Army Outpost Becomes Cooperative Village White House Conference Urges Ratification of Genocide Pact ALMAGOR—This frontier out- poSt, established under Syrian gunsights in 1961 by NAHAL, the special combination of Army ser- vice and farm training, recently became a full-fledged moshav, co- operative village. The young sol- N— "diers who settled the place have now completed their army service ord, shedding their uniforms, have chosen to live the life of co- operative farmers. At the celebration marking Al- magor's new civilian status, a mes- sage from Prime Minister Levi Eshkol commended Almagor for "making a landscape that has been deserted for thousands of years flourish." Men and women serving in NAHAL have established over 40 agricultural settlements, mos- havim and kibbutzim, in many of the wasteland and border areas of Israel. Almost 160 kibbutzim have been strengthened by NAHAL groups. l 1,500 Jews in Jamaica The Jewish community of Jamai- ca, which dates back to the 17th Century, today numbers some 1,500 persons, most of whom live in the capital city of Kingston. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 10, 1965-33 the United States would be entitled to complain in good faith about it only if the United States has itself accepted the obligations," said the final draft. 47Gni,c24 twg A number of committee mem- bers criticized the final draft on grounds that it claimed sweeping achievements in human rights in the United States but that action has been lacking on genocide ratification and in other areas. It was stressed that the United States must put its own house in order before it can lecture to other nations on human rights matters. * New Floor Show and Dancing Nightly * Supervised Children's Activities OCEANFRONT to 26th Sts •• Maami likrach __Miami Afters 9 gr.-600.3 'Round-the-clock entertainment Free Parking • Private Beach and Pool daily per person dble. occ. to Dec. 17 30 of 117 rooms $7 *Dec. 17-Jan. 3 BIG XMAS-NEW YEAR'S HOLIDAY Deluxe Full Course Bkfst.:::::: : Xmas Day Buffet Poolside;:;:;: : Gala New Year's Eve Part0: : KIDS UNDER 12 in same: room (breakfast add'I) $3 F R WASHINGTON (JTA) — The White House Conference on Inter- national Cooperation issued a final draft on human rights recommend- ing that the United States ratify the human rights conventions, in- cluding the genocide pact, now pending before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. In an address before the confer- ence, Ambassador Arthur Gold- berg, U. S. chief delegate of the United Nations, also indicated agreement that the genocide measure should be ratified by the United States. The report of the National Citizens' Commission on Human Rights noted that "the Genocide Convention has been rat- ified by more than 60 nations" but not by the United States. The Con- vention was sent to the Senate in 1949. Neither the Republican nor Democratic Administrations have pressed for action on it. The final draft said: "It is in the interest of the United States to have the standards embodied in the United Nations Convention on Human Rights adopted by as many countries around the world as pos- sible. But it cannot exhort others to ratify these conventions, if it is not itself a party to them." A shift in American attitude was de- manded. "Should some other coun- try violate the agreed standards, ON THE OCEAN AT =13th ST.--MIAMI BEACH, FLA Rabbi Solomon Sharfman of the Synagogue Council of America, told the committee that the American people are not adequately informed or aroused on human rights prob- lems. He referred to the situation of minorities in the Soviet Union and said more must be done to provide facts. Citing ratification by many European countries of human rights agreements, the report said that "despite close political, mili- tary and economic links to Europe, and a common tradition in the field of human rights, the United States has made no attempt to participate in this highly-advanced system of protection of funda- mental freedoms or to extend it to the whole Atlantic community." The human rights committee was under the chairmanship of Prof. Louis B. Sohn of Harvard University, and included, among others, Jacob Blaustein, Jewish leader and former U. S. delegate to the UN General Assembly; Rabbi Philip Hiat, director of the Jewish Center for the United Nations; and Sidney Liskofsky, director of the UN division of the American Jewish Committee. Philip M. Klutznick, noted Jewish leader, served as moderator of a panel on technical cooperation and investment held by the conference. A number of other leading per- sonages of Jewish faith took part in various aspects of the four-day gathering. (In New York, Rabbi Jacob J. Weinstein, president of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, denounced "the two faces of Amer- ican policy" where on the one hand our government sponsors a White House Conference on Inter- national Cooperation and on the other hand continues the escala- tion of the war in Vietnam. He spoke at the 50th anniversary din- ner of the Fellowship of Reconcilia- tion, a religious pacifist group founded in Garden City by a group of clergymen.) South Vietnam and the United States should cooperate to al- leviate suffering of homeless children and separated families in Vietnam, the committee on social welfare of the National Citizen's Commission on Inter- national Cooperation urged at the White House conference. Mrs. Joseph Willen of New York, president of the National Council of Jewish Women, headed the committee appointed by Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson to submit proposals for strengthening inter- national social welfare services. Joint U.S.-Vietnamese coopera- tion would prevent many future relatives could be located. Emerg- social problems, the committee ency child and family welfare said. They explained that many of services, training and employing the increasing number of child war Vietnamese specialists, could aid victims now in orphanages could separated families, widowed moth- be reunited with their families if ers and homeless children. 'T BEL. 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FREE SELF PARKING FREE GOLF at nearby Country Club1 18 hole course and golf practice range with PGA pro on hotel grounds FREE CHAISE LOUNGES & BEACH MATS FREE ENTERTAINMENT, MUSIC & DANCING FREE TV & RADIO IN EVERY ROOM FREE COCKTAIL PARTIES & DINNER DANCES' FREE WATER SKIING LESSON FREE ORANGE JUICE AT POOLSIDE „ 3 GREAT NIGHT CLUBS! The COMEDY BOX Featuring MARSH & ADAMS The HAPPENING Featuring FREDI "I'm a Girl" SANDEL i EL BRAVO ROOM Featuring Top Entertainment Stars Different Show Every Night 15 5C1* daily per person $ 1 950* double occupancy $ Jan. 17 to March 20 Jan. 3 to Jan. 17 • 75 of 500 rooms INCI.UNNG PRIZE WINNING GOURMET MEALS Detroit Office: UN 4-3190 PHIL MAYER , Managing Director. Miami -3 days by car...2 hrs. 29 min. by Delta Jet! TIME FLIES ... And it's time to begin the SUN SPA way of life ... where you relax In luxury ... get in trim ... rejuvenate ... enjoy all.the fun of a fine resort the Penthouse Spa ... Roman Pools ... figure-slimming diet ... stimulating baths ... invigorating massage ... tailored to your specific needs! Staff of 5 board qualified and certified physicians on premises. ALL THIS, AT NO EXTRA COST — Golf at nearby Hollywood Lakes Country Club • Experienced staff of specialists • 3 meals & snacks daily • pool & ocean bathing • Complimentary on-arrival facial & make-up in Princess Marcella Borghese Salon. See your Travel Agent, or, for Personalized Information and Reservations, write direct or call: HOLLYWOOD (305) 927-1661 (Collect) Jimmy Payton, General Manager • Margery Bellows Lane, Owner P a FLORIDA'S ONLY SPA DIRECTLY ON THE OCEAN, HOLLYWOOD-BY-THE-SEA, FLORIDA Dec. 16 to Jan. 16 BON VIVANT DINING, from Dec. 16, Master-Chef TEMPUS FUGIT... NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE YOUR RESERVATION AT $14 A and only '57: For instant reservations thruDELTAMATIC, call WO 5-3000 or see your Travel Agent