1953SamuelMargoshes12 28 45p8MZFrankRosenwaldUChicagoWood1 18 46p8Brit...

Clipped from US, Indiana, Indianapolis, Indianapolis Indiana Jewish Post, January 18, 1946

He testified on Friday afternoon. The room in the State Department- Room 474—was packed and for the first time all passe' were carefully checked by the attendants. The rules of decorum ' were suspended to allow the public to applaud and all members of the Commission, and all the Arabs and their friends joined in the applauses. But Einstein, instead of striking the lofty level of Jews ' ir. civilization and the need for a Jewish cultural center, as was expected of him, came out bluntly with a condemnation of British colonial policy which is based on the exploitation of the natives with the help of native princelings and which seeks to exploit the incipient antagnoisms of various ethic groups for the sake of its rule.This was a bombshell. Einstein was charming in his childish naivete; he had not studied the subject, he admitted but relied on people he trustee? lt;evidently Professor A. S. Yahuda). He even quoted books he admitted he had not read, such as “A Sword for Hire,” by Duff. The Britishers were almost visibly flattened like Dancakes. i