Jewish Agency Provides for Rental
Housing; Deals With Education

NYC Set to Probe
Day Care Centers
With Hasidim Only

NEW YORK (JTA) - -A
spokesman for the city's
JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Guarantee Insurance Corp.,
agency for child development
said that the agency was Jewish Agency Assembly de- the giant mortgage guarantee
proceeding with plans to dared that more rental hour- firm. The plan called for 90
check the eligibility of fam- ing in Israel was vital for per cent mortgage loans for
ilies whose children Pow 'at-- absorbing immigrants and to low-price flats and no mort-
tend two day care centers relieve the indigenous housing gages at all for expensive
ones.
in Brooklyn poverty areas in shortage.
Karl's plan has attracted a
which all the enrollees are
Adopting a draft resolution
good deal of attention in Is-
from Hasidic families.
of its housing committee
There are some 400 such . which included some of rael. and Jewish Agency
centers throughout the city I America's top Jewish build- Chairman Louis Pincus
operated with city, state and ers—the Agency Assembly promised it would be
federal funds.
called on its permanent tech-': thoroughly studied.
Announcement by the ACD nical committee on housing to
A resolution from the aliya
of its re-registration plans "consider ways of reducing committee urged that officials
evoked opposition from both financing costs and of the Agency's immigration
Rabbi Minuet Butrnan, head building costs with the pur- department receive on-the-job
of the board of the Mosdoth
pose of creating the frame- training to raise their pro-
center in Crown Heights, and
work for a new mortgage pro- fessional standards. -
Hertz Frankel, spokesman
gram in Israel essential to The agricultural settle-
for the Bedford-Harrison cen-
reduce the price of apart- ment committee called for the
ter in Williamsburg.
ments and to encourage in- formation of a joint body of
They contended any
vestments in rental housing." Jewish Agency officials and
changes in the ethnic make-
The resolution reflected a representatives of diaspora
up of children attending
Jewry to introduce new in-
would force the closing of detailed plan for overhauling
dustries into rural settle-
the centers with their pro- Israel's mortgage system pro-
grams of kosher food and posed to the housing commit- ments.
The Assembly,adopting the
Jewish cultural and Yiddish- tee by Max Karl of Milwau-
kee, president of Mortgage resolutions of the higher edu-
speaking environments.

Museum's Warsaw Ghetto Display
Recalls Uprising of 30 Years Ago

,

As the 30th anniversary Shaar Ilashomayim Religious
of the Warsaw Ghetto Up- School of Windsor.
rising approaches, there is
Rev. Carl Scovel, minis-
mounting interest in the War- ter of King's Chapel, Bos-
saw ghetto display at the ton, wrote Bozich that he has
World War II War Crimes advised Unitarian ministers
Museum in Keatington An- In five surrounding cities to
send their young people to
tique Village.
the War Crimes Museum.
The village, located on Jos-
lyn Rd., off 1-75 in Lake "This is a great service that
Orion, is operated by Stanley you are rendering," wrote
Bozich, a longtime collector Rev. Scovel. "You are as
of documents and items from much a minister and prophet
the Third Reich, as well as a as anyone could be in this
researcher of that era. His country. May .God bless you
goal primarily is to show in your work"
youth the tragedy of the past
The children in Rabbi Mel-
and to keep it from happen- , vin Sachs' seventh grade
ing again. Despite the vast Shaar liashomayini religious
range of material, Bozich school class "had heard stor-
has carefully organized it so ies from their parents," he
as to avoid creating a horror' wrote, "but it had always
museum.
been difficult to believe
The War Crimes Museum them." The trip to the muse-
attempts to show life as it um, said the Windsor educa-
was in the Warsaw Ghetto, ! tor, "had a very settling
in which mare than 480,000 effect" on the children, de-
Jewish men, women and chit-' scribed as "the worst class
dren were imprisoned in only in terms of attitude and be-
1.3 square miles. Destruction ! havior.
of the ghetto began on April !
19, 1943.
As Bozich describes it in U.S. Mizrachi Leader
Wants Israel to Keep
his museum brochure:
"Great heroism was dis- I West Bank Area
played by the Jewish martyrs
JERUSALEM (JTA) — An
in the last days of the ghetto
American Mizrachi leader
against overwhelming odds.
urged the Israeli government
This 'Warsaw Uprising' was
not to return any part of the
not a spontaneous, unplanned
West Bank to the Arabs.
act stemming from uncertain-
Rabbi Bernard Bergmann
ty, but a preconceived, delib-
contented that "The govern-
erate call to arms. It was a ment of Israel has no right
fight for dignity and the hon-1 or power to forego the in-
or of the Jewish people. It I heritance of our forefathers '
was this act that grew out of which was restored to us
their yearning for dignity 'I through the Lord's mercies
that kept two SS divisions and through the heroism of :
fighting in the ghetto for 27 our sons."
days; instead of the three-
Rabbi Bergmann spoke for
day operation the Nazis in- himself and for Rabbi AVig-
tended it to be."
dor Tsipperstein of the U.S.
Among Itozich's collection and Rabbi Tibor Rosenbaum
is a
1939 Mercedes- Berl"' , of Switzerland.
standing in front of the mu-
The three comprise the new

■

Rabbi Sachs,
Now, said
they "realize what their peo-
ple had endured not so many
years ago. They also began
to realize to what depths of
inhumanity man can fall, if
he chooses to ignore the basic
moral teachings of religon."
The comment of .a high
school student from Kings-
ton, Mich., was possible the
most telling of all "Just think
that every one of those
6,000,000
Jews that were
slaughtered had a name,
family and a life like me.
It's spooky to think what did
and could happen."
There is a small admission
fee to the museum, hours of
which are 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tuesday through Saturday;
and noon-6 p.m. Sunday. For
group rates and reservations,
call 391-0404.
Bozich and his wife Lou
often personally conduct the
tours of the museum. There
is also a taped explanation
of the displays.

cation committee, called on
the Agency to set up a per-
manent committee to define
criteria for the allocation of
Agency funds to Israeli uni-
versities each year and for
supervising the univerities'
long-range planning. Most of
the universities' funds come
from the Jewish Agency.

The budget committee ap-
proved the $470,000,000 budg-

et for

1973 - 74 but stressed
that it was not really enough

for all of the Agency's pro

grams. The Assembly assail-

ed the Soviet education tax

and the persecution of Jews

in Arab lands.

Yigal Allon, Israel's deputy
prime minister and minister
of education, said that Israel
was working toward the goal
of a free high school educa-
tion for everyone. At present,
free compulsory education in
Israel extends only from kin-
dergarten through the 10th
grade. Addressing the Jewish
Agency
Assembly, Allon
promised a free 11th grade
within four year. He said
that until then, 11th grade
tuition would be reduced by
25 per cent.

The Keren Ilayesod-United
Israel Appeal plans to raise
$125,000,000 for Israel in
1973. The announcement was
made by Ezra Shapiro, KH
chairman, at a conference of
55 Keren Ilayesod-U1A lead-
ers from 20 countries attend-
ing the assembly of the Jew-
ish Agency. Keren Hayesod
raises funds in Israel and in
69 other countries excluding
the United States. The lead-
ers were asked by S. J.
Kreutner, director general of
the KIT, to increase the num-
ber of contributions by con-
centrating on those who have
not contributed before, es-
pecially among young people.

10—Friday, Feb. 16, 1973

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Egypt Wants Peace, Brazil Envoy Says

JERUSALEM (JTA)—For- sapping Egypt's
resource
eign Minister Mario Gibson and that the Cairo govern
Barboza of Brazil believes ment would like to turn it
that Egypt genuinely wants efforts to the welfare of its;
peace so that it can concen- own people.
trate on its pressing internal
problems.
The Latin American diplo-
IF YOU TURN THE
mat wso was in Cairo re-
.
portedly conveyed his im-
UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T
pression of the stability and
FIND A FINER WINE THAN
political future of the Egyp-
tian government to Foreign
Minister Abba Eban at two
working sessions and a pri-
vate meeting.
Barboza reportedly said
Wiwories. 0.troit, Mich.
that the war situation was

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iii. cis• , •t ,
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