Newspaper Page Text
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Friday, August 17, 1956
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Israel Negotiates Building
Oil Pipeline To By-Pass Suez
Atlanta Boy Is Aid to Adlai
Gets Close Look at Big Show
certain politicians.
Adlai Stevenson has set up
headquarters in the Conrad Hil
ton Hotel. Dan Goldwasser has
set up his headquarters in the
YMCA.
LONDON, (JTA)—Israel Gov
ernment representatives have
opened negotiations with British
and American oil companies on
a plan to build an oil pipeline
from Elath to Haifa to by-pass
the Suez Canal, it was reported
here today from Jerusalem.
The pipeline could be built in
one year and would cost $30,-
000,000, the report said. It would
be 10 Inches in diameter and
would carry 4,000,000 tons of oil
a year. The line would terminate
at Haifa where the oil would be
refined at refineries which now
operate at far less than capacity
because of the Arab refusal to
sell oil to Israel or to pipe it into
Israel. The Israel plan is for
tankers to unload in the Gulf of
Akaba, at Elath, the report stated.
At the same time, It was in
dicated here today that the For
eign Office has given no conside
ration, nor does it intend to give
any thought, to the proposals for
the digging of an alternate canal
or the construction of an oil pipe
line across Israel. Apart from the
cost, it is felt that such a canal
or pipeline would have to be
constructed only in -the event of
closure of existing facilities. If
such a situation ever arose, the
Foreign Office believes, the
Arabs would be equally prepared
to halt supplies through a cross-
Israel pipeline or blockade the
Red Sea entrance to an alternate
canal.
Meanwhile, the influential
weekly Economist calls on the
government to consider an alter
native channel to the Suez Canal
visionary. The newspaper sug
gested that the de facto border
area between Israel and Egypt
along the strip from Akaba to
Gaza could be placed under
United Nations authority — with
Israel and Egyptian agreement—
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and could carry pipelines, land
traffic and possibly a canal.
The importance of “Britain’s
standing by its friends,” was
stressed last night by Sir Knox
Helm, former British Minister to
Israel, addressing the Liberal
Party’s summer school at Cam
bridge. Sir Knox asserted that
Britain and the United States
“went a long way to building up
Colonel Nasser.”
The former envoy referred to
Israel as the ‘‘strongest weapon
in the armory of Arab national
ism” adding that without its anti-
Israel rallying point the Arab
world would fall apart because
of internal differences and di
visions. He expressed the opin
ion that Nasser is not yet ready
to make war on Israel.
Referring to the “tragic hu
man problem” of the Palestine
Arab refugees, Sir Knox charged
that they were being exploited
for political ends. He said that
the refugees, prey to troublemak
ers and agitators of all kinds,
constituted a real danger.
Greenberg Takes
Place in Baseball
Hall of Fame
COOPERSTOWN, N. Y., (JTA)
Henry Joseph Greenberg, better
known to a generation of sports
fans as Hank, joined the most
select group in his sport, by tak
ing his rightful place in the Na
tional Baseball Hall of Fame here
last week. A plaque listing his
better known exploits on the
field was dedicated in the ornate
building erected here in 1939. It
shows Hank wearing the cap of
the Detroit Tigers, for which he
played from 1935 to 1946 — with
time out for war service. Hank
also put in one season with the
Pittsburgh Pirates in 1947.
Now general manager of the
Cleveland Indians, Greenberg’s
induction into the Hall of Fame,
along with Boston Red Sox gen
eral manager Joe Cronin, was at
tended by many of Baseball’s top
dignitaires. The plaque in his
honor lists a number of his me
morable achievements during his
hey day as a player, as follows;
“One of baseball’s greatest right-
hand batters. Tied for most home
runs by right-handed batter in
1938—58. Most runs-batted-in
1935—37-40-46, and home runs
1938—40-46. Won 1945 pennant on
last day of the season with grand
slam home run in ninth inning.
Played in 4 World Series, 2 All-
Star games. Most valuable Ameri
can League player twice 1935—40.
Lifetime batting average .313.”
Let’s Keep
T. RALPH GRIMES
SHERIFF, Fulton County
19 Years’ Experience In Sheriff’s Office
A Faithful Public Servant
Deserves a Full Term
1
Elect Claude H.
Blount
DeKalb County needs a
usiness man
,s Chairman of County Commissioners
A 17-year-old Atlanta boy will
be in the middle of things as the
oldest floating circus gets under
way Monday in Chicago.
Dan Goldwasser, son of Mr.
and Mrs. David Goldwasser, has
for an official title “volunteer
office clerk” in Adlai Stevenson’s
campaign headquarters.
While he will be engaged in
routine matters, he also will be
used as a “secret” courier scuttl
ing from Stevenson’s quarters to
various delegations with signifi
cant, confidential and important
messages.
Dan is a senior at Grady High
School.
One of 10 clerks from through
out the country, Dan has quite
a few of the characteristics of his
employer. If you think Stevenson
is of the egg-head variety, then
Dan could also be considered as
much.
He is president of the honor
society at Grady and he is the
recipient of the Harvard Book
Award from the Atlanta Harvard
Club: And, as his boss did, he
plans to attend Harvard.
The road that the volunteer
worker trudges is a rocky one.
Dan doesn’t get paid and he pays
his own expenses. He doesn’t
smoke cigars so he can’t appre-
cite smoke-filled rooms. And
Dan Is a little young to reap the
fruits of political patronage.
But there is no doubt that
young Goldwasser will quickly
learn some of he fundamentals of
politics, and the importance of
Mrs. Miller Refuses
Conversion Comment
LONDON, (JTA) — The often
mooted question of Marilyn Mon
roe’s conversion to Judaism,
which gave rise to a number of
well-headlined reports last week,
remained an open one after the
actress, whose visit here is tho
object of more publicity than any
comparable visit in a long time,
said she wouldn’t comment.
Referring to a newspaper re
port that she would receive full
instruction in Judaism when she
returns to the United States with
her husband, playwright Arthur
Miller, the swivel-hipped glam
our girl let it be known—through
her agent—that she just would
n’t talk about it.
Miss monroe’s statement on the
subject said “I never comment on
religion or politics. For me, re
ligion is a personal matter.”
(Paid Political Advartisamant)
Elect
JOHN W. CUNYUS
Tax Commissioner — DeKalb County
Democratic Primary
September 12, 1956
(Paid Political Advartisamant)
(Paid Political Advertisement)
You be the Judge of the
Best Qua lifted Judge
Hamilton Douglas, Jr.
Candidate for
Judge of Fulton
Superior Court
(Paid Political Advertisement)
(Paid Political Advartisamant)
Elect
HOKE
: SMITH
State Senator
A Experienced
Legislator A Lawyer
fjenapr-*
(Paid Political Advartisamant)
(Paid Political Advartisamant)
Judge of Fulton Superior Court
Candidate to
succeed himself
A He is Making you a Good Judge ★
(Paid Political Advertisement)
ELECT
Judge H. O. Hubert, Jr.
Judge Superior Courts
Stone Mountain Circuit
DeKALB, NEWTON and ROCKDALE COUNTIES
(Newly Created Third Judgeship)
DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY SEPT. 12
Judge Hubert voluntarily gave up two years of his term as Judge of the City
Court of Decatur so that the urgently needed judicial reform plan might be put
in effect in the Stone Mountain Circuit.
Judge Huberfs Background and
Experience
Fifty-one years of age.
Educated at Richmond Academy and the Uni
versity of Georgia.
Twenty-eight years a successful lawyer.
Present Judge City Court of Decatur which is
being abolished to make room for third Superior
Court Judgeship.
A Vote for Judge Hubert
IS A VOTE FOR ABILITY AND
JUDICIAL EXPERIENCE
JUDGE HUBERT’S
QUALIFICATIONS
Unquestioned
tegrity.
character and in-
Broad legal, legislative and judi
cial experience.
Calm judicial temperament.
Ability to cooperate with others.
Spund knowledge of law.