Meeting Our Communal Responsibilities in 5731 At the same time, there was further development of our services to older people as construction of Federation Apartments for approximately 225 senior citizens began and by the completion of the Henry M. Butzel Senior Citizens Village and Conference Center at Camp Tamarack. By ALAN E. SCHWARTZ, President, and WILLIAM AVRUNIN, Executive Vice - President, Jewish Welfare Federation In this season of personal assessment, we look back - on the year 5730 as one characterized by opportunities; by achievements, and by a continued strengthening of the programs of the organized Jewish community of Detroit. Through the Jewish Welfare Federation, its planning and budgeting function, and its Allied Jewish Campaign, we have faced many challenges together, challenges Sinai Hospital added the Zivian Center for Continued Care as a new dimension in health services and we moved closer to the attainment of additional beds through the Max and Marjorie Fisher Patient Care Wing. The Jewish Vocational Service began the remodeling of its new facility near the medical center of downtown Detroit for the benefit of the hard to place and the handicapped. Most of these developmdnts and many more are part of the normal growth of a healthy Jewish community. They took place while the Allied Jewish Campaign reached its greatest achievement in our history: A total of $11,600,000 of which al- most $8,000,000 is for the critical situation overseas and in Israel. This was our com- munity's expression of identity with the embattled Jews of Israel. Their struggle continues and their basic welfare and educational needs become greater and more serious. This presents us with a major challenge for the year ahead which will put to the severest test the resources of our organized community and the generosity of our good citizens who make it function. We face the New Year with determination to meet our responsibility to the end that Jewish life will survive and flourish. which would have been overwhelming without the benefit of our ongoing community structure built and enriched by succeeding generations for 70 years. Basically our communal programs address themselves to -people, to their adjustment to the achievement of their potential, to giving fuller meaning to their lives. While carrying out this mandate, we have been fortunate to be able to build a strong community which stands us in good stead in facing the problems of each era. In the year past and for some time to come, increasing emphasis was directed to make Judaism meaningful and our programs relevant - for young people. There was specific emphasis on the college-age group, both at the Jewish Community Cen- ter and the United Hebrew Schools. The organization of the Michigan Association of Jewish College Students by the Center and the extension of the College of Jewish Studies program to the campuses have been landmarks which hold great promise. American Assn. for Jewish Education to Launch College Studies Program NEW YORK — The national ex- ecutive committee of the Amer- ican Association for Jewish Edu- cation has authorized the launch- ing of a major curricular program in the development of materials in Jewish studies to be used in public high schools and in col- leges in the United States, it was announced by Robert H. Arnow, AAJE president. The initial stage of this three- year project, has been made pos- sible by a seed grant from the Herman and Gertrude Gross Edu- cation Foundation. Dr. Sara Feinstein, recently ap- Knesset Committee . - Urges Nations Speed Laws on Air Piracy JERUSALEM (JTA) — The par- liamentary foreign affairs and de- fense committee called on the na- tions of the- world to "expedite the passing of legislation aimed at in- creasing the security of interna- tional civil aviation." The committee urged universal application of the 1963 Tokyo Con- vention on air piracy and recom- mended the immediate passage of conventions penalizing hijackers, airline terrorists and their super- iors. The committee also condemned the "surrender to blackmail" in releasing Arab terrorists. The International Civil Aviation Organization was scheduled to meet again in Montreal Tuesday •to consider a United States pro- posal that the 119 nation members of the ICAO institute an aerial boycott of any country which har- bors airline hijackers or detains hijacked planes. U.S. Transportation Secretary John Volpe submitted the proposal at a special ICAO meeting in Montreal Sept. 18. After the dele- gates listened to the U.S. proposal, the meeting was adjourned until Sept. 29 so that delegations could receive instructions from their governments. 63 Witnesses to Testify at Saarbruecken Trial BONN (JTA)—Fritz Gothard Ge- bauer, 63, went on trial in Saar- bruecken, charged with murdering 22 concentration camp inmates in Lvov in 1941-1943. He is charged with beating some Of his victims to death, shooting and hanging others, and causing the death of a Jewish child by dashing the child against a wall. Sixty-three witnesses, including Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal of Vienna will give testimony against Gebauer. I pointed to the staff of the AAJE, will direct the program, conducted under the guidance of the Nation- al Curriculum Research Institute of the AAJE. At the same time, Arnow an- nounced the appointment of Her- bert Berman, New York attor- ney, and a member of the Board the role of the Jew, nor will ma- terials be doctrinal or propagan- distic. On the other hand, both Jews and non-Jews at last will be able to obtain a more balanced picture of Western history than has heretofore been available in traditional texts and courses." of Higher Education of New York (Sty, as chairman of the national committee for this un- dertaking. In making his announcement, Arnow noted that "A distinctive trend in American education in recent years has been the intro- duction into the school curriculum of materials relating to the cul- tural background, ideas and aspi- rations of the ethnic components of American society." This development not only en- riches educational opportunities, he said, "but offers a maturer un- derstanding of the nature and com- position of our domestic society. On the university level, the de- mands of students and the en- couraging reactions of school au- thorities have resulted in the pro- 'iteration of chairs in Jewish studies, the expansion of course offerings and the enhancement of the academic status of Jewish so- cial studies." This process, which started more than two decades ago, has been accelerated by recent demands for courses in black, and other minor- ities, history and culture, on the university and secondary levels. A number of universities and local boards of education have ex- pressed an interest in integrating courses and materials in Jewish social studies into the total social studies programs of their institu- tions. Arnow stressed that in its capacity as the national 'mord'. natiag agency for Jewish educa- tion in the United States, the 'AAJE is the logical agency to /help plan, research and prepare required materials. "It will assist in disseminating information about existing pro- grams, enabling other school sys- tems and universities to benefit from programs that have been tested in operation. The work of the AAJE will be conducted un- der the guidance of authorities in the field of Jewish studies, and in cooperation with responsible public and private education agen- cies." He foresaw the enrichment of secondary school and college cur- ricula through the introduction of texts and materials which would accurately describe the nature of the Jewish encounter with West- ern civilization. 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