Friday, May 16, 1958 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEW S- 32 Riots in Lebanon Endanger Jewish Lives: Central High Centennial Banquet Dr.flunche Ends - Most Constructive' Talks Saturday Night an Historic Event (Continued from Page 1) Doctrine could not be brought into play, it was said, because this doctrine only allows for dispatch of American forces to repel attack by a Communist State or state controlled by "international Corn in unis m." Secretary of State Dulles - has declared that he does not con- cider the United Arab Republic to be controlled by Communism. The republic's only recourse, it was said, was to the UN Secu- rity Council. Nasser-backed rebel elements were reported Tuesday to have seized control of the northeast section of Lebanon. In be- leaguered Beirut, which was cut off from most other Leb- anese centers, loyal troops re- pelled a mob attack on the UN States E m b a s s y. Egyptian agents and arms were reported to have dropped into Lebanon at various points. The govern- ment announced that its gun- tj'T riP'rPA — — tiaL71 ryalin .r.);7'717. -1; -.17p trk,z ,trrra., z2:)pnp / man'? trilD .ep n'.;7)in • tyrr npr,1 niinp — rpm i47 - 14 0717 '717 Crr 1 - nrDa 77 -117p; ,t4r1 Trr4 wri . 1 71 "rr;74 14 1. r1 7171-1 P 1 n in 713.7 x•'21 ,707 1 -p. 00'074ra.z4 .1t? .nprip tra7ri r 417)ri3r11 1:47 1p brr)ix mt44i7 ,rrpk; n - vpz._ r q trrr, 0x07 oi"ri — — nnit ;TIL rinsm nrrn trn ov;t: . pn t,v7p 1a tv nritinn70 TtlAt — ?ronln • riF;0 rP.? tnnT;i7 PT;Tri - rr-p117 nx P44papl nFi r ri L? ritgR 0 414,10 11. nvn 9k5 nsItt4 'ax ItP,? 1,7 — - 41DtM 'N'7110 T tilLpt ?ram:. 113 wri tiVki ,w-onnri — "TriR K12 ry-1;7 7.), 41 ttip.mL?1 ✓ •'7 nx 74)1;71 .1 Prr'? 0 Arn z?ix . 10 '717 tvgl.z taiii3nm7 517 ntgin ,444z: 1 ,Otg nitom .non T T . (ro?;'?iy n ,14y rol* win?) boats had intercepted and cap- tured three Egyptian vessels carrying guns, ammunition and fedayeen raiders. What ap- peared to be a fullscale civil war was underway north of the Israel border. Jews Not the Only Opponents of Nasser, Ben-Guiion Tells Mapai TEL AVIV—Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion declared Tuesday night that Israel was not the only country in the Mid- dle East resisting the expansion ambitions of Gamal Abdel Nas- ser, the Egyptian dictator, and said there were other peoples in the area who are not pre- pared to accept enslavement by the Cairo ruler, who realize the danger in store for them and seek ways of averting it." The Israel) leader, addressing 1,200 delegates to the national convention of the Mapai Labor Party, of which he is the head, predicted that "there may be developments in the area not exactly according to the will of the Egyptian dictator." Ben-Gurion reminded h i s audience, which all day long had been following news bulle- tins of the Nasser-inspired up- rising against the government of neighboring Lebanon, that "the area in which we live is not only an area of Arab peo- ples but also includes the Sau- dan and Ethiopia, as well as Iran and Turkey." He added that "the Egyptian dictator's ambitious policy and his aims - at domination create tension and fear not only among the Arab peoples but also through- out the .Moslem world and on the African continent." Dr. Bunche Concludes Talks With Top Israeli and Arab Leaders JERUSALEM — Dr. Ralph Bunche, Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations, completed a series of talks Tuesday with Israel and Jordan officials and prepared to return to New York to report to UN Jerusalem Calling Gefillte Fish Translation of Hebrew column on left. Published by Brit Ivrit Olamit. An historic event will take by Richard Frankenstein. It was Secretary General Dag Ham- place this Saturday evening, in set to music by Rowland Fixel, marskj old. He described as "most con- the Fountain Room of the Ma- with lyrics by Fred Lawton, and structive" an hour-long meeting sonic Temple, when 1,000 grad- sung by the alumni themselves. There will be many other with top Israel Foreign Min- uates of Central High School istry officials Tuesday morning will gather to mark the school's highlights at the dinner, reser- vations for which, at $5 a plate, which reportedly covered a 100th anniversary. Mrs. Bertha M. Robinson, the can still be made by calling Cen- wide range of problems con- nected with the Israel-Jordan school's present principal, who tral High School's office. dispute over access to the has played a leading role in A number of publications Mount Scopus enclave behind planning the event, stated: were issued in connection with Jordanian lines. the centennial celebration. Miss Robinson edited the banquet Dr. Bunche, who arrived here program. Beverly Schwartz, Sunday, previously met with Jewish News columnist, was one Samir El Rafai, the Jordanian of the editors of the Centennial Foreign Minister, in Amman, issue of the Central Student. and with Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion. The reason for the In a statement relating to the sudden Bunche trip to the Mid- celebration, Miss Robinson said: dle East was the newest Jordan- "Detroit's leadership in the created dispute over the fort- automobile age set the pace and nightly Israel convoy to Mount determined the direction of the Scopus enclave. The discussions growth and development of Cen- Tuesday reportedly covered un- tral High School in its first implemented details of the century. Mount Scopus agreement nego- "As we raise the curtain on tiated recently by Dr. Francisco MISS BERTHA M. ROBINSON our second century, we reach Urrutia, of Columbia, as UN Secretary General Hammar- "This centennial is a testimonial the watershed of history. New skjold's special representative. to the fact that in this century thinking has split the atom. We the public high school has be- are poised on the edge o space Among the topics reportedly come .universal." ready to explore the stars." discussed at Tuesday's meeting High "The history of Central were a system of inspection of convoys, the transfer of books School is the story of our stu- Urge Nasser as U.S. Guest WASHINGTON (JTA) — from the Hebrew University dents, our teachers and the edu- Library on Mount Scopus and cational leaders who piloted the Harold B. Minor, president of the broader problems, includ- course," a member of the ar- the American Friends of the ing Jordan's refusal to imple- rangements committee s a i d. Middle East. urged that Presi- ment Article Eight of the Mixed "Central High School's centen- dent Nasser of the United Armistics Agreement and Isra- nial alumni banquet presents a Arab Republic he invited to el's refusal to participate in culmination of these 100 years the United States by the gov- regular plenary meetings of of learning and the beginning ernment. He made this recom- of the second century of school- mendation in testimony before MAC. Article Eight establishes free- ing on the secondary level." the Senate Foreign Relations At the dinner tomorrow night, dom of access for Israel to Committee. The AFME is a Mount Scopus, resumption of a number of well known speak- pro-Arab propaganda organiza- ers will precede a musical ex- normal cultural and humani- tarian work at Hebrew Univer- travaganza. It will be narrated tion. sity and Hadassah institutions, access to the Wailing Wall in Old Jerusalem, the opening of DY AHARON ROSEN the Bethlehem and Latrun roads and related issues. window Israel takes part in meetings close (m.s.) tiLpri .271 `1 1a .276 of MAC subcommittees dealing iJah-lohn soh-gehr with day-to-day matters like border sanitation, the return of open (m.s.) nryin .277 therefore P"2 17 .272 ahl-kehn infiltrators and minor incidents, poh-teh-ahlj but refuses to attend plenary request (m.s.) lah-khehn ten? .278 meetings on grounds that Jor- vah-kehsh in` dan has failed to implement de- cisions aimed at preventing is familiar wind rirl .273 .279 major incidents. roo-ahb with (m.s.) Sources here said that talks driver mah-keer 17;11 .274 with Israel was a secondary rea- nah-hahg son for Dr. Bunche's hasty visit, the primary one being discus- look (m.s.) .2 8 0 glass t , !1T. .275 sions with UN Truce Super- mah-beet ekhoo-kheet visory Chief Maj. Gen. Carl Von Horn on UN handling of Israel- Jordan disputes. wax — 131703 TY'7V..)11 4/i in t?.? "Yes sir," our fishmonger said to me, "Nobody ever speaks of them. They come to the shop, ask for fish, go home and cook then suddenly they speak about fishermen over the radio and write about them in the news- papers. Why! Because a fishing boat sunk in a big storm. Thank God (the Name) that all the fishermen are well!" The fishmonger spoke with much emotion and I did not know what to answer him. I came home and placed the fish on the table. My wife took them out of the paper and said to me: "Today you have brought very fine fish!" "You hear", I told her, "There was a big storm at sea and our boys were almost drowned." "Which boys?" My wife did not know what I was speaking about. "Our fishermen. They work hard all the year and endanger their lives. They are never spoken about, except in times of danger." "Now I understand," my wife laughed. "You surely spoke to our fishermonger." "Yes. That's right! How did you know?" "His son is a fisherman, and he is one of the boys who were saved during the big storm. Didn't you know?" That moment I wanted to run to the fishermonger and ask his pardon. I felt guilty that I eat fish and do not think of our good lads, who go down to the sea. HEBREW SELF-TAUGI IT ...1'73 r)473 on0tn7?3 'fix JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Israel Supreme Court turned down an appeal of three men sentenced to life imprisonment for the assassination of Dr. Is- rael Kastner. Two of the defendants, Zvi Eckstein, who was convicted of having fired the shots which killed Dr. Kastner, and Dan Shemer, convicted of having supplied the murder weapon, held that the prosecution had never proven that the bullets taken from the dead man's body actually were fired by the gun. The third defendant, Yosef Menkes, was convicted of com- plicity in the crime. Immediately after the defen- dants pleas were turned down, State's Attorney Mrs. Miriam Ben Porath filed an appeal against the lower court's re- fusal to consider charges that the defendants were members of an underground group and that Menkes was one of its leaders. Mrs. Ben Porats is attempting to establish the existence of such an under- ground in order to prosecute others allegedly implicated in the assassination plot. 4 ,tirrTi.42 rinx 1711 Deny Appeal of Kastner Slayers rikoi -017 .047-In 717.14 nr.iati tow? ,nr,x) 0400 nnx rk,; nx 0'013 rint.z roktri nkr - 147) .14zi rkt rk3 .r:vit? ;ikon , 4ti -171 nt3 ra3in nr)K ,nitt rki ?my: ,Lnp-pri, - vntp tiasma iarlax toz1 —111,704 13r.i 3 i .117r)4 m ,ItM. ,.n ii704 —DT.11./04 t11:1X, 71704 .Z7Itt .01'77 7x11 'zx N- rfilprin rinti rue? .infix nr1n Iran tRnp ,rr4inp'.) 7t714 ;Tip( .infix `laia 44ti 75 .-2711) ,ro41a7pLz rit; ;4 ;Rib m1— Reading material in vocalized Easy Hebrew, and also material for advanced students may be obtained through your local Hebrew Organization or by writing to Brit Ivrit Olamit, Y.O.B. 7111, Jerusalem, Israel, Published by &it Fait Muni' K