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February 21, 1969 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-02-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

-

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, February 21, 1969-13

U.S. Politely Turned Down DeGaulle Call for Big 4 Talks

-PARIS (JTA) — Serious differ-
ences exist between Washington
and Paris over the interpretation
of President de Gaulle's call for
Big Four talks on the Middle East,
the chairman of the French Sen-
ate's foreign affairs committee dis-
, closed in a report.
Sen. Andre Monteil said that the
U.S. acceptance of President de
Gaulle's proposal was actually a
polite, diplomatic rejection of it,
presented in a way that would
spare Gen. de Gaulle's feelings.
He said that contrary to the view
held in Paris, the Nixon adminis-
tration believes all consultations
should take place within the frame-
work of the mission of United Na-
tions special Middle East envoy,
Gunnar V. Jarring.
He said further that Washing-
ton's insistence that bilateral talks
take place first to determine
whether Four Power talks were
feasible virtually cancels France's

insistence on Big Four consulta-
tions. The foreign affairs commit-
tee was scheduled to hold a full-
scale debate on the Middle East
this week.
Meanwhile, in New York, the

American Jewish Congress put
President Nixon on notice Sun-
day that it expects him to stand
by his campaign assertions that
Israel's military strength would
be kept at a level to deter ag-
gression and that the United
States would deal directly with
Russia to make sure its "client
states" are kept in "check."

Addressing a rally dealing with
Israel's defense, AJCongress presi-
dent Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld of
Cleveland told 1,000 members that
Jewry counted on Mr. Nixon's lead-
ership to, prevent "Israel's being
sold into extinction or attrition by
international wheeling and deal-
ing."
The rally voted a resolution
voicing confidence that Mr. Nixon
would reject efforts by "outsiders"
Israel's Party Papers See to imopse a Mid East peace not
accepted by Israel and the Arabs
Decline ; Free Press Booms in
direct negotiations.
TEL AVIV (ZINS) — With the
Both Rabbi Lelyveld and Dr.
expansion of Israel's industry, the Joachim Prinz of Newark, N.J.,
newspaper advertising business in World Jewish Congress governing

the country is booming. The largest
share of the advertising business,
30.6 per cent, was procured by the
afternoon newspaper Ma'ariv. An-
other afternoon publication, Yediot
Ahronot, got 18 per cent of the
trade; Ha'aretz 16.6 per cent; and
the labor newspaper Davar, 8.3
per cent.
The remainder of the advertising
business went to the various other
publications in the country. These
statistical facts reflect the steady
downward trend of the party press
and the progressive growth of the

council chairman, decried as dan-
gerous to Mid East peace the "illu-
sion" that a Mid East war was on
the verge of breaking out. Rabbi
Lelyveld said a "manufactured
mood of hysteria" would enable the
Kremlin to achieve through ap-
peasement a settlement at the ex-
pense of Israel's security.
Dr. Prinz called for a U.S. policy
that demands an end to terrorism
and the Arab refusal to recognize
Israel, and calls for a negotiated
and "mutually respected relation-
ship of peaceful co-existence and
cooperation."
Mayor John V. Lindsay of New
York City declared that the United
Nations must end its "double stand-
ard" in its treatement of Israel
and the Arabs. He said Israel is
the potential victim of internation-
al "conduct which threatens to
leave it helpless before renewed
aggression." The U.S., he stressed,
must refuse "to permit Israel to
become a victim of superior mili-
tary might."
Father Edward Flannery, execu-
tive secretary for Catholic-Jewish
relations of the National Confer-
ence of Catholic Bishiops, declared,
"Israel's existence . . . must be
preserved and guaranteeed. Israel

must be accorded all means neces-
sary for a vigorous economic life."
It must not "be a victim of terror-
ism, guerrilla warfare, border
raids and inflammatory propa-
ganda," he said.

IEST IMRE
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free newspapers.
Davar, which is actually the or-
gan and spokesman for the United
Labor Party, is in a mire of huge
deficits, and its existence depends
upon permanent subsidies from the
party treasury. The rest of the par-

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—Ambrose Bierce.

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U DER

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ty newspapers are faring even
worse.

Mrs. Gomulka Denies
Jewishness; Is 'Karaite'

LONDON (ZINS) — The Polish-
born Dr. D. Lazar, an Israeli jour-1
nalist, relates a piquant story re-1

garding the wife of Wladyslaw Go-
mulka, ruler of the Communist
Party in Poland.
Mrs. Gomulka has been an assim-
ilationist for many years, although

until recently she never denied her

Jewish origin.

At present — relates Lazar —
she completely repudiates her Jew-
ishness, saying that she hails from
Karaites. Under Hitler, many Jews
similarly tried to save themselves
by maintaining that they were Ka-

raites.
The journalist further reflect-
ed that the present regime in Po-
land exceeds the Spanish Inqui-
sition in cruelty, because in Spain
the Jews were given an alterna-
tive: conversion to Christianity.

In Poland, conversion to Chris-
tianity or Communism did not

help.
Lazar said the Poles are using

the racists yardstick, the Nazi
method; Unearthing the Jewish
ancestry, the ewish grandmother.
The values, the beliefs or convic-
tions of the Jews are irrelevent.
It does not matter whether he be-
lieves in Jesus or in Karl Marx—
his fate is sealed, said Dr. Lazar.

Children Learn Terror

WASHINGTON (ZINS) — Ameri-
can correspondents in Jordan have
. disclosed here that terrorist bands
are recruiting children 10 to 14
and are training them in guerrilla
warfare.
Besides being indoctrinated in
hatred toward Israel, they are also
being taught the use of weapons.
After completion of the training
period, they are transported to the
central headquarters. At age 18,

they are officially assigned to the
commando units.

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