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July 10, 1970 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1970-07-10

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

Friday, July 10, 1970-3

Federation Allocations Announced

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

(Continued from Page 1)
new Henry M. Butzel Older Adult
Village and Conference Center, tin-
der the direction of the Tamarack
Hills Authority. The request was
for funds for administration and
secretarial service as the facility
begins operation during the sum-
mer.

ICAO Adopts Israel Proposal
Setting Sanctions on Airline
Saboteurs; 1 Opposing Vote

Consideration of the financial
problems of four agencies in the
health and welfare division—
Fresh Air Society, Jewish Com-
munity Center, Jewish Family
and Children's Service and Jew-
ish Vocational Service-Commu-
nity Workshop—were compli-
cated by dual problems. The four
agencies are beneficiaries of the
United Community Services and
the Torch Drive from which they
received more than $1,100,000 in
January. The United Community
Services allocations, which rep-
resent the major deficit appro-
priation for the agencies as com-
pared to the Federation supple-
mentation, are given for a calen-
dar year while Federation agen-
cies operate on a fiscal year
beginning in June. With grow-
ing demand for Torch Drive
money to be spent in solving in-
ner-city problems, there is some
possibility that United Commu-
nity Service grants to many
beneficiaries will be held to the
existing plateau of support.

Jewish education received $786,-
428, allocated to United Hebrew
Schools, Midrasha, Beth Yehudah
Afternoon School, Combined Jew-
ish Schools and United Hebrew
Schools Day School Project.

United Hebrew Schools received
$677,0666, an increase of $66,902
over last year's allocation. A

\

'Northland sefr Lot 4 'II

Lot G

Eastland

broadening of the program of Mid-
rasha, the pre-Midrasha program
which allowed some advanced stu-
dents to spend the summer at He-
brew University in Israel and the
move to the new campus in South-
field were among the new develop-
ments reported by George M. Zelt-
zer, education division chairman.
For its operations in the field
of community relations, the Jew-
ish Community Council received
$147,206—an increase of approxi-
mately $5,000 over last year's
grant, Max J. Pincus, community
relations chairman, said. The
Council is participating in the na-
tion's first interfaith P r o j e c t
Equality program and is involved
with the Higher Education Op-
portunities Committee and the De-
troit Mayor's Committee for Hu-
man Resource Development as
part of the community's concern
for urban problems. It deals with
foreign issues affecting Jews and
has a hand in cultural program-
ing.
Federation President Schwartz
said that budget considerations
for allocations to national agen-
cies in the domestic field, as well
as agencies operating overseas,
will take place in the fall, when
Federation also will review the
capital needs of local agencies.

MONTREAL (JTA)—The Inter-
national Civil Aviation Organiza-
tion, the majority of whose dele-
gations had originally considered
Israel's proposal for sanctions
against airline saboteurs too "pol-
itical" for acceptance, approved
the motion June 30 by a vote of 91-
1. The "solemn declaration" calls
for condemnation of all violent
acts against civil aviation and
ICAO action against such acts. The
dissenting delegation was not ident-
ified other than as being "Arab."
(In New York, it was learned that
the dissenter was Syria. The Egy-
ptian, Jordanian and other Arab
delegations to the ICAO emergency
conference voted, however reluct-
antly, for the Israeli proposal.)
Two Arab amendments were de-
feated. The first would have re-
stricted the authority of the pro-
posed legislation to aircraft and
passengers in flight or at airports.
The ICAO chose to include, as well,
airline terminals and town offices,.

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which have also been the targets
of terrorist attacks—notably the
strike against the El Al office in
Athens. The second Arab amend-
ment would have omitted from
ICAO condemnation attacks on
planes "carrying arms and war
materials." The convention, called
into extraordinary session here in
the wake of the Feb. 21 Swissair
disaster called on member ICAO
states to adopt by the summer of
1971 a resolution making airline
violence an international crime.
The adopted proposal will be taken
up formally by international diplo-
mats next December in The Hague.

Savings insured to $20,000
Branches throughout
Metropolitan Detroit

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