Levine Book `Fascinating' The Soviet Union, from Kalin- ingrad on the Baltic Sea to Petropavlovsk on the Pacific, is the fascinating subject of Irving R. Levine in his new 400-page book, "Main Street, USSR," pub- lished by Doubleday & Co. (Gar- den City, N.Y.). As the title suggests, the book is an account of Russian life today — its people, problems, pr o g r es s, successes, failures. Above all, it provides insight into the workings of every-day life in Socialist Russia. The book is valuable espe- cially since it is an objective account of events in the USSR, but this is to be ex- pected because of Levine's training. H e is Moscow cor- respondent for t h e National Broadcasting Company, and has been in Levine Russia for three and a half years —longer than any other net- work correspondent. Through Levine's anecdotes, which dot the pages of the book, personal observation and con- versation with Russians in all strata of society, Americans will learn something of what it is like to be a Soviet citizen. JLC Denied Visit with Mikoyan; Deposit 'Memorandum of Outrage NEW YORK—A "memoran- dum of outrage," addressed to Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan, was left Wednes- day at the Soviet UN mission by a Jewish Labor Committee delegation. The document cited examples of anti-Jewish abuses and propaganda by the Soviet Union's past and current regimes. The JLC had requested an audience with the Soviet leader in order to discuss the con- tents of the memorandum, but were denied a meeting. The memorandum addressed to Mikoyan said that for the past 10 years, the JLC had "catalogued documented evi- dence showing that Jews in the Soviet Union were the victims of cultural pogroms en- dorsed by both Stalin and Khrushchev." The JLC memorandum also cited two broadcasts by Soviet broadcasting facilities in Kiro- vograd—one on Dec. 17, the other on Dec. 23—in which the commentators "ranted against Jews in language echoing the ghost of Josef Goebbels." The earlier broadcast, the JLC document said, "echoed the old First and foremost, the reader learns that the Russia today is not the Russia of Stalin—the dread period of the "midnight knock on the door." Levine tells how each phase of Soviet society is being geared to the new five- year plan (extended now to seven years), and what its re- sults will mean to the people. The author's treatment of communications, industry, agri- culture, housing, travel, salaries, medicine, culture, education, re- ligion are told in fascinating style. Each subject is compared to life as we know it in the United States, and the analogy is simplified because Russia's aims are to emulate and eventu- ally surpass, in each field, every- thing that has been accom- plished here, His second last chapter, "Why Was the Anti-Religious Museum Liquidated?" will be most in- teresting for Jewish readers. There is this description of Jew- ish life in Bukhara in Soviet Central,Asia: ". . . The _Jews now worship quite freely. On Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, 500 crowd the synagogue and for Friday evening services, 200 frequently are present. The sixty-year-old rabbi is permitted to supervise the slaughter of animals at a state butcher shop, and there are two stands at an outdoor market where kosher meat may be bought. "The congregation pays 400 rubles ($40) rent per year for their building. The only re= ligious training is that re- ceived at home, and when I asked whether there was any religious training in the syna- gogue, a young man spoke up: `They'd put us in jail if we tried to do that." Levine indi- cates that religion is now "tolerated but not encour- aged." Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News Levine's conclusion is most enlightening: "Great changes are in motion in Russia. Edu- cation has produced sputniks; it has also created a hunger for contacts with the outside world, for more goods, for a measure of self-expression. The acquisi- tion of property and the dim- ming of fanaticism act as a brake on adventurist Soviet policies. Time may be on the side of the democratic West in eventually shaping a Russia that is more moderate, more rea- sonable, more amenable to liv- ing and letting live."—F.S. 9 A book, recently published Policy," by K. Ivanov and Z. canards against Jews that in- cited the Russian people under in Moscow entitled "The State Sheynic, was termed a "com- of Israel: Its Position and panion piece of the anti- the Tsars. * * * Semitic forgery, "The Protocols of Zion," which was used by Tsarist secret police and by professional bigots to incite the Direct JTA Teletype Wire physicians plotted to assassinate masses of non-Jews against the to The Jewish News by medical mistreatment the Jews. WASHINGTON — American top Kremlin hierarchy. "What purpose does this Jewish organizations intend to The assassination of Mikhoels volume serve?" the JLC memo ask Soviet Deputy Premier was followed by the liquidation asked, "other than to further Anastas Mikoyan, who is now of Jewish cultural institu- perpetuate a policy of violent visiting the United States, to tions in the Soviet Union and anti-Semitic assaults. Is it not intervene for the restoration of by the wholesale arrest of Yid- designed to incite the Soviet Jewish cultural activities in dish writers and artists, many populace against all Soviet the Soviet Union, as well as of whom perished later in Jews, identifying them as 'tools for the stoppage of anti-Jewish Siberia or were executed. of imperialism.' and anti-Israel propaganda over "The graveyards of Russia The charges against the the Soviet Radio, it was learned Jewish physicians were later and her satellites bear mute here Tuesday. annuled by Soviet Premier testimony to the fact that Jews Simultaneously, it was pointed Nikita Khrushchev immediately have been the first to suffer out that Jan. 13 marks two sad after the death of Stalin. The at the hands of imperialistic anniversaries for Soviet Jewry. so-called "doctors plot" was and totalitarian powers." The Soviet Deputy • Premier It was on Jan. 13, 1948, that termed by the Khrushchev ad- actor-director Solomon Mik- ministration as a frameup by is asked why the Jewish press, heels of the Moscow Jewish Lavrenti Beria, chief of the Yiddish literature, Jewish Theater and chairman of the Soviet secret police, who was theater and Jewish cultural in- liquidated Jewish anti-fascist executed in Moscow. stitutions are repressed. The memorandum paints out committee in the USSR was Exactly eight days after these assassinated on a street in two anniversaries occur the that to this date the families Minsk by agents of the Soviet Soviet Communist Party is of scores of Yiddish writers secret police. planning—according to authori- purged and liquidated between It was also on Jan. 13, 1953 tative reports—to raise the 1948-52 have never received that Moscow published the "Jewish problem" at its 21st public apology nor their cases discussed in the Soviet press. charge that leading Jewish party congress in Moscow. Still Hope to See Soviet Premier NATI 0 NAL BANK, OF DETROIT STATEMENT OF CONDITION, DECEMBER 31, 1958 RESOURCES Cash on Hand and Due from Other Banks United States Government Securities . Other Securities . Loans: ••• Loans and Discounts Real Estate Mortgages Accrued Income and Other Resources Bank Premises Customers' Liability—Acceptances and Credits . $ 392,538,460.61 660,681,069.33 191,913,278.91 $ 539,261,660.80 133,866,299.36 . . 673,127,960.16 9,091,775.71 15,597,874.35 3,976,886.35 _ $1,946,927,305.42 LIABILITIES Deposits: Commercial, Bank, and Savings United States Government • • • • Other Public Funds Accrued Expenses and Other Liabilities . Acceptances and Letters of Credit Capital Funds: Common Stock ($10.00 par value) Surplus Undivided Profits $1,627,638,052.94 83,130,839.20 55,491,668.00 $ 28,974,000.00 90,000,000.00 29,007,681.56 $1,766,260,560.14 28,708,177.37 3,976,886.35 147,981,681.56 $1,946,927,305.42 United States Government Securities carried at $169,193,395.99 in the foregoing statement are pledged to secure public deposits, including deposits of $11,810,317.78 of the Treasurer, State of Michigan, and for other purposes required by law. BOARD OF Howard C. Baldwin Henry T. Bodman Prentiss M. Brown Harlow H. Curtice William M. Day Ray R. Eppert Charles T. Fisher Lawrence P. Fisher John B. Ford B. E. Hutchinson DIRECTORS Ralph T. McElvenny John N. McLucas F. W. Misch Peter J. Monaghan George E. Parker, Jr. Nate S. Shapero R. Perry Shorts Donald F. Valley C. E. Wilson 6a Neighborhood Offices Serving Detroit and Suburban Areas Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation