THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
34—Friday, September 5, 1969
Labor Woes—TV, Mail— Bog Down Israeli Life
JE R USALEM (JTA) — Israeli , down when the latter refused to
postmen were not on the job this accept the appointment of an
week everywhere but in Tel Aviv arbitrator under conditions pro-
and Haifa in a long smoldering' posed by the journalists.
dispute with the government. Strike ' Meanwhile, labor troubles loomed
leaders said the walkout would last in other areas. Nurses in govern-
indefinitely. They said a 10-point ment hospitals threatened to strike
list of demands has not been met if their wage demands are not met,
although the deadline for a settle- and longshoremen at the port of
ment agreed to by Minister of Ashdod continued their prolonged
Posts Israel Yeshayahu passed two work slowdown. The dock workers
arrive at work late and go home
weeks ago.
The Journalists Union suspended early because their demands for
income
tax adjustments have not
its week-long strike temporarily to
Permit radio and television to been met.
broadcast last-minute campaign' A two-hour "warning strike" by
speches for Tuesday's Histadrut public transport workers brought
elections. The journalists, em- chaos and an indescribable traffic
ployed by the Government Broad- jam to Tel Aviv and its environs
casting Authority, are striking for last Friday, virtualy immobilizing
wages equal to those paid by print- 1,500,000 people. The action was in
ed media. Nonparty-affiliated news- support of the bus cooperative's
papers criticized the strike sus- demand for increased fares, a
pension which they said served demand which the ministry of
political parties but not the public. transport rejects as unjstified.
,
The television employes jumped
the strike deadline and walked out
Avg 24. They were followed at
noon Aug. 26 by radio workers af-
Medical Center to Begin
Program for Psychiatrists
Beth
ter wage talks between the Gov- Israel Medical Center has an-
ernment Broadcasting Authority nounced a three-year residency
and the Journalists Association program designed to prepare psy-
Collapsed.
chiatrists who are "soundly based"
The journalists of the elec- not only in medicine but also in
tronic media are demanding the the social sciences and who will
same pay as those employed by have a "working knowledge" of
newspapers. They staged two the relationship between mental
"warning strikes" before the and behavior disorders and the en-
Broadcasting Authority agreed to vironment of persons suffering
negotiations. The talks broke from such illnesses.
an
Aug. 27—To Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
(Arlene Lois Shap
iro). 23695 Rutland. Southfield, a
SOn, Eric Scott.
a a •
Aug 24—To Mr. and 44rs. Rich-
ard Fine (Dianna Kaplan), 29541
Gramercy. Farmington. a daugh-
ter, Marci Deborah.
Schwartzberg
* * *
Aug.
23—To Mr. and Mrs. Barry
P. Waldman (Stephanie Avrunin),
24754 Rensselaer, Oak Park, a son,
Adam Blake
.
Aug. 23—To Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
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NEW YORK (JTA) — The
noun
cements
Blackman (Barbara Charness)
29853 Fairfax, Southfield. a daugh
ter. Kimberly Ann.
* • *
Aug. 23—To Mr. and Mrs Gerald
Bloomberg (Phyllis Dubrinsky).
14630 Oak Park Blvd.. Oak Park, a
son. Robert Lawrence.
• *
Aug. 21—To Dr. and Mrs. Neil
Millman (Anita Katz). 22289 Ivan-
hoe, Southfield. a son. Bruce Ian.
* * *
Aug. 21—To Dr. and Mrs. Gerald
Benaderet (Dede Zechman). 3362
Winchester. Birmingham, a son.
Brian David.
Aug. 19—To Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mickel (Iris Halberstarn). 21717
Stratford, Oak Park. a daughter,
Jodi Lynn.
* * *
Aug. 18—To Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Bloom (Susan Margolis). 2310 Cool-
idge. Troy. a son. Zachary CharleS.
* a a
Aug. 18—To Mr. and Mrs. Melvyn
Berent (Barbara Lupiloff), 18231
Filmore, Southfield, a son, Daniel
Mark.
• * *
Aug. 17—To Mr. and Mrs Shel-
don Slavin (Sandra Cantor), 30886
Pearridge, Farmington, a daugh-
ter, Gabrielle Elana.
* * *
Aug. 16—To Dr. and Mrs. Dennis
Weber, 3154 Gloucester, Troy, a
daughter, Elizabeth Gayle.
• * «
Aug. 11—To Mr. and 'Mrs. Alan
Shepherd (Barbara Moss), 25075
Thorndyke, Southfield, a son, Kevin
Peter.
• « *
Aug. 4—To Mr: and Mrs. Jerrold
Zabel (Rochelle Grund, Des
Moines, Iowa), 2200 Berkley, Berk-
ley, Mich., a daughter. Marla Ann.
* * *
July 30—To Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Graff (Margie Winer). 24589 Rens-
selaer, Oak Park, Jeffrey Kevin.
* * *
July 18—To Mr. and Mrs. Melvyn
B Chisik (Barbara L. Phillips),
22172 Hessel, a daughter, Aimee
Beth.
GROSS
.-110111111111111111110111
- l Body
4 Collegians Electe d to Nation a
Making Policy for Hillel Foundation
STARLIGHT, Pa. (JTA)—Four pants in a seminar on Jewish
education that was added to the
Jewish college students were
institute's agenda at the stu-
elected Monday as voting members
dent's insistence, complained
with "full participation rights" of
that
young people did not learn
the National Council of the Bnai
how to interpret what they are
Brith Hillel Foundation, the organ-
taught in terms of their own
ization's highest policy-making
lives and interests.
body. The four undergraduates
were elected to one-year terms
In calling for "issue-centered"
by 230 fellow students attending school curricula, the group crit-
the 24th annual summer institute iczed educators who tried to
at Camp Bnai Brith here.
"perpetuate Jewish values with-
They are: Daniel Friedman. 20. out explaination" instead of train-
of Westport, Conn.. a junior at ing students to question what they
Yale University's Byron Kohl, 18, are teaching them.
of Evanston, Ill., a sophomore at
Northwestern University: Phylis
Levinthal. 19. of Long Beach.
Calif. a sophomore at Stamford.
and Arnie Rachlis. 20, of Mor-
Orchestra and Entertainment
ristown, Pa., a senior at the Uni-
`The Earthly Jerusalem'
"The Earthly Jerusalem" by
Norman Kotker will be published
by Charles Scribners Sons on Sept.
30.
the
The volume emphasizes
special religious significance Jeru-
salem holds for Jews, Christians
and Moslems and recounts the end-
less struggles from the time of
King David to the present in the
city's history.
Ountinat atop is ahao.v ■
PERSONALIZED
FITTING
Larry Freedman
versity of Pennsylvania.
In other action at the conclud-
ing session of the eight-day in-
stitute. the group's social action
workshop proposed resolutions by
the Hillel Foundation's 224 cam-
pus units to speed the withdrawal
of U.S. forces from Vietnam and
to endorse the right of individuals
to refuse to fight in Vietnam on
grounds of pacifism or selective
conscientious objection.
Also proposed was the estab-
lishment of programs to combat
Arab propaganda on American
campuses.
A growing trend within the
The "level of sophistication
in teaching" in Jewish schools
does not grow as young people
mature in their ability to think,
some 30 participants in a semi-
nar charged. They said that as
students progress in their Jew-
ish education, they study the
same basic "body of knowledge"
they first learned at an "uncriti-
cal age." The group, partici-
Bookkeeping Course
for Moroccan Settlers
MONTREAL (JTA) — A course
in French for new Jewish immi-
grants from Morocco was added
to the English-language course in
bookkeeping which the Jewish Im-
migrant Aid Service of Canada
has provided for many years for
Jewish immigrants who held such
jobs in the lands of their origin.
JIAS officials said that the
courses were developed to acquaint
such new settlers with Canadian
accounting terminology, bookkeep-
ing methods and office procedures.
I k LEIB SHOES
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Jewish community to deal more
with "particular Jewish inter-
ests" and less with its "univer-
sal concern for humanity"
threatens to alienate a large
segment of today's Jewish youth,
according to Albert Vorspan, di-
rector of social action for the
Union of American Hebrew Con-
gregations. who addressed the
institute.
Vorspan declared that many
Jewish youths, determined to in-
volve themselves with the issues
"that are tearing their consciences
apart." will either restructure the
Jewish community to meet their
needs or fall away from it entirely
"if the trend toward parochialism
continues."
The speaker warned that the
Jewish community's "drift to look
inward" to the increasing exclu-
sion of broader moral and ethical
questions, poses the danger of
turning it into "a tribal, fossilized,
self-righteous group on the pe-
riphery of American life."
Vorspan, however, took excep-
tion to the "other side of the
coin." He referred to those Jew-
ish youths who "have swallowed
every mythology about a Third
World force and conspiratorial
theory by which Israel and every
other Jewish interest are sold
down the river."
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