Bnai David School Strike Impending;
UHS Teachers Keep Asking Arbitration

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30—Friday, Oct. 13, 1972

Temple Will Present

Antonio's 'Millhouse'

Birmingham Temple film
series will present Emile de
Antonio's "Millhouse" 8:30
p.m. Saturday, at the temple.
• The film utilizes newsreel
and TV footage and inter-
views in its coverage of
President Richard Milhous
Nixon.
. Nominal fee will include
coffee and popcorn. For in-
formation, call Mrs. William
Ernst, 557-1383.

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Unless Cong. Bnai David
acts to negotiate a contract
with the teachers and to re-
sume talks for an agreement
by today, there will be a
strike at that school, David
Wayntraub, president of the
Bnai David School teachers,
stated this week.
Ile said the synagogue
school board was given 10-
day notice a week ago Wed-
nesday, to act on decisions
reached by the teachers who
rejected a 3.2 per cent wage
increase offer, demanding a
5 per cent increase.
The teachers also reject
elimination of sabbatical
clauses from previous con-
tracts and tenure proposals
that are unacceptable.
Wayntraub denied that
leachers had rejected agree-
ments. He said that a propo-
sal for a Din Torah—a rabbi-
nical court — was accepted
by the teachers, but that the
school board refused to com-
mit itself, as the teachers
did, to adhere to rulings to
be handed down by such a
court.
The last meeting between
teachers and school board
was held immediately after
Yom Kippur. Teachers con-
tinue to conduct classes but
they may walk off today if
negotiations are not resum-
ed.
At the same time, the He-
brew Teachers Association of
the United Hebrew Schools
made another plea for a
board of arbitration to as-
sist in solving the impasse.
Joseph Baras, president of
the UHS Teachers Associa-
tion, stated Wednesday that
while the teaching staff vot-
ed unanimously to insist that
the next step can be only
through arbitration, this pro-
posal was summarily reject-
ed by the school administra-
tors.
The UHS teachers, in a
memo to the president, Nor-
man Katz, with copies to all
board members, charged
one-sided and erroneous in-

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terpretations of earlier re-
ported decisions for a three-
year contract.
The teachers' charges in-
clude harassment, humilia-
tion and intimidation of He-
brew teachers by a number
of administrators" and in
their proposals they declare
that they favor setting up
needed standards and evalua-
tive procedures to be reach-
ed by both teachers and ad-
ministrative staff. They

maintain that responsible
Detroiters are willing to act
as arbitrators and they plead
for resort to an arbitration
board to asist in resolving
the issues that have led to
the conflict.
On Thursday morning, how-
ever, a spokesman for the
UHS administration appear-
ed confident that the issues
will be resolved at a meet-
ing scheduled for Monday
evening.

2 Kids Celebrate With Shifman's

Franklin Lectures to Begin at WSU

"Medical-Social-Legal-Ethi-
cal Interfaces" is the theme
of Wayne State University's
22nd annual Leo M. Franklin
Memorial Lectures in Human
Relations.
Dr. Charles F. Whitten,
professor of pediatrics at
WSU's school of medicine
and program director for the
General Clinical Research
Center for Children at Chil-
dren's Hospital, is this year's
Franklin Lecturer.
First lecturer of the series
is Dr. Willard Gaylin, presi-
dent of the Institute of So-
ciety, Ethics and the Life
Sciences, Hastings-on-Hudson,
N. Y. He will speak 8 p.m.
Thursday in Upper DeRoy
Auditorium.
Dr. Nicholas Kittrie, pro-
fessor of criminal and com-
parative law at the Ameri-
can Law School and director
of the Institute for Studies
in Justice and Social Be-
havior, will speak on "The
Right to Live — The Right

to Die," Oct. 26.
Dr. Whitten will deliver the
final lecture Nov. 2, speaking
on "Neglect—Then Abuse:
Will This Be The Fate of
Sickle Cell Anemia?"

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Talent Galore!

Shel Shlfman (right) and Mark Suede, manager of
Shifman's Harvard Row Shop, present 12-year-old Amy
Rubin and Mike Soloman, 13, with the racing bicycles
the youngsters won during Shifman's grand opening cele-
bration.

personalized Music service exclusively designed
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Israel New Dimension of Jewish
Experience, Says Rotenstreich

The unique link between
Israel and Diaspora — in
which "a sense of identity
with Israel reinforces feel-
ings of iderftity with Jewish
tradition" — was described
by Israeli philosopher Dr.
Nathan Rotenstreich in a lec-
ture here Tuesday evening.
Dr. Rotenstreich, former
rector at the Hebrew Uni-
versity, where he is profes-
sor of philosophy, was in De-
troit for the "Jewish Educa-
tional Adventure," co-spon-
sored by the American Jew-
ish Committee and Midrasha,
College of Jewish Studies in
cooperation with the Jewish
Community Council and Jew-
ish Center.
Discussing "The Influence
of Modern Culture and So-
ciety on Jewish Thought"
based on his book "Tradition
and Reality," Dr. Roten-
streich suggested that there
are new dimensions of Jew-
ish experience, calling for
"new formulations of Jewish
consciousness in our own
time."
These new dimensions add
to two existing lines of for-
mulation and justification,
said Dr. Rotenstreich, name-
ly the formulation of ideas
based on the Bible texts and
the use of these ideas to con-
front other, competing ideas,
such as those expounded by
the Church
"Jewish culture all through
the g Hone has been
shaped by the past," he said.
"The past is far away. It
has to be recaptured once In
awhile to make it a present
fact. Israel is a present sym-
bol of Jewish Identity, not a
past event, but a reality."
The uniqueness of the
Diaspora-Israel relationship

lies in that Israel is a crea-
tion of a collective effort,
"the creation of the aspira-
tions of Jewish generations
and the persistence and ten-
acity of Jews in our own
time ... Only when the Jews
of Palestine joined forces
with Jewry all over the
world, and the latter realized
the notion of return" through
the instrument of Palestine,
only then could a Jewish
state be realized, he said.
The new dimensions of
Jewish experience are re-
flected in two related ideo-
logical aspects of Zionism,
he said. First, the Jews,
though they share many
ideas with the world, know
that based on historical fact
they "can't rely on the
world, only on themselves"
and thus must establish their
own entity (Israel). Second,
although Jews are not ac-
cepted by the outside world.
"the way of acceptance and
the amount of acceptance is
enough to uproot the Jewish
identity, or national ego."
Thus, the Jew is attracted by
the world but afraid of losing
his identity.
A course utilizing Dr.
Rotenstreich's book will be-
gin 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Midrasha.

Tel Aviv University an-
nounced that a leading Amer-
ican nuclear physicist, AL-
VIN RADOWSKY, was im-
migrating to Israel, where
he will teach theoretical
physics. Prof. Radowsky, who
developed a method for ex-
tending the life span of
nuclear-submarine reactors,
worked for 20 years for the
Atomic Energy Commission's
reactor division in German-
town, Md.

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