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July 09, 1971 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1971-07-09

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



10—Friday, July 9, 1971

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Sabin Receives U.S. Science Medal

Dr. Albert B.
Sabin, president of
the Weizmann Insti-
tute of Science,
receives the U.S.
government's highest
science award, the
National Medal of
Science, from Pres-
ident Nixon. The
award was given at
the White House
"for numerous fun-
damental contribu-
tions to the under-
standing of viruses
and viral diseases,
culminating in the
development of the
vaccine which eliminated poliomyelitis as a major threat to human
health."

USIA Hearings Conclude Without Mention
of Yiddish Broadcasts to Soviet Jewry

WASHINGTON (JTA)—Appino-
One of the senator's legislative
priations
hearings before the I assistants, told the JTA that un-
United States Information Agency less the senator personally ap-
ended without mention of recent proved the questions, they would
requests for Voice of America not be asked in his absence, add-
broadcasts in Yiddish to the Soviet ing that the senator was not able
Union proposed in recent weeks to attend the hearings and could
by Jewish organizations and sev- not be reached to approve the
eral congressmen.
questions.
The event also was marked by
Feuerstein charged that the
complaints by two Boston Jewish senator's office had stalled him
leaders of non-cooperation on the and, "as it turned out, never in-
matter by Sen. Edward Brooke, ' tended to ask the questions."
Massachusetts Republican.
The complaints were made by
Henry Feuerstein, who came here Israel Scientist Invents
on behalf of the Ad Hoc Commit-
tee on Voice of America Broad- Heart Potential Detector
casting. and by Rabbi Samuel J.
Fox, president of the Massachu-
setts Council of Rabbis. Feuerstein
said he came here to ask the sen-
ator to ask USIA Director Frank
Shakespeare about his refusals to
consider Yiddish broadcasting.
Feuerstein said the senator's
office had instructed him to
send some pertinent information
on the question and that "it
would be taken care of." He
said that when he learneJ that
the material he sent had not
arrived, he brought a list of
questions to the senator's office
and that he. had been given to
understand that the questions
would be asked at the hearings.

German Foreign Minister
Is First to Visit Israel

JERUSALEM (JTA) — West
German Foreign Minister Walter
Scheel, here for a four-day visit,
is the first German foreign minis-
ter to come to Israel while in of-
fice. His tour of the country in-
cludes East Jerusalem, Galilee and
the Negev.
Foreign ministry officials denied
that Scheel requested not to be
taken to the occupied territories.
The official said that the time
left for sightseeing by Scheel was
so short that the question of visit-
ing the occupied areas had not
even arisen. "There is so much
to see in Israel proper," the offi-
cial added.
Scheel's visit includes talks with
Premier Golda Meir and two work-
ing sessions with Foreign Minis-
ter Abba Eban. The principal sub-
jects are expected to be West Ger-
many's Ostpolitik—her policy of
accommodation with Moscow —
and questions arising from Israel's
relations with the European Com-
mon Market.
Chief among the latter is a docu-
ment on the Middle East drafted
by the six Common Market coun-
tries which Israel considers un-
favorable.
The document has not been Ad-
opted as official Common Market
policy, and Jerusalem is seeking
Bonn's assistance in opposing it
when it comes up for discussion.
"My visit to Israel is more than
just a courtesy visit, because no
German can forget what was done
to the Jewish people," Scheel said
Wednesday before departing.

This photograph is of a battery
operated miniature electrocardio-
graph invented by Dr. David
Danon, head of the department
of biological ultrastructure at the
Weizmann Institute of Science in
Rehovot, Israel. The instrument
enables doctors to determine on
the scene whether the life of a
patient—victim of war or acci-
dent—can still be saved.

Bar-Ilan Criminology Dept. Probes
New Way to Rehabilitate Delinquents

RAMAT-GAN—Members of the
department of criminology at Bar-
Ilan University, under the guidance
of Dr. Jonah Cohen, are investigat-
ing a new method of rehabilitating
delinquent youth.
The research study is being con-
ducted in conjunction with the
ministry of welfare, with mem-
bers of the Bar-Ilan school of so-
cial work participating. The proj-
ect will require about IL 400,000
($476,000), and a grant of half that
amount has been awarded by the
U.S. government, interested in the
possibilites of applying this new
rehabilitation method to American
delinquent youth.
Current treatment of delinquent
youth in an institutional setting is
met with two main obstacles: Dif-
ficult adjustment to the institution
and its conditions and negative in-
fluences exerted upon a youth by
the institution and its inmates.
Even in cases of successful
treatment, it appears that the
youth's new behavior cannot be
applied to the same environment
that nurtured the delinquent be-
havior in the first place.
The new model to be developed
in the course of the study is based
on the assumption that two groups
are significant to the youth: the
family and the peer group.

* * *

Campus Size Doubled

Bar-Ilan University doubled the
area of its campus at a ceremony
marking the conclusion of nego-
tiations to buy 270 dunams (671/2
acres) of land adjacent to the
present 240 dunams. Taking part
in the ceremony was Dr. Zerah
Warhaftig, minister for religious
affairs and chairman of Bar-Ilan's
executive council.
The plot will cost the university
IL 5,000,000 ($450,000).
This is the first time that an
institution of higher learning
actually has had to purchase land
for its campus. The owners of the
land, represented at the ceremony
by Dr. Augusto Levy and Joseph
Sinigalia, are a group of Italian
Jews who bought it in 1929.
The new area will be used for
student dormitories, apartments
for lecturers, a building for Jew-
ish studies and a law school.

Instead of being sent to existing
corrective institutions, young peo-
ple will be referred to a special
day center established in their
home environments. The young
offender will sleep in his own
home but will spend the day at
the center engaged in study and
occupational activities, and in-
dividual and group treatment.

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At the same time, a social work-
er will commence a series of visits
to the young delinquent's family,
and another worker will treat the
social environment. Thus the
therapeutic intervention will focus
simultaneously on the youth him-
self, his family and his environ-
ment.

The working hypothesis suggests
that such an organizational struc-
ture will:

Prevent or minimize the pheno-
menon of a "delinquent subcul-
ture" within the institution.
Reduce the difficulties involved
in the youthful offender's adjust-
ment to his new environment.
As a corollary will have a bene-
ficial effect upon other youths be-
longing to the delinquent's native
environment.

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OPENING IN FEBRUARY OF 1972
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Lounge Rooms, Color T.V. and Stereo.
Library Reading Room.
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