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November 03, 1978 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-11-03

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

18 Friday, November 3, 1918



UN Unit Adopts Anti-Israel Rulings

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tee) adopted two draft reso-
lutions with strong anti-
Israel provisions.
The first resolution, on
the international conven-
tion on the suppression and
punishment of apartheid,
had among its provisions
the declaration and pro-
gram of action adopted re-
cently in Geneva by the
World Conference to Com-
bat Racism and Racial Dis-
crimination. The declara-
tion and program of action
links Zinoism with racism,
recalling the infamous 1975
resolution by the General
Assembly.
The anti-Israel provision
was voted on separately and
was adopted by a 97-21 vote
with 10 abstentions. Israel,
the United States and other

9taticieze gaunt

JUDGE BENJAMIN J.

JUDGE MARVIN F.

FRIEDMAN

FRANKEL

A proven judicial team that has served for the last decade (Judge Frankel since 1968; Judge Friedman
since 1969), these two judges have brought national recognition and praise to the administration of justice
in District 45-B, They have established the highly successful Neighborhood Arbitration Panel, which has
- enabled many to work out disputes without going into court. The Probation Department serves as a model
for the entire nation.

Both Judge Friedman and Judge. Frankel are graduates of the Wayne State University Law School and have
been honored for ".. . distinguished service rendered to the public as members of the Judiciary ..." by the
Law School. Both have been rated in the top five District Judges by a poll of Oakland County Lawyers.
Both are proven members of the community, having served in various capacities ranging from athletic
coach to lecturer at Wayne State University Law School.

'12e-Ceect 3oth/
JUDGE BENJAMIN J. FRIEDMAN
JUDGE MARVIN F. FRANKEL

District Court 45-B

Serving Oak Park, Huntington Woods, Royal Oak Township, Pleasant Ridge

VOTE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7

Paid for by Committees to Re-Elect Judge Friedman and Judge Frankel, 25911 Stratford Place, Oak Park, MI 48237

Western countries were
among those who voted
against.
The other resolution,
regarding the self-
determination of peoples
in colonial countries, in-
cluded provisions con-
demning Israel's "expan-
sionist activities in the
Mideast" and con-
demned governments
which did not recognize "
the right to self-
determination of all
people, "notably the
people of Africa and the
Palestinian people."
The vote on the draft was
95-21 with 10 abstentions.
The Western European
countries, Australia,
Canada, New Zealand, Is-
rael and the TJnited States
voted against the draft. The
two resolutions are ex-
pected to be approved by the
General Assembly.
In Paris, Amadou m'Bow,
director general of UN-
ESCO, tried, without ap-
parent success, to avert a
clash over Israel at the 20th
general conference of the
United Nations Educa-
tional, Scientific and Cul-
tural Organization.
Departing from the pre-
pared text of his speech,
m'Bow stressed that there is
"no issue over Israel" or Is-
rael's response to previous
UNESCO resolutions.
He also released a re-
port on education in the
Israel-occupied Arab
territories that contains
numerous favorable
references to Israeli ac-
tivities in that field.
The Arab bloc and its al-
lies had sought to suppress
that part of the report while
Israeli diplomats re-
peatedly pressed for release
of the full report which they
felt vindicated Israel's
policies.
In spite of m'Bow's ex-
temporaneous plea, the
Arab rejectionist front said
it would try to obtain Is-
rael's condemnation at the
current UNESCO confer-
ence and its temporary exc-
lusion from the organiza-
tion.
The Arabs and their allies
claim that Israel has failed
to respect a UNESCO reso-
lution barring its archeolog-
ical digs in East Jerusalem
and has refused to permit
the appointment of a UN-
ESCO observers team to
supervise educational
facilities on the West Bank
and Gaza Strip.
Meanwhile, Napolean
LeBlanc, a professor at
Laval University in
Quebec, was unanimously
elected president of UN-
ESCO at the plenary ses-
sion. The Canadian had
been challenged by the
Arab and African bloc
which supported the Deputy
Prime Minister and Educa-
tion Minister of Jordan,
Abdul-Salam Majali, for the
office. LeBlanc won a 60-54
victory over Majali in the
nominations committee, a
decisive defeat for the Arabs
and their supporters.

A principle illustrated by
an example only produces
an example.

Meanwhile, a slahsing
attack on the United Na-
tions by Arnold Forster,
national general counsel
of the Anti-Defamation
League of Bnai Brith was
contained in a speech
prepared by Forster for
delivery at the Hillcrest
Jewish Center in Queens.
According to Forster, _the
UN has betrayed the high
hopes held for it and has
been taken over "by the
Soviet bloc countries, the
Arab and Third World
militants." He implied
strongly that the UnitP '
States should withdraw
nancial support from the
UN.

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