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July 26, 1957 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1957-07-26

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

Friday, July 26, 195 7 — THE DETROIT JEWISH

V. 'Israel Would Welcome Dulles
as Mediator of Arab-Israel Dispute

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Se-
cretary Dulles' statement at his
press conference, reiterating his
1955 stand that the United
States' good offices were avail-
able to both sides in the Arab-
Israel conflict was welcomed
by a spokesman of the Foreign
Office here.
The spokesman pointed out
that Israel continues to favor
direct negotiations between Is-
rael and the Arab governments
"and for this purpose and the
good of f ices of the United •
States are certainly welcome."
He noted that Dulles' remarks
indicated that he did not ex-
pect progress toward a peace
settlement in the near future.
Actually, the Israeli continued,
in recent weeks all Arab radio
stations have been vying with
each other in virulent threats
to destroy Israel.
Meanwhile, in the United Na-
tions, the concensus of authori-
tative opinion regarding Secre-
tary of State Dulles' hint of a
"quieter" role for the U.S. in
peace efforts between Israel
and the Arab states, is that it
is an excellent diplomatic move,
bordering on the masterpiece.
While Dulles did not say what
"nation or nations" he had in
mind as playing "a more useful
role" than America possibly
can in the area, it was certain
here that he had Moslem Pak-
istan in mind. It was pointed
out that Dulles was well pre
pared for the question and that
a Secretary of State does not
pull such important matters
from a hat.
This, plus the statement by
Pakistan Prime Minister H. S.
Suhrawardy, that Israel was a
fact that one must live with,
and that there might be media-
tion between her and the Arab
states, is taken to mean that
an era of "quiet diplomacy," as
sought by Secretary General
Dag Hammarskjold, may be
about to begin in the Middle
East.

It is significant that at Ham-
marskjold's press conference in
Geneva, he parried all ques-
tions relating to the Middle
East.
Also, opinion here is that
Prime Minister Nehru's visit to
Cairo has much significance
along these same lines. Word
here from Asian sources is that
Nehru has been trying to get
President Nasser to take a less
belligerent attitude, not only
toward Israel but toward other

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Arab states, in or out of the
Baghdad Pact.
Asian delegates are saying
that the American move to al-
low states within the Asian-
African sphere to attempt to
bring peace to their own area
is a smart move, since any ac-
tion on the part of the West,
particularly the United States
now, in a section so newly re-
moved from colonialism begins
under an initial handicap.
One thing is certain, dele-
gates said, the U.S. is not think-
ing of playing a smaller role
in the Middle East only a
quieter one.

East Germany
Releases Film
on Anti-Semitism

BERLIN, (JTA) — An East
German film company has pro-
duced a motion picture on a
theme of pre-Hitler anti-Semi-
tism, "'Incident in Benderath,"
which has been entered in the
famous Edinburgh Film Festi-
val scheduled for later this sum-
mer.
The movie is based on Curt
Corrinth's play, "Trojanner,"
which was a wide popular suc-
cess throughout Germany from
1927 until 1933 when Hitler
banned it.
Theme of the play is the fight
of a high school student, the
only Jew in his class, against
malicious discrimination from
one of his teachers.
The boy demands a public
apology from the teacher. Sup -
ported . by his school friends,
the boy continues his fight un-
til the teacher is dismissed. The
story ends on the idea that
neither the real cause of the
incident nor the fear of the
Jewish student and his family
have been removed.
Following a run in East Ber-
lin theaters in 1955 and 1956,
the play was rewritten by Curt
Corrinth, its original author, to
suit it to current conditions in
West Germany.
Critics said it was much more
objective than the work of most
East German writers supplying
the East German play market
with propaganda serving the in-
terests of the puppet Commu-
nist regime.

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By HAROLD U. RIBALOW
(Copyright, 1957, JTA Inc.)
In the old days, boxing was
an extraordinarily colorful sport
and the managers were, more
often than not, more interest-
ing than the pugs off whom
they earned their daily bread.
Some of the managers have
been better newspaper copy
than their fighters, and we re-
member when Harry Matthews
came into prominence, and how
Jack Kearns, not the fighter, in-
trigued the sports writers.
It was much the same with
Joe Jacobs, who was a manager
for more than two decades and
who handled Max Schmeling
when the German was a top-
ranking pug. He also made
money for Tony Galento.
He was a brash, aggressive
little man, and many Jews were
bothered that he managed
Schmeling, a Nazi,, in the days
when Hitler's power was begin-
ning to affect the Jews of Ger-
many.
A few months ago, Frank
Graham of the "New York
Journal-American" wrote a col-
umn on the anniversary of
Jacob's death, and as is his
wont, Graham wrote sympa-
thetically and warmly about the
Jewish manager. One of his
stories is about "Jewish" issues
and reveals a new side of
Jacobs.
It happened when Joe took
the light heavyweight title-
holder, Mike McTigue (in 1923),
to Columbus, Ga., to fight
Young Stribling. You may re-
member that Stribling later was
ruined by Schmelling, but this
is getting ahead of our story.

Jacobs was cautious enough to
bring his own referee, Harry
Ertle, to the fight down South.
This is how Graham tells it:
"It was a close fight. At the
end of the tenth round, Ertle
gave the nod to McTigue. The
crowd howled in anger. Back at
the hotel where Joe and Mc-
Tigue stayed, a mob of Ku-
Kluxers grabbed Joe.
" 'You Jew . . . !" they said.
`We're going to hang you!'
" 'Go ahead,' Joe said. "Hang
me. But if you do, my mob from
New York will come down here
and blast this town off the map.'
"Joe didn't have any mob. He
had guts, though. A Jew sur-
rounded by Klansmen in a hos-
tile town, he made them take
it back. He and McTigue . . .

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President, Premier of France

at Ceremony Honoring Martyrs

PARIS (JTA)—The 14th an-
niversary of the Nazi dragnet
operation which scooped up
thousands of Parisian Jews for
imprisonment, deportation and
death in 1943 was marked with
services before the tomb of the
Unknown Jewish Martyr.
Present at the services were
French President Rene Coty,
Premier Maurice Bourges-
Maunoury, former Premier Guy
Mollet and numerous French
officials and Jewish communal
and religious leaders.

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Warn of Breach
by Israel, Zionists

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Dr.
Emanuel Neumann, president of
the Zionist Organization of
America, and Abraham Good-
man, chairman of the ZOA
executive, expressed grave con-
cern over the spiritual gulf de-
veloping between the Jews of
Israel and Jewry abroad.
They spoke at dedication ex-
ercises for the Goodman Audi-
torium and the Neumann Gar-
den at ZOA House here.
Goodman charged that Israeli
youth was being "poisoned" by
the "doctrine of non-interfer-
ence" from abroad preached by
Israeli leaders. Such teachings,
he insisted, would put a wedge
between Israeli Jews and those
abroad.
Dr. Neumann said that this
trend would result in two philo-
sophies: an assimilation philo-
sophy among Jews outside Is-
rael, and a "Canaanite philoso-
phy" followed by the Israelis.
The Zionist movement, he said,
would struggle against both
ideas.

Gestapo Official Gets Off
With Suspended Sentence

SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
OR PHONE HOTEL
ELLENVILLE (N.Y.) 370

Joe Jacobs' Story:Boxing Manager Who Foiled Klan

DUESSELDORF, (JTA) — A
local court found former Ges-
tapo official Erwin Brandt
guilty of inflicting upon inmates
of the Sachsenhausen concen-
tration camp "dangerous in-
juries while in the exercise of
an official function, "but sen-
tenced him to only a year in jail
and ruled that his term has al-
ready been served through a
period of pre-trial custody.

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