Rustum Bastuni, Arab Ex-Member of Knesset, to Speak in Detroit Feb. 9 Rustum Bustuni, prominent Israeli Arab leader, a noted architect and a former member of the Knesset, the Israel Par- liament, will be a guest here on Feb. 9 and will address several gatherings, at locations to be announced next week. Bustuni is one of a small group of Palestinian Arabs who advocated Arab - Jewish peace and a common understanding between the two kindred peo- ples even before the establish- ment of the State of Israel. Despite great pressures, po- litical and personal, he stood consistently and fearlessly in defense of his program for amity, and he emphasized it during his four-year term as a member of the Knesset. He became the spokesman for large groups of Israeli Arabs who reject all forms of national chauvinism and who not only accept their roles as citizens of Israel, but regard themselves as spearheads and vehicles in breaking the ring of enmity that surrounds Israel. Bustuni explained, upon his arrival in this country on a brief visit, that he and his group are battling for the creation of a basis for peace and cooperation between Arabs and Jews. All groups and parties in Is- rael have recognized Bustuni's stature as a spokesman for his people. He especially gained recognition for his intensive re- search into Arab village life in Israel. As an eminent architect, his gifts towards improvement of Arab village life—economic- ally and socially — have been considered as especially effect- ive. Bustuni is one of the editors of the magazine New Outlook, an authoritative publication that deals with ]problems in Israel • and the Middle East. Jews and Arabs contribute to its columns, with the ultimate aim of ce- menting friendship between the two peoples. During his two-month visit in this country, Bustuni aims to enlist support for the peace- sponsoring magazine, in order that it may penetrate into Jew- ish and Arab quarters, including the Arab countries. His address in Detroit will be on the topic "The Key to Peace in the Middle East." NEW YORK, (JTA)—The re- cent termination by Regie Renault, French automobile manufacturers, of the firm's business relations with the Kaiser-Frazer car assembly plant in Israel, was denounced here this week by leaders of 17 major American Jewish or- ganizations as "capitulation" to Arab pressures and "harmful to American and • United Na- tions efforts toward stability in the Middle East and toward world peace." Pointing out that the Renault Company has admitted that it withdrew from Israel "because Lindbergh Guilty of Anti-Semitism? Memoirs Claim He Aided Jewry NEW YORK — Suspicions of anti - Semitism against Charles A. Lindbergh, held in many quarters since his acceptance of a Nazi medal in 1938, may be completely unfounded, it was revealed this week. A memoir reported in the National Review, a conservative weekly publication, written by its editor, John Cham- berlain, re- veals that Lindbergh ac- tually was be- ing used, at the time, as a State Depart- ment "decoy" in the hope of Lindbergh winning relief for downtrodden German Jews. The Review article is based on a manuscript written by Col. Truman Smith, who was then the U.S. military atttache in Berlin, which is in the Yale University Library. Col. Smith's memoir states that Lindberg had made five missions to Germany, where he Oripittirk's ott Ulaollington linitIrtrarb . AT SALE EXTRAORDINARY TOPCOATS OVERCOATS LEATHER COATS ALL-WEATHER COATS V Selected Groups Regularly $95 to $125 $7 995 No Alteration Charge Right at the height of the season you get an extra- ordinary selection taken from our own stock of famous imported and domestic makes and fabrics. All hand- tailored to Scholnick's rigid specifications. 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Here it was hoped that Lindbergh would be successful in appealing to the German leader to ease the plight of the Jews. At the dinner, .Col. Smith's memoirs continue, Goerring un- expectedly produced the Service Cross of the German Eagle and gave it to Lindbergh with the -statement that its was"for his services to the aviation of the world, and particularly for his historic 1927 solo flight across the Atlantic." =- In a letter written by Ambas- sador Wilson to Lindbergh in 1941, the Ambassador wrote, "Neither you, nor I, nor any other American present had any previous hint that the presenta- tion would be made." Its re- fusal, the letter adds, would have constituted "a breach of good taste and an act offensive to a guest of the Ambassador of your country." Acceptance of the medal and Lindbergh's later campaign to keep the United States out of World War II was attacked in many quarters as an act of anti- Semitism, a label which has stuck through,the years. Col. Smith's memoirs reveal that the flyer's wife, writer Anne Morrow Lindbergh, on seeing the decoration called it "The Albatross," a reference to the way a slain sea bird was hung around a sailor's neck in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" as a. curse. of pressure from the Arab League Boycott Office," and that, subsequently Renault was taken off the Arab League's blacklist, the statement de- clared: "The Arab League boycott also makes it impossible to achieve progress toward peace in the Middle East. UN Secre- tary General Dag Hammarsk- jold has characterized the boy- cott as a 'dead weight upon our efforts.' It is a form of political and economic aggres- sion that creates and maintains tension in the Middle East. By keeping the Middle East in a state of near war, the boycott is a continuing threat to world peace. So long as the boycott lasts, interests vital to America are jeopardized. "The boycott has brought about violations of the rights of American citizenship and in- terference with the freedoms to trade, invest and travel. Be- cause the boycott imposes un- necessary expenditures and eco- tries of the Middle East, it sub- verts the purposes of United States economic assistance and makes the Middle East more dependent upon such American aid. Arab League economic warfare therefore places un- • necessary and additional bur- dens upon the American tax- payer. "We shall continue to expose these evils in the conviction that on political and economic as well as moral grounds, the Arab League boycott must be resisted by the United States Government, by American busi- ness, and by the American pub- lic." HAVE BOARD WILL DRAW MURRY KOBLIN ADVERTISING ART UN. 1-5600 Plymouth NEW CAR! USED CAR! or SERVICE! JACK MANN YOU EXPECT MORE FROM HAMILTON AND GET IT ! BEN GREEN You Can't Drive Overhead — Why Pay For It! HAMILTON MOTOR SALES 13519 HAMILTON at DAVISON TO 6-2800 DES'T SEVER UST! Enjoy Increased Income Tops on your own personal list of favorite books can be your Savings Account Book. Your savings con earn the Highest Rate on Insured Savings in Detroit at Guar- JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The Jewish Agency Executive has approved a budget of 20,000,000 Israeli pounds ($110,66,000) for the fiscal year comencing April 1, Dr. Dov Joseph, treas- urer of the Agency, announced this week. The largest single item in the budget is 77 million pounds for agricultural settlement. 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