Newspaper Page Text
vi2§^v- ;; -
A Weekly Newspaper for
JERUSALEM!, <J*A) — Prime
Minister DevttT Ben-Gurion, at-
tending his first Cabinet meet
ing here this wwfc since his re-
tarn &oea visiters Canada, the
United States, Britain and
France, reported on his eonver-
sattons with Western leaden at
the summit, but the Government
aaattsd a complete black-out on
Ms report
Hi Cabinet session, lasting
three hears, wss attended also
by Foreign Minister Oolda Meir,
who has just retamed from visits
to fltandlnaila; Minister at Com
merce and Industry Pinhas 8a-
pir, who visited all of the West
ern countries where Mr. Ben-
Gurion had stopped; and Deputy
Defense Minister Shimon Peres.
But at the end at the unusual
ly leng Cabinet meeting, a Cabi
net spokesman refused to reveal
what Mr. Ben-Gurion had re
ported about his conversations
with Canada's Prime. Minister
John G. Diefenbaker, U.S. Presi
dent John P. Kennedy, Britain’s
Prime Minister Harold Macmil
lan and the French President,
General Charles de Gaulle.
The spokesman was asked
specifically whether the Govern
ment has received explanations
of contradictory reports concern
ing the Ben-Govion — Kennedy
talk about the Arab refugee
problem. Mr. Ben-Gurion had
been reported as indicating that
President Kennedy had proposed
a solution of the rsCMph'JWfek
lem, while the State Department
at Washington had reportedly
said there was no such solution
offered by the American Presi
dent. The spokesman replied “no
comment’’ to this question.
The blanket of aacracy was
dim via, the Mid Wrtelw had
also gone to Iceland and, latar, to
Paris.
Mrs. Meir did report publicly,
upon her return frees Bureps,
that she had found Strong feel
ings of friendship toward Mrael”
in the Scandinavian eottaMaa. In
Paris she said, she Bad discussed
Israel’s position id the MOW eco
nomic framework m >urlb i, but
she declined to OOtXMBt on Is
rael’s chances of being accepted
as a member of the European
Common Market
lengthy argument MM
tomey Genera) Oidaen
for the prosecution, mX
art Serve ti us Mr the Ml
the Adolf ffliMarm t*
day, the dM
ed, by a vote ef 9-1, the
bility of an but oartafn
Eichmana’s tape-records
otra
The ruling came wl
prosecution—Instead at
its case as previously ex
continued presenting fur
timony, including rocorti
otchnik, mentioned the figom of
100,000,000 reichsmarks ah the
estimate of the valuables taken
by him from the Jewiah victims
in Poland. Mr. Hausner told the
court Hurt the figure was “nomi
nal”
The Globotchnik report stated
that the liquidation of Jewish
valuables had been “completed
as planned, except lor some dam
age in Warsaw resulting from a
mistake in taetMfe.” That "mis
take” referred to the revolt by
the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto
in IMS.
Mr. Hausner told the court
that, when Heinrich fWywwiy,
head’of the GestfepO, visited Mir*
May Appeal to High
Court on Rockwell
NEW YORK, (JTA)—The City
of New York, over-ruled by the
State’s highest tribunal on its re
fusal to grant a permit for a pub
lic rally desired by George Lin
coln Rockwell, leader of the
American Naxi party, was re
viewing the entire case thia weak,
to determine whether to take an
appeal on the issue to the United
States supreme court.
The seven-man State Court of
Appoak this weekend upheld
noctwem? ngnr w*noia wn
meeting in lMw York Cify by g
unanimous decision. The tribunal
affirmed, without a written opin
ion, a ruling handed down last
February by the Appelate Divi
sion, which had reversed a de
cision given- in August I960, by
Rockwell had appealed for a
permit to bold a rally in Union
Square originally on July 4, 1960.
Parks Commissioner Newbold
Morris denied the permit, and
Mayor Robert F. Wagner called
Rockwall “a half-penny Hitler,”
^"**1 that hfa preachment of
NliHi and racial hatred would
incite tg riot and violence.
tha 9mm York Civil Liberties
Unie* applied o*RoekweIl*a ba
the dedsAf by Manli and vn-
her. Although declaring Rock
well’s views as "hateful,” the
CLU insisted that the denial of a
permit violates the constitutional
guarantee at free speech which,
it stated, “applies to all, no mat
ter hOW obnoxious the person or
the ideology he represents.” Jus
tice Epstein upheld the permit
denial ordered by the city offi
cials:
While neither Mayor Wagner
nor Commissioner Morris would
comment this week on the Court
of Appeals decision, Corporation
Counsel Leo Larkin said he
would review the case before de-
Zeev Dover New l$ra<
Consul in Atlanta Post
Mr. Dover was barn in lfltt fee
Ce rno witz, the Capital of tha
former Rumanian Province at
Bessarabia, which became port
of tha Soviet Union after World
War H. His moved
Vienna, where ilk' utnm flMnad-
ed grade school Ha forth, to M-
rael at the age ef U yortra Ml
completed his high school adnop-
tion In M Mil • M
During the war he served as
a civilian employee of the BrURh
Amy. After the war he eon-
tinued his military activities Jto
the rank of Haganah — the osrtrt
BRING THE CHILDREN
Lelyveld Joins Faculty
Of Ga. Institute of Judaism
Dr. Arthur J. Lelyveld has
I-itii named to the faculty of the
‘ ieorgia Institute of Judaism
which the Georgia Association of
H’niu B'nth lodges at Camp Blue
Star. Hendersonville. flHRHHHHH|j|HHHH
Dr. Lelyveld. presently rabbi
of the Fairmounl Temple in
Cleveland, was formerly national H§
director of the B’nal B’rith Hillel Agf
Foundations. From 1944 to 194b Hi
he was executive director of the JftaaHapHHHKi
Committee on Unity for Palestine at S'B.V'
He had previously served as Kab HgSBNl
bi of Temple Israel in Omaha. IfsaWh:
Nebraska.
A native of New York City. Dr tHMMMBBl
Lelyveld received his A B from
Coiumbia University in 1933. the -j
M.H L degree from the Hebrew • ' ‘ V; ■ j
Union College in 1939 and in 195.V f
a Doctor of Divinity degree,
honoris causa, from the Hebrew
Union College, Jewish Institute
of Religion in New York. ■■■■■■■■■
family life and eodetja.Thnui
the same
studies in
from whic]
Xb 1969 ha
mard Factor, IT. «-
NntNN
urt Justice Henry
Mainu