his difficulties with the other Gerald Green, already famed boys, his father's miserable prac- for "The Last Angry Man" which tice, the status of a Jewish gen- depicts the idealism of a dedicated eration that commences to inter- physician in the slum area of New York, provides us with another , mingle, eventually to transfer residence. major sociological study involving Brownsville of the time of the 1 In a sense "To Brooklyn With depression, the youth of a pre- Love" brings to mind Dr. Chaim vious generation, the changing Potok's best seller, "The Chosen," neighborhood, in a splendid new which also commences with a base- narrative, "To Brooklyn With ball game. Green's has Jewish Love," published by Trident Press, characters but is not necessarily a a division of Simon and Schuster.' Jewish story — because Potok's It is a story of a doctor and his sketches the Jewish ideological de- son — as much of one as of the. bates between his two major char- other — and the craving for play- acters whereas in Green's it is time, as well as the urge for study. strictly the sociological and neigh- and the search for friendships and ' borhood experiences of boys who intermingled with the experiences', happen to be Jewish and whose of a struggling physician whose! associates are Polish and Italian patients, because of the poverty ! and some with whom they battle extant, contribute to difficluties ' are Negroes. to attain a livelihood as well as Green's story doesn't have Po- to achieve the satisfaction from a tok's theological discussion but creative professional life. it carries the sociological message Primarily this is the story of much farther. Albert Abrams and the boys, Jews From the point of view of the and non-Jews and the incoming Ne- game, Green's story is superior to groes, who play ball on the avail- 1 Potok's because it is more exten- able playground — the street — sive. It goes into greater details and who form gangs — they were and involves more serious conflicts more like cliques — to compete than Potok's limited antagonism in games. between two Jewish boys. Green's Albert, aged 12 in the story, draws into the contest the Negro nearsighted, unable to meet the boys who molest Albert, who steal challenges of fighting gangs who ball and glove and turn the game finally gains courage and enga- into a battle for the tools of the ges is a fist fight — after many game and for eventual triumph for humiliations suffered at t h e the whites, then in a majority on hands of the boys on the street the block. — is now the adult whose desire And Green's also emerges as to see the old neighborhood causes him to bring his two more interesting from the point of children with him to the old view of the sports because the Brownsville neighborhood. The narrator also tells about the punch- area has changed — it is now ball game, dramatizing it to the a Negro neighborhood. The tree fullest. And he relates about the in front of the house is gone. Ringalevio game, in the midst of They are all new faces they en- which Albert once more is molest- counter. Albert commences to ed by two Negroes. reminisce and the book is the recollection of his 12th year, This dramatic tale is not limited to Albert. His father, as a struggling physician, as a mas- ter of invective, the embittered sufferer from the poverty of the age and the area, is a remark- able character. He is expertly delineated by Green who does not overlook the Jewish influ- ences of the neighborhood, the relationships of Jews with the politicians, the religious urge and the family attachments. Dr. Abrams himself is attracted nos- talgically to the synagogue and the Tora procession, even though he is a pork-eater. (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV — Cairo Radio an- nounced Tuesday night that Egypt has suspended all operations to clear 15 merchant ships stranded in the southern portion of the Suez Canal and blamed Israel for the Suspension. A military spokesman said here that there was no sign of activity Wednesday along the Egyptian- held west bank of the canal. The quiet followed a two-hour ex- change of fire between Egyptian and Israeli units across the canal Tuesday when the Egyptians, at- tempted to send survey boats into the canal's northern sector. Israeli units fired warning shots at the craft. The Egyptians responded by shelling Israeli positions at Kan- tara and Dar Sueir. Israel held that Egypt was vio- lating the cease-fire agreement of last June when it sent boats into the northern sector of the canal without Israel's prior assent. The agreement provided that neither side navigate or use the canal in any way without agreement by the other. Israel had agreed last week to Egyptian operations to clear the southern end of the canal to free the stranded merchant ships. Israel contended that Egypt's; attempt to enter the northern end of the canal Tuesday constituted al violation of that agreement as well. 1 (Egypt's attempt to start clear-1 ing operations in the northern sec-1 for was probably undertaken at the urging of Russia, the Financial Times reported Wednesday in a dispatch from its correspondent in Tel Aviv. (The Russians want the entire canal cleared for use and want to blame Israel for preventing it, the dispatch said. This would turn world opinion against Israel and would divert attention from Egypt's refusal to meet Israel at the ne- ed and one Israeli and two Egyp- tion tanks were destroyed in the exchange of fire that erupted noon Tuesday along the Suez Canal. The clash occurred when Israeli forces fired warning shots at the Egyptian launch attempting to en- ter the northern sector of the canal from Lake Timsah to carry out what the Israelis said was an "il- legal survey." United Nations observers in the Suez Canal area arranged a cease fire to go into effect at 12:30 p.m. local time, but Egyptian batteries (lid not desist from firing until 1:15 p.m., a military spokesman reported. Apparently the Egyptians were bent on testing Israel's res- ponse to their announced intention of starting clearing operations in the northern portion of the canal. Israel had earlier warned Egypt in writing, through Lt. Gen. Odd Bull, chief of the UN cease-fire observers corps, that she would not permit unilateral operations in the northern sector. Foreign ministry sources said meanwhile that UN Ambassador Gunnar Jarring's visit here Thurs- day was previously scheduled and did not arise from Tuesday's Suez clash. His visit to Israel will be his seventh since he began his peace-seeking mission in the Mid- dle East. Jarring's mission has reached an impasse at the end of its first phase during which the diplomat solved a number of marginal problems, according to Haaretz, the Israeli newspaper. Quoting "political sources." the newspaper said that the UN envoy had brought about an Israeli ag- reement with Egypt on clearing the blocked Suez Canal and the agreement under which all prison- ers of war were exchanged last week between the two countries. However, on the basic issue of peace in the region, there has gotiating table.). been no progress, Haaretz assert- Five Israeli soldiers were wound- Does U.S. Want Out From M.E? ed. Jarring has conferred repeated- ly with Israeli and Arab officials. except those of Syria, which re- fuse to talk to him. ' The Arab states were under- stood to have rejected Israel's posi- tion that direct talks must pre- cede all other matters, and Israel, in turn, has rejected the Arab de- mand that Israeli forces must be withdrawn from occupied areas be- fore other matters can be con- sidered. The envoy was reported to have agreed to Israel's stand that the UN Security Council resolution authorizing his mission did not call for unconditional withdrawal by Israel. The Haaretz report was in ef- fect confirmed by the semi-official Egyptian newspaper, Al Ahram, whose editor, Hasseinen Haikal, is known to be close to President Nasser. Haikal wrote that Jarring's mission had reached a deadlock and that the Arab states had re- jected Israel's offer to discuss new borders, freedom of shipping, the refugee problem and cancella- tion of Arab anti-Israel boycott. Haikal added that since the envoy apparently had brought no other proposals for negotiation, a settlement of the Arab-Israel conflict by political means was ruled out and that a new war was perhaps to be expected, a theme the Egyptian editor has expounded previously during Jarring's visits to the Arab capitals. Abba Eban, Israel's foreign minister, told the cabinet Sunday that the Swedish envoy was ex- pected to come here for another visit at the end of the week. The foreign minister also reviewed the talks with Jarring leading to the Israeli agreement to allow Egypt to proceed with clearing opera- tions at the southern end of the Suez Canal. (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) WASHINGTON — The United States government, preoccupied with problems in Korea and Viet- nam, is seeking to quietly disen- gage from involvement in the Arab-Israel issue and is looking to the United Nations to resolve matters like the most recent vio- lence on the Suez Canal, highly placed officials said Tuesday. Authorities said the United States fully supports the efforts of the United Nations team headed I by Gen. Odd Bull and feels that sides should heed UN deci- sions. ; Officials here said that the United States does not want to be , emboiled "at every twist and turn" in Israel-Arab frictions and would look increasingly to the United Nations in that region because policymakers regard developments in Korea and Vietnam more vital to U.S. security interests. The State Department holds This is where Yussel Melnick, one of his patients, steps in. Yussel is in his nineties. But when the Tora procession commences he is right there and he drags the doctor into it . Then came the tragedy: the synagogue fire. Melnick is there, passes out — suffocates! And when the doctor arrives he finds that Yussel the mystic had spent his time carving — recreating the city of Jerusalem as a dream, as a life's ambition. At this point there is inspiration for the doctor, and the son, Albert, m also is in a more elated mood be- cause he had just triumphed in a fist fight. The story ends, and Albert, readying to take the children back to their home after showing them his residential origin, thinks about his old friends, wonders what had happened to them, sees a name i akin to the Negro, Lee Roy, who molested him, and wonders whe- ther the man listed as subway platform superintendent is really the same person. Now he forgives him — and in that act of kindness is reflected the entire spirit of a splendid novel aptly entitled, by the man who returned to his old neighborhood to show it to his youngsters, as "To Brooklyn With Love." UAR Halts. Operations to Clear Suez Canal of Stranded Ships After Shots Exchanged THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40—Friday, February 2, 1968 `To Brooklyn With Love'—Green's Masterful Novel Nostalgically Recalling Brownsville Depression Era the position that "despite press reports to the contrary, we have no evidence of any kind that the USER has installed any such (ground-to-ground) missiles in Arab countries up to the present time, or that such installation is imminent." The denial was made by Assistant Secretary of State William B. Macomber Jr. in a letter to Rep. J. Herbert Burke, Fla. Rep. Macomber conceded that "some Arab countries have received cer- tain other types of tactical mis- siles." He said that "there has been no evidence of a large new influx of Soviet military personnel into Syria, Egypt, Algeria or other Arab countries." Government esti- mates on the numbers of Soviet personnel in these countries, he said, were "classified" informa- tion but "I am able to say that they are substantially below the * * figures cited in recent press re- ports." The State Department official also minimized the danger of Soviet airpower operating from Egypt. He said that the Soviet TU-I6 bombers had been in Egypt on a temporary mission but had returned to the USSR. The Rus- sians, he added, had not sent any of their best long-range and med- ium-range bombers to the Middle East. Although he minimned the ex- tent of Soviet military personnel placement in the Middle East, Macomber revealed that "increas- ed Soviet military activities in the Mediterranean area" have been discussed by the United States "with our NATO allies." He said that "instability and disputes in the Middle East have provided a basis for increasing Soviet pres- sure and influence." He also noted that "the Soviet resupply of losses in military equipment suffered by some of the radical Arab states in the June 1967 war has given Mos- cow a chance to make up for the psychological loss it suffered in the Arab military defeat." Outlining the aims of American policy in the Middle East as "to promote our important political and commercial interests." Ma- comber said that "we believe it essential to maintain a collabora- tive relationship with the moder- ate elements in the area with which we have had long and friendly ties. We hope that our ties can be restored, in time, with those states in the area which broke diplomatic relations with us last year during the Arab-Israeli war; but we insist that relations can be resumed only on the basis of mutual respect and dignity, and under conditions which will speci- fically compensate us for damages suffered." state Department's and Rostow's Roles in Appeasing the Egyptians By MILTON FRIEDMAN (Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.) WASHINGTON — The adminis- tration appears to be resuming arms gifts to Jordan while per- mitting Egypt to earn millions of dollars by selling cotton in the United States despite the serious balance of payments problem. Important members of Congress are infuriated. Rep. Edward J. Gurney, Florida Rep., said he would oppose the shipment of even a single bullet to Jordan as long as the Jordanians refuse to talk peace with Israel and maintain ties with the Cairo Unified Arab Command which is so strongly in- fluenced by the Soviet Union. Rep. Gurney said that "at the very same time that the North Korean Communists seized the U.S.S. Pueblo, the Amman radio broadcast attacks on the United States and defense of the Com- munists. In an obviously official broadcast the Jordanian radio said "the primary and only purpose of the Soviet fleet's presence in Arab waters is to assist the Arabs in confronting Israeli ambitions." The State Department is con- templating replacing the military equipment lost by Jordan during the Six-Day War. The explanation given is that Washington wants to retain influence with Amman by keeping the Jordanians dependent on U.S. military supplies and spare parts. Officials dismiss the con- tention of some Israelis that this leads to an arms race in which America supplies Jordan while the Russians supply Egypt and Syria. retary of State for Political Af- fairs, has asked a Senate agri- culture subcommittee to kill a bill passed in the House by a vote of 274 to 64. The legislation would ban the import of Egyptian cot- ton. Rostow maintained that the bill might delay restoration of American relations with Egypt and "widen the breach between the United States and the Arab w o r 1 d." The administration spokesman held that concessions to the Nasser regime would con- tribute toward regional peace. Senator Joseph M. Montoya, New Mexico Dem., is the sponsor of the Senate version of the House bill. He emphasized that Egypt was earning dollars "at the expense of honest Americans" unable to sell American - grown cotton. He charged that Nasser "has influence here out of proportion to what he deserves. He seems to have power- ful friends in Washington who put Egypt's benefit ahead of America's national and domestic interest." Since last June, the State De- partment has allowed Egypt to dump cotton here and take out over $3,000,000 in cash. State Department officials charged members of Congress with "protectionism" in that they would ban Egyptian cotton. Sen. Montoya replied that "there is a world of difference between protectionisM and proper action against a sworn and obvious enemy of our country. There is no conceivable benefit t9 our national interest by coddling this man and his goVernment." The senator said "I do not be- Following the severance of American - Egyptian diplomatic lieve one American in 10,000 would relations, the administration — be unhappy if we remove Egypt's without informing Congress — quota and place it in the hands of quietly authorized the import of American cotton raisers who have cotton from Egypt. India rep- watched their market shrink year resented Egypt in such trans- after year." Administration officials are work- actions. The State Department has extended authority to Egypt ing quietly on Capitol Hill to pre- to sell additional cotton here until vent the Senate from voting final approval for the House WM April 1. Eugene V. Rostow, Undersec- (Related story Page 7)