Syria-Jordan Rift and Israel's Role in UN Assignment By SAUL CARSON (JTA Correspondent at the United Nations) (Copyright, 1965, JTA, Inc.) • UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Everybody knows that Syria and Jordan are the closest pals. They share Nasser's hatred for Israel. Both are making all kinds of wild threats about diverting the head- waters of the Jordan River, so as to rob Israel of those waters which Premier Eshkol has called "Israel's life-line," and which he has pledged to defend even with arms. Both Syria and Jordan back El Fatah, the Arab terrorist gangs that have been carrying on sabo- tage inside Israel. El Fatah has its headquarters in• Syria, but most of the recent anti-Israeli depredations have been carried out recently by members of the gang based in Jordan. Here, however, the friendship ends. Right now, Syria and Jordan are engaged in a stiff hassle. The issue: both want to be on the next Security Council; each insists that, if only one of them can be chosen, its state comes first. Enlargement of the Security Council, from its present 11 mem- bers to 15, is in the cards. The General Asembly adopted amend- ments to the United Nations Char- ter in 1963, calling for an increase in Security Council membership by four, and also for enlarging the Economic and Social Council from the present 18 members to 27. As of this writing, only the formal ratification of the United States is needed for final passage of those amendments. More than enough other votes in favor are already in (Israel voted for the amend- menth some months ago). The U.S.A. is the only perma- nent member of the Security Council that has not, as yet, filed its ratification, although the full Senate voted in favor of ratifica- tion as long ago as June 3. The U.S.A. is holding back on a tech- nicality—but there is little doubt that Washington's vote of "yes" will come forth formally by the deadline for this procedure. fight. Jordan was elected last year to a one-year term on the Security Council. Ordinarily, such a term runs for two years. But Mali had opposed Jordan's candidacy and there was a dead- lock. To break the impasse, an agreement was made that Jor- dan would sit on the Council un- til December 31, 1965, would re- sign, and Mali would take over the vacancy for the second year. What will happen if the amend- ments are put into effect and the Council is enlarged? Syria's permanent representa- tive, Rafik Asha, sent a letter to all members of the United Nations announcing its candidacy for a seat on the Security Council. He did not say whether he wants a seat in addition to one for Jor- dan, or whether he wants Syria to be on the body instead of Jordan. Jordan's Abdul Monem Rifai sent out his own letter. He claimed that the agreement re- garding Mali was phrased in such a way as to let Jordan stay on — if the enlargement amendment is put into effect. While the rivalry between two of the anti-Israeli members has thus been re-emphasized here, the Arab bloc evidently feels it has nothing to lose by the Damascus- Ammna maneuver. The Arabs want to make sure that at least one Arab remains on the Council and feel that, if two get elected, so much the better. Overlooked entirely is one im- portant fact: That the Arab states are not the entire Middle East, and that Israel is also a sovereign state in that region. There has al- ways been an Arab representa- tive on the Security Council since the first Council in 1946. Israel has never been on this principal organ of the United Nations. (Nor for that matter, as noted here re- cently in connection with the cur- rent vacancy on the International Court of Justice, has Israel ever been a member of, let alone head of, any of the other principal or- gans of the United Nations.) While Syria and Jordan are jockeying for position, the thought of putting up Israel as a candidate for Security Council membership may well be entertained by some delegations. Certainly, the Arabs would kick and howl. But when don't they, concerning Israel? Maybe the Jordanian-Syrian rival- ry, pointing up the Arabs' frequent proof of their intramural rivalries, may kick up a move in Israel's di- rection. Maybe. KE 8-6600 than other methods now in use abroad. Chicken-feed producers in Europe and the U.S. have dis- played a keen interest in the in- vention. The color of the yolk has no influence whatsoever on the nutritive value of the egg. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 3, 1965-15 If You're Driving Over the Holiday Week-End . . Drive Carefully If You're Flying .. Have a Safe Trip and Come Back to See Us for Your Next Airline Ticket! We'll Be Closed as Usual on Saturday, Sept. 4, and Also on Sunday and Monday. JULES DONESON TRAVEL AGENCY (Call DI 1 7111 on Tuesday, Sept. 7, for All Your Travel and Space Needs . . . We'll Be Back) - How to Be a Jew For Tremendous Savings During Our Red, While and Blue Sale! AT GRAND RIVER HAIFA — A new additiive to chicken feed invented at the Tech- nion, Israel Institute of Technol- ogy, will enable farmers in Israel and abroad to make their hens lay eggs with deeper-colored egg yolks. The Technion invention is be- lieved to be considerably cheaper From "Israel" by Ludwig Lewisohn It is not easy to be a Jew. It will be easier when the Jew is content to be himself. He must listen to his own soul. It is futile for him to try to cultivate the chivalric vir- tues—love of combat, uncritical ac- ceptance of standardized objects of loyalty, an artificial sense of honor, an acceptance of life as a game to be played according to rules. The Aryan gentleman asks concerning an action: Is it honorable accord- ing to a code? Is it correct? Is it gentlemanly? Is it "quite cricket"? The Jewish gentleman asks: Is it righteous? What is its relation to an eternal justice, to an eternal Now comes the Jordan-Syrian mercy? It is perfectly true that, according to the standards of chivalric Europe and the analogous tradition in America, the Jew is no gentleman. How could he be? Why should he strive to be? He cannot say, for instance, "my coun- try, right or wrong." His historic experiences are not rooted in the Germanic institutions of nobles and retainers, of fealty as an ab- stract virtue. He missed not only by actual exclusion but as a matter of character and instinct the whole experience of the feudal world. As a romantic curiosity he can appre- ciate the devotion of Aryan gentle- men to a royal nonentity, to the "People come a mediocre occupant of an exalted long way to deal office. Personally he can never share these emotions. His democ- with Stark Hickey Ford" racy, his passion for reasoned jus- tice, are bone-deep and thousands of years old. In the moral world he does not understand compro- mise. When the great oppressed the humble the prophets of Israel sought to destroy the state even into obliteration, even unto. for- eign captivity. The Jew has not • MUSTANGS changed. It was inevitable that modern socialism should be large- • THUNDERBIRDS ly the creation of Jews. It does • GALAXIES not matter whether the precise • WAGONS doctrines of any group of them are likely to prevail. They acted out of • FAIRLANES an immemorial and unchangeable • FALCONS Jewish instinct. "He judged the cause of the poor and needy; then it was well. Was not this to know me? said Jehovah." STARK HICKEY FORD WEST SEVEN MILE Technion Study Hatches Brighter-Hued Egg Yolks Noted Neuropathologist Albert Adamkiewicz, a 19th Cen- Pat ReynOlds admits she was wrong! (She was sure electric dryers were more expensive. Then we showed her. these money-saving facts.) A Gas dryers cost a couple of pennies less per load to operate; we'd be the first to admit it. But with electric dryers you still come out ahead. Read on. Electric dryers cost less to buy. Model for model, prices run about $20 to $40 lower than gas dryers. 0 And now, for a limited time, this lower price includes instal- lation and wiring, if needed, when you buy from one of the many dealers participating in this special sales event. Electric dryers cost nothing for electrical repairs or labor. Gas dryers? 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