Hadassah Saves Leg of Bedouin Hurt by Arab Mine

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A. Bedouin shepherd, Rashed Muhamed Abdulla Sadaka, from Almidla on the
West Bank, had his right leg saved at the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Cen-

ter by Prof. Henry Romanoff (right), head of the cardiovascular surgery department.
With Rashed are his sister and brother-in-law, visiting him from their home village.
Hashed recently stepped on a mine planted by Arabs during the Six-Day War. The
operation, which included vein grafts and cleaning clots from the blood vessels, took
about five hours. Three weeks later, Rashed's leg was normal and he is ready to be
discharged from the hospital. Rashed expressed his gratitude to Prof. Romanoff and
said he had been "treated wonderfully."

U.S. Grants to YIVO to Spur Recording of History

NEW YORK—Recent Jew-
ish history that could have
been lost or obscured may
now be written with the help
of grants from the National
Endowment for the Humani-
ties—if the YIVO Institute for
Jewish Research and the
Jewish community can come
up with matching funds.

awarded Dr. Lucian Dobros-

zycki, VIVO research asso-
ciate and a recent immi-
grant from Poland, to study
"the abortive efforts of 200,-
000 Polish-Jewish survivors
of World War II to re-estab-
lish Jewish life" there be-
tween 1944-1948.

meets the $20,000 matching
proviso—to Ezekiel Lifschutz
and Zosa Szajkowski, YIVO
archivist and research asso-
ciate, respectively.
Their project is completion
of cataloguing and micro-
filming documents in YIVO
archives "pertaining to the
Immigration and Americani-
zation of Eastern European
Jews (1860s-19505). Such ma-
terials would deteriorate
were they not soon micro-
filmed.
The Weinreich Center has
been training scholars and
students for teaching and
research. The center has
been the recipient of a re-
newed . award: $382,000 if
YIVO raises an additional
$161,000.
The YIVO Institute for
Jewish Research, founded 45
years ago in Vilna, Poland,
is the major Jewish institu-
tion of world-wide scope
dedicated to research and
education in the history, eth-
nography and languages of
East European Jewry. It is
located at 1048 Fifth Avenue,
New York City.

Dr. Dobroszycki, who was
According to the provisions able to bring with him from
of one grant, Dr. Barbara Poland "5,000 primary docu-
Kirshenblatt - Gimblett, a ments" pertaining to his
young folklorist on leave subject, sets his project
from the University of Texas mainly in the brief period
serving as visiting professor after the war when the Pol-
at YIVO's Max Weinreich ish government allowed the
Center for Advanced Jewish decimated Jewish commu-
Studies, will investigate "Old nity to set up "central and
World Yiddish Folksong Per- local bodies, schools, reli-
formance in Its Social Con- gious institutions, newspapers
text."
and periodicals, publishing
The need for writing the houses, theatrical companies,
project at this time, points self-help organizations."
out the folklorist — who will
The era ended with "the
interview in depth East Euro- outbreak of the anti-Jewish
pean Jewish immigrant folk- riots of the middle and late
singers living in New York 1940s, which sparked the
City—is that "the last sources first postwar Jewish exodus
for the information" are from Poland."
"rapidly advancing in years."
Neither grant of NEH—an
F end s also have been agency of the United States
government — is outright.
YIVO must produce match-
CARS TO Si NAVE
ing
funds for each. Dr. Kirsh-
Ts way 'Nth Al.. /ON. Newish-
enblatt will receive $47,000 if Large Families
oil we Aim. yew a. wereseluses.
Inswees1 we. I.C.C. hisemeell
YIVO adds $10,000. Dr. Do-
broszycki gets $20,000 from .4re on the Decline
DRIVEAWAY SERVICE
the NEH if YIVO finds its
JERUSALEM (JTA)—The
9970 Grand River
own $10,000.
number of large families is
Detroit, Mich. 43204
NEIL will also renew an decreasing, according to the
WE 1-0620-21-22
$80,000 allotment —if YIVO National Insurance Institute.
In the early 1960s, 42 per
cent of the country's children
were being raised in families
with four or more offspring.
In 1970, 1971 and 1972, how-
ever, these four-plus families
were raising only 38.6 per
cent of the nation's young-
sters.

■

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

The study also showed that
the number of large families
decreased by about 1,500 in
the last decade. They num-
ber today about 21,000.

Another discovery of the
survey is that more than half
of Israel's families have more
than one breadwinner. In
small families, one out of
three mothers go out to work;
among large families, one
out of 10 mothers work, but
older children often work to
help balance the family bud-
get.

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WOMEN OF
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ASK YOUR HELP IN PLANTING A FOREST

HONORING ISRAEL'S 25th ANNIVERSARY

(An extension of their Forest-Recreation Center in Kiryat Shmonah,
memorializing the 14 victims, including 9 children, killed in the
bombing of a school bus by Arab terrorists.)

ISRAEL'S 25th ANNIVERSARY

PRE-DONOR RALLY and PETITE LUNCHEON

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1972, 12 Noon

CONGREGATION B'NAI MOSHE
W. 10 MILE AT KENOSHA, OAK PARK

GUEST ARTISTS

CANTOR
LOUIS KLEIN (L)

Cong. B'nai Moshe

CANTOR
HYMAN ADLER

Cong. B'nai David

DOOR PRIZE

PLEASE BRING YOUR BLUE-WHITE BOX FOR CLEARANCE

LAIRS. FRANK SILVERMAN. MRS. WILLIAM LEVIN, MRS. JACK ROSENTHAL,
Program Chairman
President
Fund Raising Chairman

