papers and the publishers associa- - (Copyright 1969. JTA, Inc.) !tion have prinnised to survey pus- A Jewish refugee who had twice sible locations and to recommend been scheduled for transportation sites for stands which the trade to the Dachau death camp is one group feels will offer the handi- of two elderly New York residents, c a ped newsstand operator a both now unable to work, who have chance for an adequate livelihood. started to operate newsstands spe- Bast reported that the state cially designed for physically - vocational rehabilitation division handicaped persons. The experi - has authorized funds for the ini- mental project was developed by tial newsstands, including con- the Federation Employment and struction and initial stocking of Guidance Service of New York. merchandise. The new s s t a n d The city's three major news - eventually will be entirely in the papers—the Times, the Post and operator's name. the News—and the Periodical and A national program along simi- Book Publishers Association of America took part in the planning 1 tar lines is being planned by the of the project, according to Roland . Jewish Occupational C o u n c i I. s Baxt, executive director of the stemming from the demonstration FEGS, an affiliate of the Federa- project of the FEGS, which is a member agency. tion of Jewish Philanthropies. The JOC plan, which calls for a One of the special features of the experimental street-c or n e r three-year evaluation demonstra- stand is a gate which encloses the tion in 10 to 15 cities, is scheduled entire stand so that the handicaped to be ready by 1970 when it will operator need not lift any of his be presented for funding to priva•c merchandise when he opens for foundations and the federal gov- business or closes. Baxt reported ernment. The first two trainees received also that the multicolored stand is well-lighted and much larger than three weeks of study of their gen- eral ability to handle such an the standard newsstand. The long-range goal of the pro- enterprise. They also were givon ject is to train and place handi 17 weeks of training, with close caped persons of all ages, includ- FEGS supervision throughout that ing retarded persons of 21 years period. They learned how to order and up. in small enterprises. The supplies, how to prepare and cheek short-range objective, Baxt added, newspaper returns, rotation of is to start a vending stand pro- stock and the various daily deci- gram for the handicaped 'and sions required in such a retail adult retarded person. The news- operation. er. By BEN GALLOB Parents' Worries Conte to Naught e, By DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright 1969. JTA. Inc.) We read a true story the other day that touched us deeply. A mother carries her child for nine months within her own body. Then the child is born but it remains the anxiety of the mother. When the child is old enough to start school, the mother is a little more relaxed in the hope that the school will now take over some of the burden. How weighted then must be the mother's heart when she learns that her offspring does not respond! This was the story I read. It is not, of course, an unusual story. Its parallel. the story of the child who cannot keep up with the class, is found in thousands of homes the country over, but this does not les- sen the pathos. The mother in the case we have mentioned was Mrs. Einstein. In a letter to a friend she wrote that she didn't know what they could do about,Albert. He seemed unable to learn anything. Until the age of 3, little Albert couldn't speak and it was even thought be was physically re- tarded. Some years before there was a similar case of a boy named Tom- mie. He just couldn't learn any- thing either, so the mother was asked to take the child out of school. She became the teacher of her child. Little Tommie didn't turn out badly either. He invented something to light homes. You may have heard of his name too— Thomas Edison. When Theodor Herzl was a boy. the world was agog about the building of the Suez Canal and young Theodor Herzl had ambi- tions of being another De Lesseps. The Frenchman De Lessens had built the Suez Canal. Young Theo- dor hoped to build the Panama Canal. His parents fell in with the idea and Theodor's schooling was ad- justed to enable him to work to this ambition. But soon the par- ents were worrying. They came to realize that Theodor didn't have the aptitude for technical engineer. ing. Their son was a failure. And it was a good thing that he was! Many engineers could be found to build lb- Panama Canal. The laying of the foundations for the building of the Jewish state was a greater feat of engineer- ing. The case of Rebecca and Isaac, in the Bible is interesting. They who has get up. Esau has get-up." Isaac liked Esau, the son who went hunting and brought hack the venison. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 22—Friday, December 19, 1969 Handicapped Learn Self-Su ffichmeN- Operatin., e, Special NY Newsstands ••• 4; h ‘.. •% -i • • ‘ -t' / .:8; Help Plant a Women's Forest in Israel .. . the 40th Annual WOMEN OF JNF DONOR TEA TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970, 12 NOON, TEMPLE ISRAEL, 17400 MAN DERSON "What are , we going to do about Jacob?" he said to Rebecca. "He doesn't go out to look for a job. He just sits around the house or goes to the library. I like a fellow who has set up. Esau has get-up." Featuring Said Rebecca: "Is that all life is? Why doesn't Esau go to the library once in a while and get a book to read. It won't kill him to know something. Venison isn't everything. You can't take it with you." The rabbis explain that Isaac was a very sincere but naive per- son and was taken in by the glit- ter that Esau made, but that Re- becca who came of the wily La- bans, was up to these tricks and recoghized their hypocrisy.- We knew a young fellow whose mother was at his bedside every morning with a clock showing him it was late and it was time he should get up and go to work. In the end, he did all right. too. He became a very successful manufacturer of clocks, believe it or not. DR. STUART E. ROSENBERG JEANNE DIAMOND Beth Zedek Synogogue, Toronto soprano, acclaimed by critics: Lyric "Audience charmed by soprano . . beautiful and gracious singer of in- tense stage presence . . ." Detroit News Internationally k NOW" Orator Author. arid 13 Cuban Children in Successful Settlement • PHILADELPHIA (JTA) — All of the 13 Jewish children entrusted t6 the Association of Jewish Children by United Hias Service on their arrival in the United States from Cuba eight years ago have been successfully resettled and all re- united with their parents, accori- ing to a report by the agency. The children. then ranging in age from 10 to 17. came to the United States after the Cuban government gave Jewish parents permission to send children to this country for "safe-keeeping," their parents re- maining in Cuba. Five are settled in Philadelphia, three are in South America and five in other parts of the United States. Five are attend- ing college, aided by agency schol- arship funds, and others are stu- dents in trade schools and holding jobs. Many of the children had scars of a second generation of flight. Their parents had fled from Germany and Europe to seek a haven in Cuba. "Women of JNF" Officers ,left to right) Mrs. Jules Kraft, Program chairman; Mrs. Albert Posen, President Mrs. William Levin, Fund-raising chairman. The Detroit "Women of JNF" is the only organization of its kind in the nation. With nearly 1,000 members, it is active in raising funds for the development of land in Israel in all its forms — soil reclamation, drainage, afforestation, road building, etc. . . . Women's Auxiliary of Jewish National Fund 22100 Greenfield, Oak Park 399-0820