Purely Commentary ORT's Guidelines Can Help Michigan Schools A report of the Michigan State Chamber of Commerce states that the schools in our state are not adequately preparing their students for the world of work. State Chamber President Harry R. Hall clari- fied this statement by saying: "For the past decade, the State Chamber has been urging that vocational-technical education in Michigan be restructured, reappraised and redefined to meet the educational needs of 70 per cent of the pupils in primary-secondary schools who do not enter institutions of higher learning. It is nothing short of eonomic cannibalism to have a large percentage of the school product cast on the labor market with no marketable skill." The State Chamber should utilize the experiences of the ORT, the Jewish Organization for Rehabilitation Through Training. Many coun- tries have called upon ORT for guidance in introducing and administer- ing vocational training programs—and with great success. ORT's activities in Israel, in Iran, among Algerian Jews in France and in other lands have been examples of great eduational achievements in assuring productivity and community responsibility to provide proper training for all young people. What ORT has done on a worldwide scale could well serve as a guideline for Michigan as well. • Skim:iv/ft A Basketful of Crimes . . . Condoned by Indifferent World Powers There was insanity in the German land of culture in the 1930s and 1940s, It was engineered by Adolf Hitter and was known as Nazism. Now, in the pro- gressive 1970s, the head of a government, Gen. Idi Amin of Uguanda, has given absolution to the worst crimes in history. In penitential Munich, the New Germany con- sistently abjures the 'brutalities of a not-too-distant past. The Ugandan president condones the crimes of beasts who had invaded the international Olym- pics village and turned one of the dormitories of athletes into a bloodbath. It is not yet certain whether a loan that was to have been given by our government to Uganda has been canceled out of protest against the idiocy and the medievalism of Uganda's dictator. While protests are mounting against Ugandan brutalities, in the course of expressing shock over Amin's new anti-Semitic crusade, it may be well to be prepared in advance with demands upon the nations of the • world to refrain from giving comfort to the new Many Canards in Politics criminal on the world scene. (In despair, in search for a nachtasyl—a haven There'll he lots to talk about, to discuss, to create disputes, to anger and frustrate as well as unify many Americans over many issues— of refuge in the night during Jewry's worst suffer- ings from anti-Semitism—Theodor Herzl yielded to and one labeled the Jewish issue and the Jewish vote" will be among a British proposal that Uganda be utilized for a them. Arnonz the disputable bits was one in Newsweek, under "Reading temporary Jewish homeland. He failed to get sup- the Media," which stated: "An early, 'unnoticed symptom of Jewish port for that British-made plan. How fortunate that political attitudes might nave been spotted in the Miami press galleries. it had failed, primarily due to the courageous No Jewish publication sought accreditation to the Democratic con- opposition of the Russian delegation, under the vention; three asked to cover the GOP." leadership of Menahem Ussishkin, at the World The fact is that the only Jewish news agency, the Jewish Tele- Zionist Congress in Basle in 1903). graphic Agency, which also publishes the Jewish Daily Bulletin, was What Amin did—and does! is only part of the represented by its White House correspondent, Joseph Pollakoff. terror. There is the Soviet Union, giving comfort to An item of interest, under the heading "The Jewish Vote at Both the sick-minded who are planting bombs in the the Democratic and Republican Conventions in 1948," appeared in mails and who boast that they are supporting those Near East Report, the Washington letter on American policy in the who massacred in Lydda and in Munich. They pon- Near Fast, edited by I. L. Kenen. It stated: tificate at the Kremlin, but they are bringing back Aiming to prove his favorite propaganda thesis that American into an international field the czarist pogroms! politicians must kowtow to Zionists in order to win elections, David How else is one to interpret the boast that the G. Nes recently told K:ltimore Evening Sun readers that President terrorists will be supported with weapons? The Truman was able to carry New York in his 1948 victory as a result Soviet spokesmen, already having admitted the of a pledge to Israel. crime of attempting to impose ransom upon free But Stanley A. Blumberg, a Baltimore journalist, debunked Nes men who wish to choose where to live, speak of in a column in the Sun on Aug. 23 in which he recalled that Truman arming bandits at a time when such Arab states had actually lost New York. Louis Bean, the analyst, has written that as Jordan and Lebanon look upon it with distrust Truman was elected in 1948 because he won farm states. and suspicion; at a time when the Russians had been Nes, U.S. charge in Cairo in 1967, is a prolific anti-Israel prop- ousted from Egypt where they must have sown dis- agandist who, we have occasionally pointed out, is often uninfluenced by facts. It's good that someone as well informed as Si Kenen is on the scene to expose canards—and there'll be plenty of them in the months ahead! • By Philip The Jewish Way- of Replying to Terror . Tree-Planting and the Call for Humanism cord. But how can one expect justice from a tyrant? There is a Yiddish saying: "Geh zukh yeysher fun a Cossack.' . . . Try to secure justice from a Cos- sack!" We shall no doubt have proof of the Russian compassion in United Nations General Assembly debates almost momentarily! There has to be a large measure of courage wherever there is a demand for plain speaking and for action against tyranny. After it had been stated that the U.S. loan to Uganda would be canceled because of Amin's Nazi position, it is now reported from Nairobi, Kenya, that Uganda had been told by U.S. Ambassador Thomas P. •elady that there is only a "short delay" in granting the $3,000,000 loan, "due to the need to work out certain final details . . " What kind of business is this, in the light of the temporary bit of bravery at the UN when George Bush signaled the U.S. veto of a measure that was shockingly unjust to Israel? Can't we have a few more declarations of faith in world decency? Already, the U.S. State Department has been commended by national Jewish organizations. Were they too hasty? Pathetically, truth is all too often treated for convenience, as a matter of political expedience. When it serves diplomatic purpose, fact is like putty, to be molded as the statesman chooses, That's how it has been at the UN; that's how it is with the big powers. There will be the Big Debate about terrorists; the U.S. and Canada will ask for sanctions against hi- jacking; perhaps there will be an effort to protect the mails—all in an effort to curb the murders by the crazed bandits who have gotten enough money to invade numerous world capitals. But France plays a game of opposition to protective measures, Britain is hesitant, Russia is in outspoken opposition to any attempt to curb crime. What's to be expected from such international inanities? Can we look forward to a day when truth and decency and self-respect will have meaning? It's the era we live in, and in this atmosphere when the fears even in American communities super- sede confidence in fellow human beings, we seem destined for a lot more trouble before we see the light of an humanitarian period restored in our lives. Book Month Salutes Israel's 25th Year • 'Hashmal' — Electricity in the Bible In answer to a question about Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison and the discovery of electricity, the popular Detroit Free Press Action Line gave this explanation: "All Franklin figured out in 1752 was that you can get quite a poke when you fly a kite with metal parts in a thunderstorm. Some Frenchmen had performed the same experiment two years before Franklin, but Ben got the fame. He didn't discover electricity either. Englishman Sir Thomas Browne coined the word in 1646. It's a long way from lightning to light bulbs, and Ben had a lot of other things on his mind. When he wasn't busy thinking up sayings like 'Fish and visitors smell in three days' for Poor Richard's Almanac, he was tied up tinkering with pot-bellied stoves, bifocal glasses and indoor toilets. Ben was always on hand for political causes too, once started a move- ment to oust the bald eagle as a national symbol, campaigned to replace the 'dirty, foul ill-tempered eagle' with the turkey." ISRAEL fancioftheBoof 11".1111111 :11:11• -11M11301 As to electricity: who did discover the high power? We often turn to the Bible for clues. Israel has utilized terms from the Bible and Talmud to enrich the spoken Hebrew language, with the result that hashmal became the popular word for electricity. It is from Ezekiel. Three times hashmal is mentioned in Ezekiel, as follows: Ezekiel 1:4: And I looked, and, behold, a stormy wind came out of the north, a great cloud, with a fire flashing up, so that a bright- ness was round about it; and out of the midst thereof as the color of electrum, out of the midst of the fire. Ezekiel 1:27: And I saw as the color of electrum, as the appear- ance of fire round about enclosing it, from the appearance of his loins and upward: and from the appearance of his loins and downward I saw as it were the appearance of fire, and there was brightness round about him. Ezekiel 8:2: Then I beheld, and /0 a likeness as the appearance of fve - from the appearance of his loins and downward, fire; and from his loins and upward, as the appearance of brightness, as the color of electrum. While the devil often quotes the Bible for his purpose, the Holy Book doesn't hurt the scientist either. • Trees Perpetuate Names of Victims In pre-Israel days in Palestine, every time an Arab uprooted a tree planted by a Jew on Jewish National Fund land it was replaced by a dozen additional ones. Now, in memory of the victims of Arab insanities perpetrated by terrorists, a forest will be planted in the Modi'in Israel area. Every time there is an attempt at destruction, Jews rebuild. That's our basic ideal: to build rather than destroy. In our own community. the JNE reports that some 85 per cent of the trees planted as memorials to the Munich victims were by non- Jews: they had read the call to action in The Jewish News, they re- ported to JN P. Planting and building is one of the JeWish answers to terror. 2—Friday, Sept. 22: 1972 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS JEWISH BOOK MONTH October 27- November 26,1972 Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the State of Israel More than 2,000 local groups will conduct programs in observance of Jewish Book Month, which the Jewish Book Council of the National Jewish Welfare Board has designated for Oct. 27-Nov. 26. "Israel: Land of the Book"—the theme chosen by the JIVB's Book Council for this year's observance in honor of Israel's 25th anniver- sary—is here reproduced in three languages—Unglish, Yiddish and Hebrew. JWB will also conduct two group consultations, has published program resources and will conduct other events which have been designed to be useful to Jewish centers and othr corn- agencies in programs celebrating Israel's 25th anniversary. • ....-- - - -- .-.-... -- .... 11,