Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 26, 1979 Page: 3 of 36
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Page THREE
April 26, 1979
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South Texas Hebrew Academy, 5435 South Braeswood, Houston, Texas 77096
photograph © $25.00 each.
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Name
Address
Zip
State
City
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SOL L WISENBERG INSURANCE AGENCY
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feet and the Knights of the Ku
Klux Klan will be there to help.”
It was signed “Marshall Rescue
Service.”
Wilson was also told that the
NAACP was "getting into business
where they didn’t belong.”
It is everyone’s right to attend
public meetings and make protests
(Continued on Page Eight)
Spectacular beauty
in spectacular comfort.
Sitmar to Alaska.
“Will the Ku Klux Klan be a
benefit to Marshall, or will it be a
curse?”
That was the reaction from
Mrs. Charles Wilson, president of
the Marshall and Harrison County
National Chapter of the National
Association for the Advancement
of Colored People, to the Ku Klux
The principal reasons
to deal with an
independent insurance
agent are the principals.
Robert Strauss
accepts Middle
East role
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And a complete staff of specialists in
all forms of commercial insurance. Know-
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ing, construction, medical, retail, whole-
sale, manufacturing, income-producing
properties, employee benefits programs
and life insurance.
Statement from Mrs. Charles Wilson, president:
NAACP it a ma of woes of
Ku Klux Klan plans in Marshall
Concluding report on last week’s story “KKK may make
Marshall state home”, reprinted from the Marshall, Texas
“News Messenger”, dated April 5, 1979
HOUSTON
BULLDOZER REPAIR
633-0328
BRUSSELS, (JTA) - The re-
cent Arab terrorist attack at the
Brussels airport has resulted in
tighter security measures at other
European airports and brought de-
mands from the organized Jewish
Meyer Smolen,
owner
By Joseph Polakoff
WASHINGTON - (JTA) -
Robert Strauss will head the
American delegation to the Egyp-
tian-Israeli peace talks next month
on autonomy for the West Bank
and the Gaza Strip.
Strauss, who is 60 years old,
headed an American trade delega-
tion to Egypt and Israel earlier this
month as a follow up by the U.S.
government to the Egypt-Israel
peace signing here.
A former chairman of the Na-
tional Democratic Party, Strauss
has been serving as President Car-
ter’s Special Ambassador on Trade.
President Carter announced the
appointment to the media late
Tuesday afternoon. The appoint-
ment came as a surprise. Earlier
reports in Washington indicated
consideration for former Gover-
nor William Scranton of Pennsyl-
vania, a Republican, McGeorge
Bundy, who was National Securi-
ty Council chairman for President
Kennedy or Philip Habib, former
Under Secretary of State for Po-
litical Affairs under Henry Kissin-
ger.
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Israel and Egypt, is available to our readers. The 11” x 14” print is
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Klan’s plans for making the city
their state headquarters.
Wilson questioned validity of
the Klan’s statement that it
was a non-violent organization.
“They said they were non-
violent, but in their next state-
ment, they were saying if they
found out the police weren’t
doing their job, then they would,”
she said.
“We have elected officials to
handle our problems,” she said.
“Do we need the KKK to come in
and take over the jobs we elected
them to do?”
The KKK sent Wilson a letter
two weeks ago, she said, saying
they did not like the NAACP's
statements made during her pro-
test against the Marshall School
District’s busing plan for two
elementary schools during their
March meeting.
During that meeting, Wilson
read a letter to the school board
protesting its decision to bus
black students to white schools in
an attempt to achieve a racial
balance in M. W. Dogan and
Austin Carver elementary schools.
The ' letter, written on KKK
letterhead stationery, warned the
NAACP to “beware, for some day
this country will be back on its
-4.? -
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In Houston comment on the
appointment of Robert Strauss
centered on his ability to be a
very effective negotiator. Some
thought that there should be no
fear that he would be a partisan
to either Egypt or Israel. There
was some concern that jews
would not be comfortable with
Strauss in the Middle East, with
his past low profile in the Dallas
Jewish community. Strauss is a
past president of Dallas’ Reform
Temple Emanu-El and a contri-
butor to Jewish fundraising.
While serving as chairman of
the Texas Democratic Party, he
showed no interest in proposed
legislation to not allow party con-
ventions to take place during Jew-
ish holy days. While the Congress
debated the Arab Boycott legisla-
tion, Strauss took no stand, stated
that Jews were overreacting to the
anticipated problems.
An astute observer noted that
Strauss may turn out to be another
Sir Herbert Samuel of Balfour Dec-
laration days - try to be so fair
that he would lean over backwards
to help the Arabs.
5. ——2ML4
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Samuels, Joseph W.; White, Ida S. & Friedman, Marcia A. Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 26, 1979, newspaper, April 26, 1979; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1521484/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .