Brandeis High on List of Top U.S. Colleges WALTHAM, Mass.—The Ameri- can Council on Education (ACE) and "The Insider's Guide to the Colleges" have respectively ranked Brandeis University in the top 1.2 per cent of the nation's col- leges and universities and la- beled the school as "richly intel- lectual." The ACE rating system, devised by Alexander W. Astin, ACE's director of research, is based on mean aptitude test scores of in- coming freshmen and has placed Brandeis among the 27 most se- lective colleges and universities in the United States—or in the top 1.2 per cent. Other schools in the group include Harvard, Yale, M.I.T., Stanford, the Univer- ity of Chicago, Rice, Princeton and Dartmouth. Coincidentally, the 1971 edition of "The Insider's Guide to the Colleges," compiled and edited by the staff of the Yale Daily News for high school students seeking information on colleges and univer- sities, has listed Brandeis in com- pany with the nation's most pres- tigious schools of higher learning. Group Organized to 'Protect Rabbis from Abuses' NEW YORK (JTA)—A 36-year- old New York Orthodox rabbi said the fledgling Independent Rab- binate of America, of whch he is director, was created to function as a professional organization in seek- ing to prevent abuses of rabbis by congregations, rather than as a labor union. Rabbi L. Martin Kaplan, who now holds a pulpit here and who has served congregations in Al- bany, New Jersey and Tennessee, told the JTA that the immediate stress of the organization's effort is on membership building. Cur- rently. he said, the organization . has about 100 members, most of them Orthodox rabbis serving Con- . 4,.. servative congregations. He said the three-month-old organization ' would maintain a confidential file on complaints registered by rabbis • against congregations and that this information would be made avail- :able to any rabbi seeking a posi- tion, regardless of his affiliation. Rabbi Kaplan stated that the organization was particularly con- cerned with congregations which ,,:fire their rabbis for any reason and would investigate all such incidents reported to it. He said another vmajor concern was unfair harass- ' 'ment of rabbis and attempts to "usurp" the rabbi's classical au- thority. — Repartee: Any reply that is so clever that it makes the listener wish he had said it himself. —Elbert Hubbard. The Finest of Nationally Advertised Clothing at !, 4 the Price You Would Expect to Pay. HARRY THOMAS Fine Clothes For 35 Years 24750 Telegraph at 10 Mile Daily 9-6. Thurs. & Fri. to 8 OPEN SUN. 11-4 A Visit to Black Panthers in Israel By JACK SIEGEL (A Seven Arts Feature) one child. Why? "Cigarettes bring Cancer, children bring poverty." Against the motion that his Black Panthers are a criminal element, he says membership is denied anybody unless he foregoes all criminal activity. This includes smoking hash or pot or taking drugs. Nor is membership limited to "Oriental" Jews. Anybody can join and, in fact, Abergil pointed out, they have support from Ash- kenazi (white) student's. Abergil talked on, about dis- crimination in housing, in educa- tion, how "black" kids cannot go to certain schools and that their ghettos are slums. To work against this, he has a program for his "party" each of whose members pays dues of 40 pounds per year: 1. Summer camps for children. 2.. Doing away with poor neigh- borhoods and ghettos built in certain areas for the same kind of people (mostly his). 3. Provision for kindergartens. 4. Free education through the university. 5. Special allocations for fami- lies with four or more chil- dren. 6. Aid for the 615,000 people below the poverty level, 80 per cent of whom are Orien- , tal Jews. 7. Reform institutions to be turned into schoolS. How would he implement this program? Abergil said: "The gov- ernment has the sociologists and college graduates. Let them figure it out." But there have been meetings with govenment officials on these questions, one with the prime min- ister. The problems Abergil out- lined will take time to solve, he was told. There can be no answer now, otherwise the present situa- tion will be handled as was Wadi Salib 10 years earlier. When asked the meaning of this, Abergil told of a situation in the Haifa area which, he claims was solved by buying off the leaders and/or ar- resting others. The interview over, we were shown a family across the street where 10 children lived with their parents in what appeared to be two rooms. We didn't stay long; the message was instant. There are 70,000 needy in Is- rael and 120,000 below the poverty level of whom a good part are Oriental Jews. Jobs could be the answer. Housing, too, and the complaint of the Black Panthers is that the Olim Hadashim (new im- migrants) receive the best of all possible deals whereas they, older immigrants, here since the '40s and '50s, do not benefit from lib- eral considerations applied to the newcomer. Talk with the average Israeli produces a mixed bag of reactions to the Black Panther cause, from sympathy to indifference to hos- tility; to charges that they are lazy and will not work or even accept the discipline of the army they say they are eager to serve. Lay American leadership to whom this problem was presented also have mixed views but almost all agree that it is a matter for the Israelis to solve; that Americans can raise funds for Israel through the UJA and perhaps make sug- gestions but in the final analysis it is an internal problem. You ride down the streets from the King David Hotel to the Mus- rara quarter in Jerusalem, you come to a series of hot-looking brown-brick structures and if it weren't for the famous biblical sky line, you might think you were in either New or Old Mexico..A lone dog wanders in the lots of the neighborhood and then you see the sign over the adobe type hut: BLACK PANTHERS HEAD- QUARTERS. At the open doorway stand a couple of chicano-looking types, dark and sombre, staring at the station wagon. One of our four is a lady, Mrs. Raymond Epstein of Chicago, whose husband is presi- dent of the Chicago Welfare Fund. Of the other two men, one is a chauffeur and the other does pub- lic relations for a major fund raising organization and who has made the appointment with Reu- ven Abergil, head of the Black Panthers. We go into the house with dark young men who look at us perhaps hostilely. There is a young woman who is on the lighter side and a child about two years old. Posters in Hebrew are nailed to the wall. We are introduced to Reuven Abergil, the fiery, wiry leader of the Israeli Black Panthers. Chairs are set up around the large, un- made bed on which he sits and then another, older man enters the but and slides on the edge of the bed nearest the door. The address we are told is 53-20 Ayin Het or 78, named after the Israeli doctors and nurses who were ambushed in route to Mt. Scopus in 1948. Aber- gil is 28 and came as an infant from Morocco. He has one child. "Why should I have more?" There are enough families, he says, with 10 children and all live in one or two rooms. He says his group has no poli- tical aims and he himsef has no political ambitions. He speaks at a rapid clip in Hebrew and it is translated by both the PR man and the chauffeur, a Greek from old Jerusalem. But _Abergil admits that his ac- tivity as chairman_ of the Black Panthers brings him into contact with political leaders and this he likes. He says his group has mem- bers who represent all shades of opinion from Rakah (Communist) to Matzpen (Marxist) to Schisch (New Left), but that overall his members (he claims 9,000 in Jerusalem and 48,000 nationwide) are patriotic and would defend the country. However, his complaints against the government is that he cannot serve in the army, and in Israel this is a kind of mark of Cain. He has two police records, one for stealing tomatoes. Many of his "party" people face the same problem and the resultant shame of having been rejected for serv- ice by the army. One of 14 children, he went as far as the third grade. Yet, as a result of meeting with a well known Israeli official following a demonstration, he was told that if he is an example of a third grader, then the univer- sities should be closed down. Abergil is bright and claims his profession is "social worker." When asked where he got his training, he says: "In the streets." He will have no more than the Classified Ads Get Quick Results THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 6, 1971 - 17 Former Pogromist Named to Polish State Council HOME SECURITY WITHOUT KEYS Pushbutton Combination Locks • Press the Combination • No Keyholes or Tumblers • Unlocks Automatically • Jimmy Proof Dead Soh Guaranteed Absolutely Pick-Proof Webb Wood Auto Glass 30 Webb NTIQUE SHOW For info call Harold Shapiro 868.6381 Detroit — WITH THIS COUPON $1 °° OFF . IMPRINTED NEW YEARS CARDS Offer good to Aug. 15th. Limit one coupon per customer. BORENSTEIN'S "Your Jewish Supply House" OAK PARK 25242 GREENFIELD DETROIT 13535 W. 7 MILE AMPLE FREE PARKING 398-9095 341-0569 — 341-3268 N. of 10 Mile in Greenfield Center at Schaefer • •••• • • • • •• •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • Ilt • ••••• •• • • • JOE McDONALD says: , NOBODY OB i N T ' L LET *;••18 • • • • • • • • • • • • UNDER SELL MEI' • • • • • • • • • • • • • NEW 71 PINTO • • 2 Door, Full Factory Equipment. • • A Great Buy. • • • • • • $1847 • • • ...„................... •, • • • • • •• • • • . • • • • • • NEW 71 MAVERICK 0 : • • • • • • • • All Standard Factory Equipment. • • • •S . • • • •• •o • • $2067 • • • • McDONALD Ford Farm 14240 W. 7 Mile I AT LODGE EXPRESSWAY Open Mon. & Thurs. NI 9 CALL TODAY 341-3800 Bring your antiques \ Midwest's Largest Mall Antique Show ' was the Nazi movement in Ger- many. The French weekly added that anti-Semitic General Moczar has been named to the honorary post of Chairman of the General Comptroller's Commission_ "One might say that the post given to this pogroms-organizer won't, probably, put an end to the Moczarian anti-Semitism," t h e weekly writes. "As a matter of fact, it is possible to say that as far as this point is concerned, nothing has changed in Poland." Boleslaw Pia- PARIS (JTA) secki, newly named as a member of the Council of State in Poland, was one of the leaders of the Fascist and anti-Semitic "Phal- anga" organization, the French weekly Nouvel Observateur re- vealed. The Council of State is the highest ruling body of Poland. The "Phalanga" was active in Poland in the years 1934-1939. It split away from the "Nationalist Right" and organized several po- groms. Its inspiration and model August 6-15 welve Mall Telegraph Rd. at Twelve Mile Southfield in to be appraised by experts for $1.00 Many out-of- town dealers