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October 28, 1955 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1955-10-28

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

Name U. of M. Professor

Soviet Jet Planes, Heavv
Arms Unloaded in Egypt

To Brandeis U. Board

WALTHAM, Mass.—Economist
Isaiah Leo Sharfman has been
elected to the board of trustees
of Brandeis University, it was an-
nounced by Abraham Feinberg,
chairman of the board.
Chairman of the department of
economics at the University of
Michigan, Dr. Sharfman has been
a member oft?
Michigan's f a c
culty since 1912,
and Henry Car-
ter Adams uni-
versity professor
of economicsk,
since 1947.
A member and
chairman of var-
ious emergency
a n d arbitration
boards under the Dr. Sharfman
Ralway Labor Act since 1936, Dr.
Sharfnian has served as chief in-
vestigator of committee regula-
tion of-public utilities for the Na-
tional Civic Federation, and di-
rector - of investigation of anti-
trust policy for the National In-

dustrial Conference Board:
A graduate of Harvard and the
Harvard University Law School,
Dr. Sharfman was admitted to
the Massachusetts Bar in 1909
and served as assistant in econ-
omics at Harvard from 1908 to
1910. Recipient of the Ames prize
for legal writing, he has served
on the faculties of Stanford Uni-
versity and the Imperial Pei-
Yang University, Tientsin, China.
Former president and a mem-
ber of the American Economics
Association, Dr. Sharfman is au-
thor of "Railway RegUlaton,"
"The -American _ Railroad Prob-
lem" and "Interstate Commerce
Commission" (five volumes).

Fete Synagogue Centennial

STOCKHOLM (JTA)—Impres-
sive services here marked the
celebration of the centenary of
the Gothenburg Synagoguge and
the 175th anniversary of the
establishment of the Gothenburg
Jewish community.

Charles Weinstock
Says . . .
IT'S CLEANUP
TIME!

FOR YOUR BEST DEAL

On the Beautiful

1955 BUICK

SEE ME AT

BUICK'S RETAIL STORE

6164 CASS AVE.

Near G. M. Bldg.

T R 5 9700

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27th Year With Buick

(Continued from Page 1)

Iraqi Ambassador to the U. S.
said last week after seeing Sec-
retary of State Dulles, that Iraq
would prefer to buy arms from
the West but does not mind
taking arms from its "enemy."

Soviet Unloads Heavy
Arms Order in Egypt

WASHINGTON — The Soviet
freighter, Krasnodar, has un-
loaded what was belived to be
the most important shipment thus
far of Communist munitions at
Alexandria, according to reports
received by the State Department
Tuesday.

SALE PRICES

ON

Cairo. With the Armaments, it
said, came six Russians and eight
Czechs who will show the Egyp-
tians how to use and maintain
the equipment.
Reuters News Agency reported
from Cairo that armaments re-
ceived at Alexandria included
Stalin tanks, MIG jet aircraft
and artillery from Czechoslova-
kia's famed Skoda works.

Israel Embassy Exposes
`Unlimited Belligerency'
LONDON—The Israel Embassy
here on Tuesday published a 30-
page booklet on • the Israel-
Egyptian situation in which it
charged that "at no time since
the signing of the armstice agree-
ments has Egyptian hostility been
exerted so provocatively as dur-
ing the past year." The publi-
cation accused Egypt of follow-
ing a doctrine of "unilateral
belligerency," which it described
as "Egypt may behave towards
Israel as though there is war.
Israel must behave toward Egypt
as though there is peace."
The booklet noted that under
the burden of belligerent doc-
trines, the pacific. obligations as-
sumed under the armistice have
been lost to sight and the fallacy
of a state of war . has spread in
theory and practice. As long as
the Arab states are encouraged
by this very policy to refuse to
renounce their state of war with
Israel and reject all proposals
for negotiation, the booklet said,
"Israel must insist on complete
equality of treatment on the part
of any power authorizing arms
for the Middle Eastern states
both in regard to quantities as
well as to types of installations
and armaments."
It added that "for the time
being, the warning of the govern-
ment of Israel must stand. Arms
that are given to nations openly
proclaiming themselves to be at
war with another nation are
bound to aggravate the situation
and postpone still further the day
of peace."

The State Department offi-
cially maintained. it had "no firm
information" on the nature of
cargoes unloaded within the last
week by six munitions ships, in-
cluding Krasnodar. But State De-
partment sources told of unusual
security measures employed by
Egyptian port officials and un-
loading operations under cover
of darkness.
Krasnodar arrived in Alexan-
dria Saturday. It was unloaded
by Soviet crew members and
Egyptian troops at night.
There was a complete blackout
on official information on the
Krasnodar cargo, like the ban on
information about the Soviet
ship Stalingrad which arrived
earlier last week in Alexandria.
But shipping sources reported in-
formation indicating the Krasno-
dar carried most important mili-
tary shipment thus far received
by Egypt from the Soviet bloc.
These sources expressed the
belief the Krasnodar cargo was
a major part of Czechoslovakian
heavy armaments purchased by
Egypt.
Four ships, other than the two
named, were reported to have
unloaded arms in secret within
the last week. Extraordinary se-
curity_ measures, including fighter
plane cover emplacement of anti-
aircraft batteries, were reported
by travellers leaving Alexandria. Asst. State Sec. Tells of
These steps presumably were `Armed and Uneasy Truce'
taken because of an Egyptian
CINCINNATI—The Commun-
fear of a possible attack by
ist sale of arms to Egypt and
Israelis.
Soviet overtures to other Middle
East countries can only heighten
Egypt Gets,15 Soviet
tensions in,the area and threaten
the peace, Assistant Secretary of
MIG Jet Planes, Tanks
LONDON—Egypt has already State Francis 0. Wilcox said
received 15 Soviet MIG jet Monday night in an address be-
planes under the Czech-Egyptian fore the Cincinnati Council on
arms deal, the London Daily Ex- World Affairs. Describing the
press reported Tuesday. It said responsibility of the United Na-
the planes, together with tanks, tions for the Arab-Israel truce:
were delivered secretly on Mon- he said, "This is an armed, un-
day, Armaments from Czecho- easy truce. No permanent solu-
slovakia have thus far been de- tion has yet been found, but
livered to Egypt in one Egyptian, neither side has wished to ven-
one Soviet and three Romanian ture a new war or to be stigma-
vessels, the paper reported from tized as an aggressor before
world opinicn. The main point

is that the United Nations has
succeeded in preventing a re-
newal of major hostilities."

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PHILADELPHIA (JTA) — Ar-
thur Weyne, for the past two
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nent in this city, has announced
his resignation as of Dec. 31, to
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the Jewish Record in Atlantic
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