Ask UNESCO Commission to Probe Jordan's Anti-Jewish Discrimination ish faith and is not limited to Israeli citizens. One of UNESCO's principal objectives, it was observed, has been the facilitating of interna- tional travel regardless of re- ligion. Judge Polier emphasized that the Jordan ban prohibits travel not only by Jewish UNESCO personnel but also by private tourists and visiting scholars and thus is "in contravention of mutual responsibilities as- sumed by Member States." To permit any Member State to "lay down such a prohibition would be to acquiesce in the employment .of UNESCO itself to implement the very discrimi- nation it was organized to cor- rect," it was stated. In a memorandum submitted at the Commission's meeting in New York, on Monday, Judge Justine Wise Polier, chairman of the AJCongress' national executive committee, noted that the Commission is the ac- credited statutory liaison be- tween the American public and the official U.S. delegation which will attend the next gen- The memorandum called the eral conference of UNESCO to Commission's attention to the be held in November in New unanimous adoption in the Sen- ate of Resolution No. 323, which Delhi, India. The position of Jordan was condemned attempts by foreign disclosed in its response to a states to impair the rights of letter from Dr. Luther Evans, American citizens because of their religious beliefs, and also director-general of UNESCO, asking about facilities to be to the platform recently adopt- granted persons wishing to ed by both, political parties which contain similar state- travel' in connection with edu- ments. cational, scientific and cultural activities. The document pointed out Judge Polier noted the Jor- that the adoption of an appro- dan's statement banning the en- priate resolution at UNESCO's try of Jewish personnel of next General Conference in UNESCO was reprinted in the New Delhi would implement organAation's circular, dated , the sentiments contained in a May 4, 1956, and that "as of1 resolution adopted by the this time there is no informa- 1 Eighth General Conference of tion indicating any remon- UNESCO at Montevideo in strance by UNESCO against , 1954, which read: "Regretting these restrictions. Such protest that discrimination in very ugly would appear to be an indis- forms continues to vitiate rela- pensable first step in the reali- tions between human beings in zation of the UNESCO pro- certain areas of the world, calls states and na- gram." It also was pointed out j upon all tional commissions for UNESCO that the Jordan restriction ap- plies to all persons of the Jew- to eradicate in all possible ways the evil of discrimination." DID YOU KNOW Cot. Arvey, Judge Burman Received by Ben-Gurion Israel Accepted by World .Group PHILADELPHIA, (JTA) — Israel was among four countries newly accepted to membership in the permanent International Council of the Congress of An- thropological and Ethnological Sciences which concluded its fifth meeting here. Israel was represented by Im- manuel Ben-Dor, deputy direc- tor of the Department of An- tiquities of the Israel Ministry of Education and Culture. He is currently.visiting lecturer on Biblical archaeology at the Har- vard Divinity School. Israeli nominees for posts on the International Council,-named by Minister of Education Zal- man Arrane, are L. A. Mayer, professor of Moslem art and archaeology at Hebrew Univer- sity.; S. Yeivin, director of the department of antiquities; Yigal Yadin, former army chief who is now director of the excava- tions at Hatzor; S. N. Eisenstadt, professor of sociology at He- JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Col. brew U.; Mrs. Phyllis Palgi, Jacob Arvey, Chicago political anthropologist; and Ben-for. THAT WITH CADILLAC CLUB WINE YOU TOO CAN MAKE THE COOLEST SUMMER DRINKS SUCH AS WINE ON THE ROCKS ti , GENEVA, (JTA) — Israel has signed the "Supplemen- tary Convention on the Abo- lition of Slavery, the Slave Trade and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery," which was adopted by a United Nations conference earlier this month. The Awish state's signing brings to 33 the number of countries signing the instru- ment, which brings up to date an anti-slavery conven- tion signed in 1926. The latter, still in force, is confined mainly to crude types of chattel slavery and traffic in human beings, while the new treaty seeks to abol- ish such practices as serfdom, debt bondage, bride price and abuses rising from the adop- tion of children. • (ice cubes and wine) A WINE HIGHBALL OR COOLER (wine, ice, your favorite soft drink) A WINE SCREW DRIVER (wine, ice and orange juice) THEY'RE TERRIFIC. TRY THEM SUMMER or WINTER CADILLAC CLUB IS THE BEST TASTING WINE YOU CAN GET. IT IS THE LARGEST SELLING WINE IN MICHIGAN. leader, and Judge Henry Bur- man of Chicago, were received by Prime Minister David Ben- Gurion and, later, feted at a luncheon tendered by Foreign Minister Golda Meir. Prom- inent national and city officials attended the luncheon. Col. Arvey and his wife in- spected Neoth Yaacov, a recla- mation and afforestation project being developed on a _2,009 dunam tract by Keren kaye- meth, and named after Col. Arvey. Asch's•'Prophet' in German Translation STUTTGART, (JTA) -- "The Prophet" a novel by Sholem Asch on Isaiah and his Mes- sianic message, will be issued here in German translation this fall by the Diana Publishing House. The firm has brought out • several of Asch's wortcs since the war. Don't Be Disappointed! a PLAN NOW FOR YOUR WINTER CRUISE CONSULT: DELPHINE 296 N. Hunter Birmingham JO. 6-3115 ELLIOTT or BILL ELKIN or HELEN JACKMAN 19437 Livernois UN. 4-4464 ELKIN TRAVEL BUREAU Hungarian Communists to Allow Emigration of Zionists to Israel JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The Communist Party of Hungary "no longer considers World Zionism as an agent of Ameri- can imperialism, and no longer sees Zionism as a hostile trend against the State,;°' Oscar Beten, a member of the Hungarian party's executive committee, was quoted here. The statement, initialed by Beten, was reported in the newspaper Haaretz by its Bu- eharest correspondent, Amon Illon; who quoted Beten as de- claring that Zionism is now looked upon in Hungary only as "a rival trend from the ideo- logical viewpoint." The Hungarian Communist leader is reported to have ad- mitted that Zionists had been arrested and persecuted in Hun- gary, and to have stated that , "these were regretful mistakes of the Stalinist era, and will not recur." All have been re- leased, he said. Individual Zionists may live in Hungary peacefully and without prejudice or discrimina- tion, Beten is reported to have promised. However, he objected to "Zionist propaganda" among Hungarian Jews on the grounds that the latter "enjoy full equal- ity, and Zionist propaganda may harm the free Jewish commu- nity." Hungarian Jews who wish to emigrate to Israel will be per- mitted to do so, Beten is re- ported to have assured the cor- respondent. "No difficulties," he said, "will be encountered by such prospective emigres. They will be allowed to leave on hu- manitarian grounds in cases where there is no doubt that emigration will result in reunit- ing families, especially in the case of older people who want to join their children • in Israel." Russia's 'Collective Enemy' Theory Advanced to Gain Arab Approval - BUENOS AIRES (JTA)—The Soviet Union deliberately prac- tices anti-Semitism, putting the Jews in the position of "a col- lective enemy" in order to gain approval from the Arab states, Prof. Americo Gioldi, Argentine Socialist leader, and a member of the National Consultative Council, declared here. "Soviet anti-Semitism," Prof. Gioldi said, "must be viewed as a key. to Communist strategy in the Middle East. The Soviet Union could not obtain the backing of the Arab govern- ments if it did not put the Jews forth as a 'collective enemy.' "Anti-Jewish persecutions in the Soviet Union are an offense against humanity toward which no indifference is permissible." In New York, Soviet Ambas- sador Zaroubin ignored a letter sent him last July by the Jewish Labor Committee challenging anti-Jewish statements made by Nikita .Khrushchev in an inter- view with an Egyptian news- paper, the committee reported. It said Zaroubin had failed to acknowledge the letter signed by Adolph Held, committee president, challenging s t a t e- ments - by KhrushOhev and ask- ing for clarification of others. The interview quoted the Soviet official as having declared, among other things, that "we have already expelled them (the Jews) from our country." Prospects of Jewish survival in the Soviet Union are "very slender," Prof. Morris Ginsburg declared in the first Noah Barou Memorial Lecture at University College, in London.. The London Poale Zion will submit an amendment to a reso- lution on the agenda of the an- nual conference of the Labor Party, scheduled to meet at Blackpool from Oct. 1 to 5, call- ing for an improvement in the status of the Jews of the Soviet Union. It also was announced in Lon- don that a "violent and unpro- voked" attack on Israel, fol- lowed by efforts to prevent Israel delegates to • reply, high- lighted the recent communist- inspired Congress of the Inter- national Union of Students in Prague," according to members of the British delegation inter- viewed by the Sunday Times. The "most serious episode" at the Congress, the students re- ported, occurred when a Syrian delegate attacked Israel. The chairman, an Arab, attempted to prevent an Israeli delegate from replying, even after the Israel delegation threatened to Walk out unless, permitted the right to reply.. It was only after Roland Freeman, the • British delegation leader, threatened to move a resolution of "no con- fidence" in the presidium of the Congress,athat Israel was given the right to reply at a- session that lasted all night. Liberty is a principle; its community is its security,—ex- clusiveness is its doom.—Lajos Kossuth YOU'LL NEVER do better . OR PAY LESS On the BEST BUICK YET! Come In Today and See Charles Weinstock at BUIWS RETAIL STORE 6164 CASS AVE. Near G. M. Bldg. TR 5-9700 `28th Year With Buick SPITZER'S HEBREW BOOK & GIFT CENTER - AND RCA VICTOR Present for Your Holiday Listening Pleasure A New Release of JAN PEERCE Sings HEBREW MELODIES Kol Nidrei, A Dudele, Eili, Eile, A Cantor For A Sab- bath, A Plea to God, A Shepherd, A Dreamer, Glick, Meyerke Mein Zun, Morn- E-Le, Rozhinkes Mit Mend- len, A Zemerl, Shiroh. 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LP 331/2 SPITZER'S HEBREW BOOK & GIFT CENTER Northwest Detroit's Largest HebreW Book Shop Wholesale — Retail 18294 WYOMING UN. 3-0543 TROTT' JEWISH - NEWS- s-Friday, _Septemb er 21, 1958 Charging the State of Jordan with the practice of • religious bigotry by refusing to permit entry of UNESCO personnel of the Jewish faith, the American Jewish Congress urged the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO to initiat e action against the - Middle East King- dom's "attempt to introduce re- ligious prejudice into the UN agency devoted to its elimina- tion." Israel Ratifies UN Slavery Pact