
him with the details of the Is-
rael objections to his speech. An
unusual communique from the
State Department after the
meeting indicated that the de-
partment would reject the pro-
test.
State Department action in
rushing publication of the

communique was viewed by

correspondents as an extreme-

ly unusual step. The normal
courtesy and protocol is such
that the Department allows
the various Ambassadors who
call at the Department to
make whatever statements
they see fit without such im-
mediate rebuttal. State De-
partment spokesman Lincoln
White was asked about the fie-
parture from the normal cus-
tom. He replied that it was
caused by the "enormous pub-
licity" surrounding the issue.

Mr. Byroade himself was to
leave for Istanbul to preside over
a four-day conference of Amer-
ican diplomats in the Middle
East.
In its communique, the State
Department asserted that Mr.
Byroade "explained to the Am-
bassador that he had felt im-
pelled to speak frankly on what
seemed to be some of the under-
lying causes of the Arab-Israeli

Social Club to Hold Dance
Young People's Social Club will
hold a membership social, 8:30
p.m., Saturday, at the D. W. Si-
mons Center, 4000 Tuxedo, with
dancing and entertainment. For
further information, call Phyllis
Lewkowicz, TO. 5-5119.

to see" . . . June 4, 5, 6 will be
Fiesta Week in the Livernois-
Seven Mile Rd. area . with
all the stores participating in a
"Hollywood Opening Night" set-
ting . . . Story making the
rounds is that of Georgi Malan-
kov losing a pair of cherished
gold cuff-links given to him by
the late Josef Stalin, and sound-
ing an alarm throughout Russia
. ... Thirty-seven suspects were
rounded up, and sentenced to be
shot . • . The night before the
executions, Malenkov found the
cuff-links under his bureau, and
wired police headquarters ,. . .
"Cuff-links recovered. Release
suspects" . . Back came the
answer, "Executions must pro-
ceed as scheduled. Have full
confessions from all 37 prison-
ers."

increasingly affecting the secur-
ity of the Middle East—and,
hence, that of the United States.
He said he felt the American
people were entitled to such in-
formation, particularly in view
of the new evidence of Russian
intentions in the Middle East
which had not heretofore been
highlighted for the American
people."
The Byroade speech aroused
considerable resentment in wide
circles in Israel and came in for
sharp criticism in the United
States.
In Washington, Rep. Emanuel
Celler charged that the Byroade
speech could "only increase
existing tensions."
In New York, Dr. Nahum Gold-
mann, chairman of the Jewish
Agency for Palestine, denounced
the Byroade speech and warned
that the State Department offi-
cial "may have gravely preju-
diced efforts to rescue Jews
from troubled areas by counsel-
ing Israel to put a ceiling on its
immigration." The Jewish Agen-
cy, responsible for the resettle-
ment of more than 800,000 Jews
in Israel since the establish-
ment of the State, Dr. Goldmann
said, "will not be deterred by
ungracious and harsh advice re-
sulting from dubious political
expediency."
In Pittsburgh, Philip M. Klutz-
nick, president of Bnai Brith, in-
sisted, in an address, that peace
in the Middle East is possible so
long as the United States em-
phasizes the possibility of peace.
Referring to the Byroade speech,
Mr. Klutznick charged that to
interpret Arab policies and ac-
tions as mere negativism rather
than as a calculated program to
obstruct and destroy the pros-
pect of peace is to permit our-
selves to be blinded to the reali-
ties that exist in the Middle
East.

NORTHLAND

Ambassador Abba Eban,
head of the Israel delegation,
appealed to the Council to
improve relations between Jor-
dan and Israel within the
framework of the existing
armistice agreement, and also
as a transition to a perman-
ent peace. He insisted that

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***********414-***********-*****************•••-•.+44

Council Disavowed

Speaker of the House Joseph
W. Martin, Jr., issued a state-
' ment differing with the views of
the American Council for Jud-
aism. He said that a greeting he
sent the Council's recent Phila-
delphia convention "in no way
implies any change of attitude
on my part toward the State
of Israel." He said his record
favoring "the Jewish National
State is clear and should be con-
vincing." The communication
sent the Council for Judaism,
he explained, was a form greet-
ing intended only as a courtesy
to a group assembled for a con-
vention.
Sen. Edward Martin, Pennsyl-
vania Republican, likewise issued
a statement making it clear that
he does not support the objec-
tives of the American Council
Judaism. He made the statement

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AL GREEN'S

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Serving Iv the

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MARIA'S PIZZERIA

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