General Assembly Urged to Raise Funds to UNRWA, or Face Crisis UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—The General Assembly has received an urgent appeal to provide more funds for Arab refugees or face a drastic curtailment of the ser- vices and facilities provided for them with resulting "further haro ships . . . and political repercus- sions." The appeal was contained in the annual report of Laurence Nlichel more, commissioner-general of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Arab refu- gees (UNRWA 1, published here. Michelmore reported that 395,074 refugees were currently I registered with his agency. He predicted a deficit of between S3.- 300,000 and 53,800,000 for the fiscal 1969 and warned that UNRWA was faced with the threat that its cash reserves would soon be exhausted - - perhaps early in 1970." The UNRWA chief said the agency had run a deficit in every year but one since 1963. Ile at- tributed the present crisis, how- ever, to "the continuing conse- quences of the June 1967 hostili- ties in the Middle East, includ- ing military occupation and the r ... And Then There's This Story Abu landlord, Arab "My Achmed. is a businessman who spends most of his time collect- ing his rental fees and dealing in other matters connected with the management of extensive prop- erties in Jerusalem; yet the Abu Achmeds are bona fide refugees with a proper UN certificate to prove it," declares Raya Rinott. one of the first Jews to move to East Jerusalem after the Six-Da.). War. In a story featured in Hadassah Magazine. Miss Rinott brings to light a side of the Arab refugee problem which is never mentioned by the Arab speakers in the acri- monious debates at UN assemblies. "The fact is that the Abu Achmed family never resided in the Israeli sector of Jerusalem." Miss Rinott points out. "But ii 1948 they owned an uninhabitable two-room house in the Ethiopian quarter. The loss of this house. duly registered, made the Abu Achmeds, their nine children and even their innumerable grandchil- dren refugee:, for all time and en- titled to all the privileges thereof." Once a month, Abu Achmed and his wife doff their usual fine clothing and dress in rags. This is the day the UNRWA man comes around with the monthly rations, she said. "Now Abu Achmed knows he is playacting, as does the Arab gentleman who doles out the ra- tions. The important thing is to play out one's role dutifully." "My landlord," whose name she has disguised because she doesn't want to leave her home, regards Miss Rinott "as a personal repre- Dr. Stilman exposes in his new novel the tensions that afflict doc- tors, the difficulties that confront them in their family lives, the con- troversies that emerge between those who dedicate themselves to their profession and those who seek to attain the financial gains that accrue from the practice of medi- cine. In his new novel, Dr. Stilman proves his skill at weaving a good plot. He has drawn into his story so many relevant happen. ings that he could well have made two stories out of them. Rut he has linked the happenings well and the result is a story that holds the reader's attention without difficulty. Michelmore's report laid great stress on what he called the "un- certainty about the future which has hung over the heads of the refugees for 21 years." The re- . port covers the period from July 1, 1968 to June 30, 1969. It noted that prior to 1967, UNRWA pro- vided assistance exclusively to refugees from those parts of Pales- The Michelmore report said the flight of most refugees to East Jordan in the wake of the 1967 84, ar created the "painful anomaly" of well-equipped refu- gee camps on the West Bank being only partly occupied "while their former inhabitants lived in barely tolerable conditions" in East Jordan. The report stated that "shelling, air raids and other hostilities" added to the strains of exile and emergency conditions there. that his agency had not escaped some of the consequences such as arrests, detention and imprison- ment of staff for alleged illegal activities outside their official du- ties. The UNRWA camps are staffed almost entirely by Arabs. JEWISH NATIONAL1 FUND PLANT TREES IN ISRAEL FOR ALL OCCASIONS PHONE 399-0820 BUY or LEASE the physical dangers and tensions fanatic.' " 'You see, just as I said, the resulting from hostilities across Jews are responsible.' the cease-fire lines. They felt the " 'The Jews?' I shouted. The man's a member of a Christian sect. Ile believes that Jesus, his Messiah will return when the Jews have rebuilt their Temple. Ile was trying to help matters along.' "'There you are,' shouted Abu ,i110 PRAMS • DITPOIT U S A • 42 PROOF Achmed, `the Jews are responsi- ble!' " 'But the man isn't a Jew,' I shouted back. " 'No, but his Messiah is!' "In the face of this overwhelm- ing bit of logic, I retired from the fray," concludes Miss Rinott. CHEVROLET Horry Abram 891-2360 Res, LI 8-4119 ORDER YOUR 1970 NOW A Call Will Save You Mqney Larry Stern 891-0600 Res. 358 - 2232 SHORE CHEVROLET CO. 12240 JOS. CAMPAU, DETROIT ALL X-WAYS LEAD TO OUR OFFICE go anywhere in Michigan for a nickelna-minute. and another, a very mismanaged hospital which Tyler later turns , into a well functioning institution. The plot involves the women as well, and it provides a lesson for Tyler who sees his wife Cathy very little because of his thorough devotion to his profession. But Tyler also learns his lesson in the long run. When be offers poor advice, out of opposition to excessive surgery, and must admit that he erred by preventing an operation which could have saved a life, he abandons the ambition to build up strong hospital institu- tions for the benefit of the poor and returns to private practice— and the implication is that he will now have more time for his loving wife. Kagar stems from a Jewish immigrant family background. His father, too, is the idealist, his father's twin brother, a money- maker. But the Jewish aspects are incidental to the story. Dr. Stilman, who is senior sur- geon of the depatrment of urology in the Jewish General Hospital in Montreal, utilizes extensive medi- cal knowledge in many of the incidents describing the hospital problems. Physicians will be espe- cially intrigued by his novel. A number of doctors are in• volved. but primarily it is the story of Richard Tyler, the idealist, and Victor Kagar the schemer, the charlatan, the quack, It is also the story of hospitals—the major one Wealth gotten by vanity shall be from which Dr. Tyler was dis- charged as a result of a plot by diminished: but he that gathereth Kagar and his superior, Dr. Elliot by labor shall increase.—Proverbs Blaine who was admired by Tyler, 13:11. 12—Friday, October 17, 1969 frustrations and fears of measures taken for security reasons, such as curfews, interrogations, deten- tions and demolition of buildings, and this had a detrimental effect • •on their morale." The same stresses were felt by sentative to his household of the tine which became Israel in 1943 Israeli government and of world who were living in Jordan. Leba- the 240,000 refugees remaining on the West Bank where, "as the .Jewry. Sometimes, following an non. Syria and the Gaza Strip. intense evening of watching Nas- Since June 1967, however, it has period of occupation lengthened ser on television, he descends upon been providing assistance "on an and the prospect of a settlement me with wild tirades against the emergency basis and as a tem- seemed to recede, demonstrations, porary measure" to refugees dis- strikes and bomb explosions be- state and Jews in general. "One morning, with Cairo Radio placed by the Arab-Israel war. came more frequent and led to screaming the news of the Al Aksa Of the latter, only a limited re- security counter-measures by the Mosque fire, Abu Achmed was so turn has been possible and as a Israeli military authorities. This action and reaction dislocated the gleeful you would have thought it consequence UNRWA found itself was the Great Synagogue in Tel providing aid to more than 200,000 work of schools and training cen- ters and imposed extra strains on displaced refugees and other per- 22100 GREENFIELD RD. Aviv that had burned and not a sons in Syria and East Jordan, the agency's staff," the report OAK PARK, MICH. 48237 Moslem shrine. the report said. said. " 'If we wanted to burn mos- "The refugees continue to ex- According to Michelmore, the ques,' I reminded him, 'we had plenty of opportunity during the press their disappointment and dis- situation was worse in the Gaza illusionment over the delay in the Strip where "strikes and incidents HOURS: Mon. thru Thurs., 9 to 5; war.' " Friday, 9 to 4; Open Sun- realization of the hopes to return of violence were an almost con- "'Well maybe you didn't think day, 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. to their places of residence before tinuous feature of life." He stated of it then,' reasoned Abu Achmed, June 1967, their hopes for repatria- 'but you've done it now. There'll tion to their original homes or be a jihad, and all the Jews will compensation for those not choos- he finished.' ing to return," the report said. —Ridiculous,' I muttered. "In the meantime, the refugees 'Everyone knows the fire was started by an Australian religious were confronted constantly with Stilman's Intriguing Medical Novel Twice before Dr. Abram Stilman of Montreal attracted interest with two novels—"Mariette"and "Heal- er of All Flesh." Physician turned novelist, proving successful in both. it is understandable that his third novel, "Doctor in Court," just is- sued by Fountainhead Publishers of New York, should deal with a set of medical problems and with doctors In conflict. continued deferment of hope of return to their homes for all but a small fraction of those who had to move in 1967." He main- tained that any reduction of aid to the refugees "would have to be carried out against the op- position of the refugees them- selves and of the Arab host governments." 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