Help Attain the Difference Between Success and Failure . U-M Honors Prof. Haber Missions in Israel THE JEWISH NE WS c -r . c i –r The Next Israel Prexy Commentary Page 2 Vol. XLI I I, No. 10 • Detroit's Allied Jewish Campaign closes with the traditional dinner next Tuesday, at the Jewish Center, with Israel's Chief Delegate Michael S. Comay as guest speaker. . . . The campaign still is $840,000 short of last year's total of $4,850,000. . . If the community is to live up to its full obligations to the United Jewish Appeal and to more than 50 local and national causes, the vitally needed sum must be attained. . . . Every Detroit Jew must join in securing the needed goal, to obviate failure and assure success for the current drive. A Weekly Review MICHIGAN f Jewish Events Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper—Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Printed in a 100% Union Shop 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd. —VE 8-9364—Detroit 35, May 3, 1963 Bond Redemption 11th Hour Campaign Appeal Nasser Menace Editorials Page 4 $6.00 Per Year; Single Copy 20c Britain Reaffirms Adherence to '50 Tripartite Pledge; U. S., UN Roles Stressed in M. E. Crises Strength for Israel. Seen by B-G as Prime Factor in Peace Bid By JOSHUA JUSTMAN Chief JTA Correspondent in Israel (Copyright, 1963, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) JERUSALEM; (JTA) — Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion believes that his country can achieve_peace with its Arab neighbors if Israel is made strong, if there is a gen- uine relaxation of East-West tensions and if the Arab states install democratic re- gimes. In an exclusive interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, on the eve of Israel's 15th anniversary, the Prime Minister reviewed Israel's hectic young lifetime, appraised its present and future tasks and analyzed its prospects for peace- ful co-existence with its neighbors. He made it clear that the primary factor in Israel's security and hope for future peace was a strong Israel and this, he said, called for continued immigration and land settle- ment, economic development, military prowess and prestige internationally. He stressed that Israel would be ready to participate. in a solution of the Arab refugee problem even outside the frame- work of a peace settlement. But he speci- fied this would have to be done in the "only practical way" which meant settlement "in Continued on Page 5 Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News LONDON—Preservation of the peace in the troubled Middle East is "primarily" up to the United Nations, but Britain would honor whatever commitments she has to provide assistance there if requested, and at any rate still considers itself bound by the Tripartite Declaration of 1950 for the guarantee of present Israel-Arab frontiers, Edward Heath, Lord Privy Seal, told the House of Commons Monday night. Heath made his statements in reply to questions pressuring him to disclose the govern- ment's position. Most of the questions were asked by members of the Labor Party. In reply to Laborite Shinwell concerning the possibility that a conflict might develop between the newly formed United Arab Republic Federation of Egypt, Syria and Iraq on the one hand and Israel on the other, Heath said: "the federation has not yet come into being. There are various processes to be gone through before it can exist." He added that Britain will "use all the influence we can in this area to reduce tensions and prevent the possibility of conflict." - When Sir John Langford Holt stressed the fact that the Arabs have declared their intention of destroying Israel, Heath underscored the government's continuing adherence to the 1950 Tripartite Declaration issued in that year by Britain, the United States and France. "The Tripartite Declaration," he said, "has never been retracted — it was the expression of the three countries that signed it." Laborite Patrick Gordon, his party's spokesman for foreign affairs, urged the govern- ment's consideration of extending the zone controlled by the United Nations "Farther north around the boundaries between Israel and the Arab states there." • He was obviously referring to the borders of Syria which has joined the new federation. Heath replied that at this moment the border to watch is between Israel and Jordan and pointed out that Jordan has not proposed joining the new federation. Christopher Mayhew, another member of the Labor Party, then insisted that Jordan is under heavy pressure to join the federation and that therefore "that boundary is precisly the danger point for the whole Middle East." When he expressed the thought that it "would be wiser to consider the possibility of a United Nations presence "on the Jordanian-Israeli border "before Introduce Bill trouble occurs," Heath said he would consider that question. to End Foreign Patrick Wall, a Conservative, asked what commit- Aid to Nasser ments Britain has undertaken to come to the defense • of either Jordan or Israel if either is attacked by a Story,on Page 8 Continued on Page 3 2,800 Campaign Workers Strive to Raise $840,000 Before Closing Dinner on May 7 . Preliminary to the closing dinner meeting of the 1963 Allied Jewish Campaign, to be held next Tuesday at the Jewish Center, with Israel's Chief Delegate to the United Nations Michael S. Comay as guest speaker, the sum of $840,000 still is needed for the drive's total to equal the amount of $4,850,000 secured in 1962, Charles H. Gershen- son, the campaign chairman, announced this week. _ Gershenson expressed confidence that last year's total is within reach, and he stated that the 2,800 campaign workers are proceeding to secure the amount needed to match the previous year's attainment. In his report on latest campaign results, Gershenson indicated that the pre-campaign division's big gifts portion of the drive, secured under the co-chairmanship of Irwin Green and Al Taubman, has com- pleted more than 95 per cent of its assignment; that 800 workers in seven trades and professional divisions under the chairmanship of Max M. Shaye are holding report and telephone solicitation meetings daily to assure all returns in time for the closing dinner meeting on Tuesday, and that 2,000 workers in the Women's Division are visiting the last of the division's 13,000 contributors. Gershenson said a successful Allied Jewish Campaign is part of a dynamic Detroit. "We are proud to be part of a community that cares about its old people, about the mental and physical well-being of its children and about the medical and recreational needs of its people," Gershenson said. "We plan to continue to meet our responsi- bilities in our own city while helping meet the needs of our less fortunate fellow Jews overseas." Ambassador Comay, the scheduled guest speaker at Tuesday's campaign closing dinner meeting, a native of South Africa, served as a staff advisor to the Jewish Agency delegation to the United Na- tions in 1947, and he was made a member of Israel's first delegation to the UN when Israel became a state in 1948. Comay was Israel's expert on British commonwealth nations and served as Israel's Ambassador to Canada. He received his law degree from the University of Cape Town and was a South African Supreme Court barrister before joining the South African army at the outbreak of World War II, serving as a Major in the Middle East and then in England. He has represented Israel at the International Civil Aviation Conference, at the Inter- national Conference on Law of the Sea and at the International Atomic Energy Conference. He became Israel's representative to the UN with the rank of Ambassador in 1961.