Testimonial Aids Retarded Children
\ :" •
•
A check for more than $2,000—proceeds from the recent Sammy
Woolf Testimonial Dinner-Dance, is presented to Harry Berlin (cen-
ter), head of the Parents' Association for Jewish Residential Care
for Retarded Children. Shown (from left) are Dr. LeRoy Woolf,
Maurice Cohen, Berlin and Dr. Alan Nickamin.
Poor New York Jews Excluded From Role
in Poverty Programs, Official Charges
NEW YORK (JTA)—A Jewish
anti-poverty official charged here
that poor New York Jews were
"systematically denied participa-
tion" in city poverty programs ex-
cept in the Crown Heights section
of Brooklyn.
The charge was made at a hear-
ing by a House subcommittee on
poverty and manpower by S. Elly
Rosen, speaking for the New York
Association of Jewish Community,
Anti-Poverty and Municipal Em-
ployes.
He also told the congressmen
that the city's anti-poverty agen-
cies were fomenting ethnic con-
flict between Blacks and Jews.
He said poor Jews had been
"forcibly prevented" from voting
in elections for community cor-
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porations which, in 26 officially-
designated poverty areas, serve as
channels for allocating federal and
city funds for anti-poverty projects.
Asked who barred Jews from
such voting, as well as allegedly
beating and otherwise abusing
them, Rosen replied that it was
usually Blacks who, he said,
controlled most of the anti-
poverty programs in New York
City.
Asserting that 800,000 Jews in
New York City live below the
poverty line, he said that "the
indignities suffered by the poor
Jews in this city are enormous,
horrendous and growing." He said
the agency to correct the problem
was the New York City Council
Against Poverty, the city's prin-
cipal agency for dealing with
poverty.
The congressmen are conduct-
ing hearings on New York City's
anti-poverty programs but do not
have specific legislation before
them.
Rep. James Scheuer, Democrat
of New York, demanded Tuesday
a ,General Accounting Office inves-
tigation of Rosen's charges.
In a letter to Elmer Staats, comp-
troller general of the U.S., with
copies to Frank Carlucci, director
of the Office of Economic Oppor-
tunity, and Jule Sugarman, direc-
tor of New York City's Human Re-
sources Administration, Scheuer
asked that the investigation be fin-
ished by Aug. 1 so that if it sub-
stantiates the charges, he will have
time to support necessary legis-
lative provisions to see that the
situation is corrected.
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Young Yeshiva U. Prof
New Dean of Religious
High School in Israel
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Arab Paper Leaks M. E. Proposals
.
By HENRY W. LEVY
NEW YORK—A thirty-four-year-
old American Jewish educator, Dr.
Raphael Weinberg, has settled in
Israel, where he has become the
dean at the Segula Bnei Akiva
religious high school in Kiryat
Motzkin, north of Haifa.
In the United States for the sum-
mer, he will serve as he has in
the past as the director of Camp
Stone, a Young Israel camp in
Sugar Grove, Pa.
TUNIS (ZINS) — Citing reliable
Washington sources, Al Hayet, a
Lebanese paper, has published
details of what is purported to be
a new American proposal, soon to
be revealed by the U.S. State De-
partment, for resolving the 'present
Mid East impasse. According to
the press 'account the key elements
of the new American proposal are:
1) Israel to obtain a 99-year lease
on strategic Sharm-el-Sheikh from
Egypt against a yearly rental to
For eight years an associate be negotiated between the parties.
professor in Judaic studies at Stern
College for Women of the Yeshiva
University, the youthful academi-
cian has accepted a post in an
Israel high school for girls, where
he thinks he can break new
grounds in Israel education.
The Segula School is one of two
Bnei Akiva schools in Israel co-
operating with the Jewish Agen-
cy's department of Torah educa-
tion and culture in the accept.
ance of American - high school
students.
Dr. Weinberg hopes eventually
that its enrollment will be com-
posed 40 per cent of day students
from the Haifa region, 40 per cent
of students from the northern bor-
der towns, mostly children of new
immigrants from Africa and Asia,
and 20 per cent of Americans.
"Israel must provide high school
education for its newcomers so
that the poverty level that exists
can be broken down," he said.
"There is no real discrimination
in Israel on the basis of the land
of origin of the Israelis; what hap-
pens is that the children of the
newcomers from the backward
countries do not have the educa-
tional opportunities to qualify for
the better jobs. This is the essence
of the so-called Panther outbursts
in Israel." He added: "I hope the
school I head in Kiryat Mcitzkin
will make a significant contribu-
tion along these lines."
They Made
The Grade
MADELINE SUS AN WOLK,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexan-
der Wolk of Mendota Ave., recently
was graduated with honors from
Wayne State University, where she
received a master of education de-
gree in secondary English educa-
tion. Miss Wolk teaches English at
Northern High School.
* * *
DAVID M. ZELDES, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman I. Zeldes of
Greenlawn Ave., recently was grad-
uated with honors in economics
from Wayne State University. He
also received recognition from Phi
Beta Kappa honor society and
Omicron Delta Epsilon, the inter-
national honor society in econom-
ics. He will attend the University
of Michigan Law School in the fall.
* * *
SARRAE CRANE, a Barnard
College sophomore and student at
the Jewish Theological Seminary,
was elected chairman of the North
American Jewish Youth Council
succeeding Margy - Ruth Green-
baum, a doctoral candidate at the
graduate school of the City Uni-
versity of New York.
U.S. Bond Goal Reached
With scores of employers still
to report, the goal of the 1971
Metropolitan Detroit Take Stock in
America Savings Bonds campaign
has been topped, it was announced
by Drive Chairman William V.
Luneburg, president of American
Motors Corp.
The Detroit area was the first to
achieve its goal among more than
20 of the nation's leading indus-
trial areas in which bond cam-
paigns are being conducted this
year.
Friday, July 2, 1971-31
2.) Agreement between the UAR
and Israel on the composition of
a symbolic international force to
patrol those territories from which
Israel will withdraw (the USSR
not to be represented in that inter-
national unit).
3). Palestinian refugees to be
absorbed by Israel and the Arab
states in direct proportion to their
respective populations.
Fellowships at Brandeis
Established by Bequest
WALTHAM, Mass.—A major be-
quest to Brandeis University of
more than $400,000 from the estate
of Mary Hirschfield of Chestnut
Hill, Mass., has established grad-
uate fellowships in the humanities.
Brandeis President Charles I.
Schottland announced the Mary
and Abbey Hirschfield Fellowships
in the Humanities.
4.) The West Bank comprising
Judea and Shomron, as well as the
Gaza Strip, to become autonomous
enclaves and to resettle a propor-
tionally larger influx of the Pales-
tinian refugees.
The Lebanese paper notes that
this plan originated as a formula
by Israel Foreign Minister Abba
Eban, who spelled it out during
his latest visit to Washington.
Henry Kissinger, Mr. Nixon's pol-
itical adviser, and both Hubert
Humphrey and Mike Mansfield,
are said to have endorsed the plan.
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