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June 10, 1955 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1955-06-10

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

8—DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Anti-Israel Propaganda Spread in
England by Archbishop of York

Histadrut at
Labor Conference

LONDON, (JTA)—Dr. Cyril F.
Garbett, Archbishop of York,'
and long a foe of Israel, has
loosed another blast against the
Jewish State, holding it respon-
sible for the plight of the Arab
refugees and repeating anti-Is-
rael slurs voiced by the Arabs.
The Archbishop's attack was
contained in a diocesan letter.
Reporting on a recent visit to
Jerusalem, the Archbishop said
that the borders drawn between

Friday, June 10, 1955
Challenge Arms Aid to Arabs
In Discussion on Senate Floor Arab Attacks

WASHINGTON, (JTA)—Chair-
man Walter F. George, of the
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee, told the Senate that
questions have been raised
"about military assistance being
given to certain of the Arab
countries, whereas no military
assistance has been given to Is-
rael." He gave this as one reason
for emphasizing that military
assistance "is not given for any
aggressive purpose."
Sen. George quoted Harold E.
Stassen, Director of the Foreign
Operations Administration, as
saying: "We are not furnishing
arms to any country that bor-
ders on Israel. We are furnish-
ing arrfis to the countries that
are up gainst the Soviet." He
said Mr. Stassen emphasized
that it is United States policy
"to endeavor to establish peace
in the Near East."

Senators Hit Arms Grant to
Arabs in Foreign Aid Debate

The AdministratiOn's $3.5 bil-
lion foreign aid program for the
1956 fiscal year beginning 'July
1 was on its way to the House of
Representatives this week, after
having survived a hard battle in
the Senate.
The Senate passed the bill by
a vote of 59 to 18, after its floor
managers had steered it clear of
restrictions on the size and na-
ture of the proposed, expendi-
tures.

The aid bill, which includes
an estimated S30 million
economic aid to Israel, is al-
ready being studied by the
House Foreign Relations Com-
mittee.
The question of aid to Is-
rael a n d the desirability of

TREES ARE A
SYMBOL OF
LIFE

WHAT IS FINER,

MORE DIGNIFIED,

Than to Honor

FATHER

(or Perpetuate His Money)

ON FATHER'S DAY
June 19

By PLANTING
TREES IN ISRAEL
in His Name

And

Plant Them in the

WILLIAMS-HART FOREST

Which The

JEWISH NATIONAL FUND

Is Planting On

THE HILLS OF EPHRAIM

as A TRIBUTE TO

GOVERNOR

G. MENNEN WILLIAMS

And

LT. GOVERNOR
PHILIP A. HART


To Plant Trees

CALL TO. 8-7384

THE JEWISH
NATIONAL FUND

11345 Linwood Ave.

continued arms aid to the Arab
states came up on the floor
of the Senate, when a num-
ber of Senator s, including
Administration stalwart George
H. Bender, Ohio Republican, ex-
pressed doubt about the wisdom
of shipping arms to Iraq' in the
absence of a peace treaty with
Israel.
Sen. Bender said he thought
the U.S. arms agreement with
Iraq was a mistake. He expressed
fear that it "endangers" Israel
and may lead to an arms race
deteriorating chances for peace.
He stressed that the arming
of any Arab state before it
adopts - a peaceful attitude to-
ward Israel will make peace
more difficult. He said that he
was in agreemnt with the late
Republican leader, Sen. Robert
A. Taft, in urging the avoidance
of a Near Eastern arms race.
Sen. Walter G. Magnu-
son, Washington Democrat, ex-
pressed hope that the State De-
partment will decide to withhold
further arms shipments to
Iraq "until it has publicly de-
clared that it is ready to live
at peace with Israel."

He told the Senate "there
has not been the slightest
sign of an improvement" in
Iraq's attitude toward Israel.
The United States, he said,
could do more with economic
assistance and Point Four
"than by passing out guns to
the palace guard."

"While we vote to send arms
to Iraq—we should bear in mind
that some of our taxpayers are
not permitted to enter Iraq,"
Sen. Magnuson continued. "No
Jews—whether they be Israelis,
whether they be British Jews or
whether they. be American Jews
—are permitted to go into this
country."
He reminded the Senate that
Iraq "was the one state in the
Near East, which was so domin-
ated by Nazi influence that it
went over to the Nazi side in
1941; and its army which has
never given any respectable ac-
count of itself, either in World
War II or the in Iraq invasion
of Israel, had to be subjugated
by small Allied detachments."

VIENNA, (JTA)—The Leban-
ese delegate to the world con-
gress of the International Con-
federation of Free Trade Unions
broke the calm of a session by
opening an attack on Histadrut,
Israel's labor federation and its
representative here. His attack
was replied to immediately by
the Histadrut representative,
Reuven Barkat.
The Lebanese delegate, B.
Shuman, accused the Histadrut
of maltreating Arab workers and
launched a. personal attack on
Barkat accusing him of follow-
ing an anti-Arab policy. He
based his reference on accusa-
tions made earlier by a Com-
munist leader, Esther Wilenska.
The delegate from the Lebanon
also referred to the status of
Arab refugees. saying that Israel
had not only deprived them of
their homes, but was inflicting
great sufferings on them.
In his reply, Barkat said that
it was regrettable that Shuman's
statement was based on a Com-
munist propaganda version of
affairs in Israel aimed at
spreading hatred and bitterness
between Jewish and Arab work-
erc through falsehood and mis-
representation.
Histadrut's policy from its
very beginnings, he added, was
to integrate Arab communities
and to give them full and equal
opportunity.
That program, he continued,
was now completely implement-
ed with the result that Israel's
Arab workers and farmers had a
higher standard of livino- than
that of their counterparts b in any
of the Arab states of the Middle
East.
Turning to the refugee prob-
lem, the Histadrut spokesman
asserted that it should not be
forgotten that the responsibility
for the tragic situation lies with
the Arab states which, in defi-
ance of the United Nations res-
olution of 1947, opened aggres-
sive warfare on the newborn
democratic State of Israel.

Israel Leads Per Capita
Imports of U.S. Products

Exclusive Dry Cleaning

Jews to Get Full Rights

participating in the Senate
debate, said if arms aid for
Iraq is to continue, similar aid
should go to Israel. He urged
that the United States guar-
antee Israel's territorial inte-
grity and serve notice that it
would defend Israel against
external aggression.

Hope was voiced by Sen. Leh-
man that the United States
economic aid to Israel would not
be used as a medium of apply-
ing political pressure against
Israel.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
Minnesota Democrat, urged that
development assistance funds
for the Middle East and particu-
larly Israel be increased. Sen.
Humphrey, a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations Corn'
mittee, said he believed funds
should be increased for Israel,
Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria
and Libya.

side the Western Hemisphere
according to a survey by the
American - Israel Chamber of
Commerce and Industry, Inc.,
New York.
The country's 1954 imports
totaled $74,600,000, or $43.37 per
capita of Israel's 1,718,000 pop-
ulation.
' On a global basis, Israel's per
capita imports from the U.S. last
year ranked fourth after Can-
ada, Venezuela and Cuba. Their
per capita imports amounted to
$181.50, $97.61 and $73.66 respec-
tively.
The list of Israel purchases
in the U.S. last year was topped
by $8,000,000 in grains, $7,200,-
000 in automobiles, parts and
accessories, and $6,500,000 in
steel mill products. Electrical
machinery and apparatus valued
at $3,900,000 and $3,380,000 worth
of dairy products were next on
the hit.
Other major categories repre-
sented among Israel's imports
from the U.S. with amounts ex-
ceeding $1,000,000, included raw
cotton,, nuts, industrial ma-
chine0, construction, excavat-
ing and mining machinery, en-
gines and turbines, chemical •
specialities and hides and skins.

TUNIS, (JTA) — Returning
here in triumph from his en-
forced exile in France, Tunisian
nationalist leader Habib Bour-
guiba told a welcoming crowd of.
50,000 Tunisians that Moslems
and Jews in Tunisia would share
the same rights under the new
home rule_ set-up won from
France.
Bourguiba, leader of the Neo-
Destour Party, condemned rac-
ism and xenophobia in his ad-
dress. Among the notables who
turned out to greet him were
the Grand Rabbi and the pres-
ident of the Jewish community
of Tunis. In the ranks of a boy
scout guard of honor for Bour-
guiba, Jewish and Moslem scouts
stood side by side.

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THE VAAD HORABBONIM

is appealing to all Jewish Householders that they be very careful and
cautious in buying their Kosher meats and poultry. Please, always
bear in mind the following:

1.

Buy your meat at a Kosher butcher shop which has a "Kosher"
sign from the Vood Horabbonim and where all rules and regulations
pertaining to Koshruth are observed.

2.

Even if there is a "Kosher" stamp or tog on the meat, unless
the place of purchase is under supervision, and all rules and
regulations strictly adhered to, it cannot be considered "Kosher."

PLEASE ALSO REMEMBER THE FOLLOWING:

1. Kosher meat has to be washed properly before the expiration of
three days.

Z. Kosher meat has to be "triiibered"' properly, namely by removal
of oll non-Kosher fat and veins.

3.

"Rolled beef" is supposed to be mode Kosher (soaked and salted.
properly) BEFORE it is rolled, otherwise it is not Kosher.

4.

Meat for grinding has to be made Kosher (soaked and salted
properly) before it is ground, otherwise it is no Kosher.

6.

When buying poultry, make sure that the fowl
has on its wing the red-white seal, issued for
that purpose by the Council of Orthodox Rabbis
of Detroit. The seal must be locked and intact,
whole and unbroken. Please do not trust
anyone who breaks the ruling of the Detroit
rabbinate and issues slaughtered poultry with-
out the , Proper "Kosher" seal. The "Kosher"
seal is your guarantee for the Kashruth of the
fowl

7.

Do not buy cut-up chickens, unless each piece
of the chicken has a "plombe" "Kosher" seal
attached on it by a "Mashgioch," from the
Vaad Horabbonim. Any piece of a chicken
without the proper "Kosher" seal is not to be
considered as Kosher.

Hint Arab Recognition
Of Communist Party

LONDON, (WJA) — According
to the official Soviet News
Agency (Tass), Egypt has sub-
mitted to the Arab League's
General Secretariat a proposal
for recognizing the Communist
Party.
The League's General Secre-
tary has asked the Lebanese
government to state its opinion
on this proposal. The Tass re-
port quotes the Beirut daily "Al-
Hadar as the source of its in-
formation.







Under Tunis Home Rule

Morse Questions Wisdom of
Israel is the largest per capita
Military Aid to Iraq
Sen. Wayne Morse, of Oregon, importer of U.S. products out-

told the Senate that he ques-
tions the wisdom of American
military aid to Iraq. He expres-
sed the belief that the Middle
Eastern problem might largely
be solved through economic as-
sistance. "The solution is not to
be found in stirring up animosi-
ties which are bound to be stir-
red up by giving military aid,"
he declared.
Sen. Morse revealed he had
cast a dissenting vote when the
foreign aid bill was before the
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee because of the failure to
earmark funds for the Near
East. He demanded that foreign
aid, particul4y arms expendi-
tures in the Near East, be clear-
ly earmarked. "I think the
American people are entitled to
know the purpose of those ex-
penditures," he told the Senate.
Sen. Herbert H. Lehman,

Israel and the Arab states are
"absurd and illogical." He ad-
mitted that "no doubt there are
isolated raids by individual
Arabs," but charged that the
"retaliation is terrible." Dr. Gar-
bett also declared that there is
more "hatred and bitterness"
between the two parties than is
to be found in such a small area
anywhere else in the world. "The
Arab and the Jew despise each
other," Dr. Garbett wrote.

WE ARE APPEALING TO YOU AGAIN TO FOLLOW ALL THE RULES
MENTIONED ABOVE AND ALSO TO NOTIFY YOUR FRIENDS
ABOUT THEM.

—COUNCIL OF ORTHODOX RABBIS OF DETROIT..



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