Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 3, 1972 Page: 5 of 16
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HIGHLIGHTS OF HISTORY
THIS WEEK IN JEWISH HISTORY
(From the files of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency)
10 Years Ago This Week: 1962
With government subsidies and controls removed, Israeli bread prices
rose 95 percent.
Dr. Natan Aronovich Yavlinsky, prominent Jewish nuclear scien-
tist of Moscow, died.
George Lincoln Rockwell got into England despite a ban as "unde-
sirable." but was arrested.
“BONN-The Ministries of Education of all German States instructed
all history teachers and history textbook writers to explain to public
school students the history of the Nazi era as an element of demo-
cracy's struggle against totalitarianism. 'Glorification of war and totali-
tarianism' will be forbidden."
Sen. Kenneth B. Keating (R.N.Y.) urged a UN investigation of hu-
man rights in the USSR, where anti-Semitism was “a deliberate act on
the part of the Communist central government to find scapegoats for an
economic system that is full of flaws.”
Premier Ben-Gurion again denied, as “fabrications—deliberate or un-
conscious,” allegations that Israel was producing atomic weapons.
Thirteen ex-Nazi officers were charged in Bonn with killing
170,000 Jews in Poland.
Religious bigotry in the US remained ''widespread and deeply
imbedded,'' said a Union of American Hebrew Congregations study.
“Despite the reports of more forceful action against Soviet Jewry
and other religious groups, it still does not seem that the Soviet au-
thorities have decided to return on a large scale to the extremely
repressive methods employed...during the Stalin era,” said Asst.
Secretary of State Frederick G. Dutton.
Dinosaur footprints dating back 100 million years were found at a
Jerusalem farm.
Odessa's only rabbi, surnamed Diamant, died.
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Young Republicans Draft Planks
To Attain Peace in Middle East
WASHINGTON, (JTA)—The Young Republican Na-
tional Federation has adopted a five-point statement, of
policy for the United States regarding the Middle East
which it hopes will be a part of the Republican Party’s
platform in the presidential campaign.
maintain a balance of strength
in the area; 3. Recognition of
Jerusalem as the capital and
relocation of Jerusalem as the, stationing American forces in
The policy statement will
be presented to the Republican
platform committee in Miami
Beach during the week of Aug.
14. That committee will offer
its recommendations to the
party convention the following
week. The federation’s five
points, which closely approxi-
mate the plank adopted by
the Democratic National Con-
vention in Miami Beach re-
cently, says the following:
“An important goal of Ameri-
can foreign policy is seeing a
just and lasting peace achieved
in the Middle East. The, United
States cannot and should'not dic-
tate the terms of peace in the
area.
^Observing the sovereignty
and territorial rights of all
the nations of the Middle East is
inherent in the administration’s
pursuit of a generation of peace.
We specifically recommend:
1. Direct face-to-face Arab-Is-
raeli negotiations; 2. The con-
Jii'ued supply of military equip-
m<->i <J aircraft sufficient to
capital of Israel and relocation
of the United States Embassy
there; 4. Assistance to both
Israel and the Arab states in
relocating refugees and en-
couraging the help of the other
nations 7>f the world in this
problem; 5. The resumption of
diplomatic relations with all
Arab nations willing to accept'
our policy of friendship.”
Regarding Soviet Jewry,
the federation’s recommenda-
tion declares in a section titled
“humanitarian concerns” that
“We believe in the right of all
people in all nations to pursue
their own religious, political
and economic lives.”
Like the Democratic plat-
form, the . Young Republicans’
recommendations advocate
moving the American Embassy
in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jeru- .
salem.
Neither the Detnocrats nor
the Young Republicans men-
tioned UN Security Council
Resolution 242 upon which the
Nixon administration’s current
Middle East policy is based.
Unlike the Democrats,
the Young Republicans did not
include in the Middle East sec-
tion a recommendation for
Europe and in the Mediterra-
nean to deter, as the Democrats
say, the Soviet Union from
bringing “unbearable pressure
onlsrnel^^———
Bergen-Belsen’s
Liberator Hailed
On 80th Birthday
LONDON (JTA)-The Jew-
ish community and survivors of
Nazi concentration camps are
paying tribute to Brig. Gen.
Hugh Llewelyn Glyn Hughes,
the chief medical officer of the
British Second Army which
liberated Bergen-Belsen camp
on April 15, 1945. Gen. Hughes
has just celebrated his 80th
birthday.
Where there’s marriage with-
out love, there will be love with-
out marriage._
* Now most any qualified student
who wants to attend TCU can do so.
Apply now at TCU
for up to $600 per year
in Tuition Equalization
Grants (TEG).
Gov. Preston Smith has approved the new state appro-
priations bill passed by the Texas Legislature. It provides
for special tuition grants, providing up to $600 per year
to qualified students who wish to enroll in a private
college or university, like TCU.
To qualify, you must:
• Be a Texas resident,
• Enroll as a full-time student.
• Be of Freshman or Sophomore standing
(attempted 59 hours or less).
• Not participate in any varsity athletic program.
• Have need for financial assistance.
*The TEG program in some cases can be combined with other types
of student financial aid which may substantially offset tuition costs.
Compare the cost of living in a dorm at a school outside Fort Worth
and living at home while attending TCU with TEG and other student
aid.
For information about the TEG and other financial aid
programs at TCU — and how to apply — call, write or
visit the Scholarship and Financial Aid Office (926-2461,
Ext. 218, Sadler Hall 103, TCU, Fort Worth 76129). Don't
delay.
TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY
Making right things happen in education.
PAGE 5 FORT WORTH THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1972 TEXAS JEWISH POST
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Wisch, J. A. Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 3, 1972, newspaper, August 3, 1972; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth753897/m1/5/?rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .