`A Small Kit and a Good Word'—Dean of Technion Medical Center Recalls the Not-So-Good Old Days wounded, and the sole con- countries. It also will provide nection with the rest of Jeru- increased opportunity for Is- raelis who until now had to salem was by wireless. go abroad for want of open- "I had a message from the health department in Tel ings• The medical school is re- Aviv that Haifa had been liberated and would I like to cruiting bright young scien- take over the surgical depart- Lists, and one of Erlik's tasks meet at the Rambam Med- on this trip is to interest ical Center." Dr. Erlik Americans in what the center responded that he would be has to offer. Another task was to visit more than happy to do so, but there was the little detail Dr. William Kolff, head of the artificial organs division of bow to get down from Scopus. at the University of Utah With a Red Cross-super- College of Medicine, who on one of vised truce, Dr. Erlik was Sunday will receive BY MARLOWE DUBLN Medicine has come a long way since David Erlik was a young doctor in the Jezreel Valley. The dean of the Technion ladical Center contrasted what it was to be a doctor then — a small kit "and a good word for the patient" were the sum total of his equipment — with what it is to practice medicine today, assisted by computers and Issol.e best devices that tech- nology can produce. Erlik was in the United States to speak on behalf of the four-year old medical cen- ter. Last week, he addressed the Detroit Chapter of the American Society for Tech- nion. The center's uniqueness lies in its pioneering relationship with the Israel Institute of Technology — Technion. As medicine becomes increasing- ly technical, there is greater need for. engineers who un- derstand physiology a n d Ir.'"- --:ctors who understand engi- neering. "If you go into a surgical ward or a medical ward, you're surrounded by ma- chinery, all kinds of techno- logical devices and artificial organs that help keep a pa- tient alive," said Dr. Erlik. DR. DAVID ERLIK able to leave. He has been two Harvey Prizes as the in- with Rambam ever since, ventor of the artificial kidney. earning international recogni- Dr. Erlik also was to meet tion for pioneering surgical with the other recipient of techniques. the Tech ni o n prize, Dr. Last year, Dr. and Mrs. Claude E. Shannon, professor Erlik and nine other Israeli of science at the Massachu- surgeons attended the Inter- setts Institute of Technology. national Surgical Congress in The Technion Medical Con- Moscow. It wasn't easy to ter is doing research of its obtain visas, and the papers own in the fledgling neuro- arrived only after the presi- physiology, biochemical and dent of the international so- and immunology d epart- ciety threatened to transfer ments. One young scientist is the congress elsewhere if the doing original work in trails- Israelis were not permitted plantation immunology, par- to attend. l ticularly _important with the Although they met few increasing number of organ emigrated to Palestine in 1924, left to study medicine in France and returned fol- lowing graduation in 1935. He went to work in the Jezreel Valley, assisting kibutzim that were without any medi- cal facility. "Those were days of big troubles in Palestine," he re- calls. At one lonely hillside kibutz, two young shepherds were killed by Arab attack- ers, and Dr. Erlik was sent there for a week "to cheer up the kibutz." But how to Jewish doctors — Dr. Erlik transplants taking place. get .there? "A friend went believes it was fear — the While in Detroit, Dr. Erlik with me, and we rode a Israelis did speak with many invited Dr. Adrian Kantro- horse, without a saddle, up young Soviet Jews, in Mos- witx, Sinai Hospital's noted the mountain. I was a very cow, Leningrad and Kiev. heart surgeon, to lecture on young doctor then." He reports that most of the mechanical heart at the There was the time he ac- Technion. companied a pregnant worn- those he met are now in Dr. Erlik said be often is an from Nahalal to the Israel, including a surgeon asked if increasing technol- central hospital in Afula 20 who is at work in the Rain- ogy is removing the human miles away. It was a fright- barn Hospital. "During the element from the practice of ening ride through the Arab last two years, we've had 400 medicine. "But consider how town of Nazareth, which was doctors come to Israel from many are alive today, thanks under curfew, btit they made the Soviet Union," be said, fees to technology," he said. "In the r a n s o in it. The woman died at the "but road accidents, a man can hospital due to complications, threaten to cut that off." be kept alive with artificial but doctors managed to save Dr. Erlik anticipates that resuscitation until his organs her twins. Last year, Dr. young Soviet Jews who are Erlik met the two women he leading in the effort to emi- recover. "The purpose of technology helped to deliver 35 years grate will refuse a university education to avoid being is not to take out humanity, When Hadassah Hospital charged later for their educe- but to help humanity. Y ■ s, there would be moral and opened on Mt. Scopus in 1939, tion. One beneficial side-effect of ethical problems if there Dr. Erlik was the first doctor on duty. And he was the last the opening of the Technion were human experimentation. the Medical Center is the new But in Nazi Germany, tech- to leave in 1948. During availability of positions for nology wasn't guilty; men's Arab siege, he was the only surgeon for hundreds of medical experts from other morals were." Boris Smolar's 'Between You I ... and Me' 1 Editor•in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1972, ./TA Inc.) • . — — — EDUCATIONAL BREAKTHROUGH: Israel considers itself standing now on the verge of an educational break- through with regard to providing academic education to young men and women coming from Asian and North African families. The issue of providing higher education to young Orien- tal Jews in Israel has been a burning issue during the last few years. It is one of the major grievances voiced by the restless Israeli "Black Panthers " The latter complain that talented and dedicated young Israelis from Asian and North African homes feel themselves culturally deprived. They are not given the possibility to obtain the education needed for admission to any of the Israeli institutions of higher learning, the Black Panthers assert. To understand this complaint, one must be aware of the fact that 60 per cent of all youngsters in Israel of elementary school age come from Asian and North Afri- can families. But among high school pupils they constitute only about 30 per cent. The percentage. shrinks to 15 per cent when it comes to passing Israel's matriculation exam- inations. This, at a time when 1,500,000 of Israel's more than 3,000,000 citizens are immigrants from North African and Asian countries. The shrinkage in higher education of the Oriental youngsters is due primarily to the fact that only elemen- tary education is free in Israel. Post-elementary education must be paid for—something which most Oriental Jews cannot afford financially. The government realizes that nation building in Israel depends on successful absorption of all the various elements of young Jews in the country, economically, socially and educationally. It therefore helps some of the Oriental young people in their aspiration to secure higher education: especially when they proved them- selves in the Israel defense forces. However, these for- tunates constitute a very small group in the total student body of Israel's institutions of higher learning. • • • THE SLAWSON FUND: The Hebrew University now offers new horizons to these culturally starved Oriental Youngsters. It has established a Pre-Academic Program at the university with intensive courses intended to help those who would otherwise be denied the possibility of a univer- sity education. The Pre-Academic Program is concentrating on bring- ing , up students of disadvantaged backgrounds to the uni- versity standards. It is built on the recognition that one of the greatest dangers faced by Israel is the division of The medical school, which the population into socially and culturally advantaged and is affiliated with the modern disadvantaged. Experimenting for several years, the He- Rambam Medical Center and brew University regards its Pre-Academic Program as one the Rothschild Hospital be- of its focal programs. This year this program is helping came a part of the Technion some 1,100 students to start on full university courses. It only last year. Dr. Erlik is considers the early results of this program a breakthrough. considered the driving force A lending hand to the Hebrew University has now been behind that merger, as well given by the John Slawson Fund for Research, Training as the architect of the school and Education of the American Jewish Committee. The fund has voted a grant of $25.000 to enable the univer- itself. sity to conduct research for the evaluation of its Pre- Russian-born, Dr. Erlik Academic Program as practiced. It is intended that this study not only would be limited to evaluation but would also include a program of action been no comparable large scorned," and where the gen- _- roots, he claims, is both good A Review research which would result in the discovery of innovative civilization in which fa- eral method of child care is and bad in human terms. measures for the program. It is also intended that this BY LOUIS PANUSH thers have counted for so a "fascinating experiment" What is good or bad depends FAMILY MATTF.R.S, by Lawrence study would provide a model for similar programs. which Americans may well little.") H Fuchs. Published by Run- on one's version of the good The research program financed by the Slawson Fund N. Y. 1972. 268 - dom House, There is very little refer- watch. life. He describes the Amer- will be conducted under the direction of the authorities pages. 16.95.. The author describes the . ican family system by, what ence in this book to the Jew- of the Pre-Academic School headed by Dr. David Harman. The decline of the Amer- he considers, its most impor- ish family per se, except in cult of independence, the A year ago the American Friends of the Hebrew ican f a m i I y, the conflicts 1 a n t characteristics a n d connection with some of the downgrading of the father, University pledgd to stablish a $10,000,000 scholarship fund within families that separate which contributed to the at- above characteristics. Thus the lack of intimate and in- for students of the Center for Pre-Academic Studies at tense relationships between members of families from tack on the institution and the author states, for exam- , the Hebrew University. A gift of $1,200 will now provide ple, that the Hebrews con- parents and children, and each other—indifference, ali- the conflicts within it: one student with a year's scholarship; $5,000 will underwrite family tributed too, together with the absence of support sys- enation, the generation gap, —the rejection of the one student's expenses through to the bachelors degree. tems for the family by socie- infidelity, drugs, sex, frustra- from which one has come Romans, Greeks and Chris- JEWISH FEDERATIONS' AID: Speaking of higher ty. "Children need loving tion, anger, and other mani- -one's own parents and tians to the subordination of parents who speak and act education in Israel. it will be interesting to many in this women (very debatable, L.P.) festations of families in trou- authoritatively in order to country to know that the American Jewish communities grandparents; ble—are a matter of public --the young who see it as the And, while they believed that grow into healthy adults," he are currently providing support to the seven institutions of "husbands and fathers must knowledge and concern. primary enemy of human concludes. Also, the "resto- higher learning in Israel in the amount of $52,000,000. The be given power to command Rabbi Groner, of Cong. individuality; so that the entire family ration of fathering may mean money is allocated by the United Israel Appeal and the Shaarey Zedek, considered —the widespread belief in could fulfill God's law they the survival of parenting it- Jewish Agency from United Jewish Appeal funds. th e bsolute value of hn . Aid from Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds to the present status of the made stringent rules which self and the building of hap- man independence; Jewish family and the direr- the institutions of higher learning in Israel has grown checked the abuse of male pier, healthier families in tion toward which it was — th e precocity, aggressive- tremendously since 1967. The federations also have been never justified pa- America." And, also, "What mess and self-centeredness Power and in terms of either is good for children—listen- making direct grants averaging $700,000 a year to the .neading serious enough to triarchy of small children; discuss it in his sermon dur- sinful- ing, sensitive, emphatic but Hebrew University-Technion maintenance campaign. intense, open romped- female inferiority or The board of directors of the Council of Jewish Federa- — the ing the High Holy Days. authoritative fathers—is also ness." Hon between siblings; In this book, the author— pr. th at the Jewish bus- good for mothers and mar- tions and Welfare Funds requested that the Jewish Agency. prolonged agonizing ad' the institutions of higher learning in Israel and the United professor of American Civil- —the olescent rebellion with par- band and father, " once seen riages." in Eastern European villages This advice, combined with Jewish Appeal should make clear that the basic support ization and chairman of the cuts who do not know how Jewish atti- for university maintenance in Israel comes frtini the Jewish of A m e r i c an as authoritative even in Si- the historical to cope with it; Studies at Brandeis Univer- became, according to tudes and practices and em- Agency—and that the bulk of these funds, which comes lence, sity who has encouraged new the extraordinary freedom a rich literature, a passive phasis on the uniqueness and from the United States and Canada, are received from the of unmarried females; federations and welfare funds through the United Jewish approaches to education in member of the family, the humaneness of the family, parenting and family—deals —the power and assertive - good Jewish boy grown up." may restore happiness and Appeal and United Israel Appeal. mess of married women; with the problem of why the The CJFWF regards funds for scholarships as part of he spends on this health to the Jewish family —the anxieties of mothering The most American family is in trou- subject is on family life in in America. This book will funds for maintenance. The seven institutions of higher provoke; they ble and offers some common- the kibbutz in Israel (four help the reader to get a bet- learning supported in Israel by the Jewish Agency from —the ambiguity' of male an- sense suggestions. P a g e s ) where, be notes, ter understanding of the funds raised by Jewish Federations in this country include thority and the decline of The American family sys- - . - monogamy is American family in general the Hebrew University, Technion, Weizmann Institute, Tel patriarchy ("t h e r e has "today tern, which has deep cultural staunchly entrenced and ex- and, perhaps, of his own Aviv University, Bar Dan University, Haifa University "Our purpose, then, is to let the medical students look into electronics and technical devices and to let engineers interested in hi -medical eng- ineering get an opportunity to understand physiol• ogy. And we're just at the c beginning." Restoring Family Happiness: Lawrence Fuchs' Notable Analysis 52 — Friday, Oct. 20, 1972 THE DETROIT Jamul Dints t r a in a r i t a 1 affairs are family situation. and Beersheba University.