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November 01, 1968 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1968-11-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Haber Describes ORT's Pioneering
Tasks in 'Israel's Scholarization'

MONTREAL — Dr. William
Haber, president of ORT, in his
address at the International ORT
central board conference in Mont-
real, in which he outlined a plan
for action in meeting the crises of
our time, suggested:
"It is within the prospect of our
generation to hope that we will
see an end to Jewish poverty, an
end to Jewish disadvantagement,
an end to the century-old despair,
displacement, backwardness and
stunted bodies and minds that
have so long been the bitter daily
bread of hundreds of thousands of
our people."
Urging devotion "to make real
a better life for all Jews every-
where," Dr. Haber proposed use
of the "educational crucible" to
eliminate deficiencies in the
Second Israel by creating a uni-
fied society of both Orientals
and Occidentals, with ORT
girding itself to materialize this
aim; recognize the needs of the
technological transformation;
"embrace career education as an
addition to vocational training"
—responsibility for these efforts
to be assumed by ORT.

T H, Grant

INCORPORATED

,Artistry E , T

in 1 i ,- eiewels

-

20010 James CovzensDrive
Detroit 35, Michigan

a1.

fp t

Phone:342-5666

Dr. Haber reviewed the events
that have transpired since the end
of World War II with the trans-
planting of 2,000,000 Jews, the re-
construction of European Jewry,
the changes that have taken place
in Moslem-countries and in Israel.
He spoke of the "Scholarization
of Israel" and stated that in the
advancement of education in Is-
rael "ORT was a pioneer." He
told of the advances made by ORT
and outlined many of the achieve-
ments in several areas of Israel.
In a message to the conference,
President Johnson described the
work of ORT as a "nucleus of hu-
man compassion and a nerve cen-
ter of public service."
Alluding to ORT programs of
refugee aid and its manpower
training activities for underdevel-
oped nations organized under
agreements with the U.S. Agency
for International Development,
President Johnson applauded the
organization's "capacity to experi-
ment and innovate, and to chart
new vistas of progress for man-
kind."
Canada's secretary of state for
external affairs, Mitchell Sharp,
reaffirmed his country's position
that Israel has a "right to live
and prosper, free from fear of
strangulation by its neighbors."
Sharp also applauded the man-
power training and economic aid
program which ORT has organized
for 88 years.
Max Braude, director general
of the World ORT Union said
here Monday at the closing ses-
sion that inflationary pressures
coinciding with a rapid expan-
sion of educational and voca-
tional training costs and a recent
increase in Jewish refugees have
placed new and unprecedented
burdens on ORT, the Organiza-
tion for Rehabilitation through
Training.
He said that 10 years ago, ORT
spent about $4,000,000 on its entire

TEMPLE ISRAEL

Invites the Community to Hear

DR. SAMUEL

SANDMEL

Professor of Bible and
Hellenistic Literature at
Hebrew Union College-
Jewish Institute of Reli-
gion.


MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4

— Speaking

At 8:30 P.M., Temple Israel

17400 Manderson Rd., at Merton

On

the Subject

"JUDAISM & CHRISTIANITY:

Common Ground and Differences"

Dr. Sandmel, one of the leading Jewish authorities on the New

Testament, is presently on a Sabbatical from his post at Hebrew
Union College, and is serving as Principal of Leo Baeck College,
London, England. He is a major author, contributor to profes-
sional journals and encyclopedias and is a lecturer of great
stature.
Subsequent speakers in the Temple Israel Lecture Series Will Be:
Monday, December 2—Dr. Solomon B. Freehof—THE TEACHINGS
OF THE TALMUD
Monday, January 6—Dr. Jakob J. Petuchowski—THE BIBLE OF
THE SYNAGOGUE
Monday, February 3—Rabbi Eugene L Borowitz—THE RELIGIOUS
TURN IN AMERICAN JEWISH FICTION

Tickets for the Sandmel Lecture ere $1.50 or $5.00 for the Series.

Friday, November 1, 1968-7

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Miami Federation Buys a Site For New Home

MIAMI (JTA) — The Greater
Miami Jewish Federation reported
this week it had purchased 300
front feet of land on Biscayne
worldwide program. The program Boulevard as the site of its new
has more than doubled in size and I home after a three-year study of
tripled in cost, and ORT will prob- possible sites by a committee
ably need $20,000,000 by 1970 to
maintain it. Brande said that
inflation, which has steadily de-
valued world currencies, costs
ORT $275,000 a year "just to stand
still, to say nothing of the costs of
expansion."

Braude stressed the need for ex-
pansion in at least five areas. He
said the ORT program in Vienna
must be enlarged to meet the
needs of Jewish refugees fleeing
Poland and Czechoslovakia. In
Italy, there is a problem of provid-
ing for Jewish refugees from
Libya and other countries. Estab-
lishment of new schools and class-
es in France is urgent in view of
the influx of tens of thousands of
Jews from North Africa, and the
entire program in North Africa
must be re-evaluated owing to the
large-scale emigration of Jews.
Braude said that ORT's pro-
grams in Israel, the organization's
largest, have grown by 25 per cent
in the past three years. Nineteen
new schools and departments are
expected to be opened in 1969, he
said. These include the expansion
of existing facilities in seven cities
and towns and the construction of
a new engineering school in Jeru-
salem, which will cost $8,000,000.
Gen. Chaim Herzog, the first
military governor of the West
Bank and recently elected presi-
dent of the Israel ORT, com-
plained here that while border
shootings and bomb scares make
headlines, little is said or writ-
ten aboutgrowing peaceful co-
existence between Arabs and
Israelis in the occupied terri-
tories.

He accused President Nasser,
the Soviet Union and the El Fatah
terrorists of deliberately attempt-
ing to prejudice an increasing
trend toward a negotiated settle-
ment of the Middle East dispute.
"The events of the last few days
make us apprehensive but not

fearful," Gen. Herzog said.
"The answer to the Soviet policy
of hatred and provocation in the
Middle East must be to strengthen
Israel to the point where this coun-
try can be a deterrent against any
possible aggression." Gen. Herzog
cited ORT vocational schools for
Arabs on the West Bank as an
example of "basic co-existence
that is perhaps the greatest real-
ity in the area."

Israelis Invent Device
to Aid Patients After
Bladder Operations

NAHARIYA, Israel — A new
electronic device, the Uritector, for
detecting blockage of urinary out-
flow in catheterised patients, was
demonstrated at a press confer-
ence at the Nahariya Government
Hospital.
The new device was invented by
Prof. Mordechai Diskin of the
Technion, Israel Institute of Tech-
nology, and Dr. Bernard Sztamler,
deputy head of the surgery depart-
ment in the Nahariya Hospital, and
Alexander Vilensky, medical en-
gineer.
Dr. Sztamler told the press that
the instrument will solve problems
of urinary evacuation that often
arise after bladder operations. If
prolonged and not detected, occlu-
sions of the the urinary flow may
cause serious complications. Super-
vision of the bladder outflow re-
quires additional nursing person-
nel.
Prof. Diskin also described the
operation of another device, the
Uricounter, developed as an exten-
sion to the Uritector. This instru-
ment eliminates the necessity of
collecting urine in calibrated bags
or bottles and saves the recording
of volume by a nurse.

headed by Leo Eisenstein. The
building planned for the site will
house several other community
agencies. The Bureau of Jewish
Education and the National Coun-
cil of Jewish Women plan to use
the building.



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