West Bank Arabs Add Classes, While Cairo Illiteracy Rate Rises TEL AVIV — Ma'ariv, the live survey of the school sys- Tel Aviv newspaper pub- tem in the West Bank prior lished results of a compara- to Israeli occupation and to- day. According to the findings, Wishing Al Orr Friends 1,000 new classrooms have & Customers A Happy, Healthy) been constructed during the and Peaceful New Year. intervening period, following an Israeli estimation that about 2,000 of the classrooms surveyed after the 1967 war I Optical (o. , Prescription were judged unfit for use. In the past year, 250 class- rooms were added, with es- Hwy 260C , COOuDGE timates of another 1,000 dur- 543 3343 OAK PARK ing the coming five years. 1 mo , Im v , CUTLASS SUPREME T A DELTA 88 '74 OLDSMOBILES ARE HERE! 342-7400 342-1000 E See or Calf 15000 7 MILE, Detroit, Mich. a 4 4 2 342-7000 I QUOTE MY LOWEST PRICE FIRST! DELTA ROYALE NINETY EIGHT C S George M. Brant SUPERIOR OLDSMOBILE 0 G A T 0 M 1-- may _411 Our .griendi& g e in3cribed -a, gook ..gOr of eXiie A i clealtIty & Pro3perou3 n ew Year Ruben Gold, C.L.U. & Associate 1 Northland Drive, Suite 236 Southfield, Mich. 48075 354-6630 NAINBACHUS101111 MUTUAL Uri Nosummics **field, ,Wassarlaurus. Organi-rd )85/ commui 4112 nzrizri ritlt n2v5 The Staff of EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES In Detroit Join with the People of Israel in Expressing To Their Passengers, Friends, and the Community at large Best Wishes for a Happy New Year EL AL EL AL Israel Airlines The Airline of the People of Israel 24100 Southfield Rd. Phone: 557-5737 More than 230,000 pupils The average number of students per class has been are enrolled this autumn, reduced from 55 prior to the three-quarters of them in war, to 36, the survey said. government schools and the rest in private or United Na- tions - operated institutions. Bour guiba's Idea The number is about 12,000 - greater than last year. to Replace Jordan Meanwhile, the Cairo ma- Ahar Sa'a quoted With Palestine Hit gazine Mohsin Idris, head of the It was re- JERUSALEM — city's planning and works ad- ported that Zuhair Mohsin, ministration, who said the head of the Syrian-backed percentage of the capital's A r a b organization A-Sa'ika population which is iliterate said in an interview pub- last year stood at 62 per cent. lished by the Beirut daily Al The figure, up from 54 per Nahar that he rejected the cent in 1966, was attributed to proposal by Tunisian Presi- the heavy migration of rural dent Habib Bourguiba for es- dwellers into Cairo seeking tablishment of a Palestinian an improvement in their state in place of Jordan. standard of living. Idris said "I don't even know one the capital's four per cent an- Palestinian or any other nual population growth was Arab, who is willing to ac- due half to the birth rate and cept such an idea," Mohsin half to the migration. said. The 886 primary schools in "But that does not mean the city, he said, had to be that one may conclude we op- increasedto 1,235 in order to pose—nor is there any rea- meet the increased demand. son to oppose—creation of a "The level of schooling is de- Palestinian state in part of clining steadily," Idris said. the liberated territory of Pal- estine," he added. Mohsin said he also reject. ed Algerian President Houari Boumedienne's proposal for direct negotiations between Israel and the terrorist or- ganizations. Criticizing AI-Fatah, the largest guerrilla group in the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization, Mohsin alleged that 1,000,000 Lebanese pounds contributed to all the groups by Kuwait following Leban- ese-Palestinian battles last spring were all grabbed by Fatah. Similarly, he said, Fatah picked only its own wounded officers to be sent for medi- cal treatment to the Soviet Union, even though Sa'ika suffered more casualties. Meanwhile, at a news con- ference with local newsmen, Lebanese President Suleiman Franjieh was asked what position he had presented to visiting United Nations Sec- retary General Kurt Wald- heim concerning the "Pales- tinian problem." "All that will be agreed upon in an agreement with the Palestinian people will win our agreement, and all that is rejected by the Pales- tinians will be rejected by us,' he said. 14—Friday, Sept. 28, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Angie Dobbins and Staff Yo u 1/03 S app/ new gear, ANGIE DOBBINS Pied wit4 -ilea/14 and -11ap pine33 OWNER COSMETOLOGIST * (Formerly from the Second Look Salon) _Nuttier goutevard Salon Staff of experienced Hair Fashion Designers can create an even more beautiful you! llorthiarti3 .a3hion Styli313 Formerly from the Second Look Salon 296 South Hunter Blvd., Birmingham 647-6566 Open Tuesday thru Saturday Evenings by Appointment MONTGOMERY ARD Shlikhim Group at U.S. Centers Is Biggest Yet NEW YORK—A total of 16 Israeli communal workers (shlikhim)—the largest group of new workers to arrive in one season—are joining the staffs of American Jewish community centers and YM- YWHAs this fall for two- to three-year periods of service under a program sponsored by the National Jewish Wel- fare Board (JWB), the youth and hehalutz department of the World Zionist Organiza- tion (WZO) and the Ameri- can Zionist Youth Founda- tion. The Israelis have been re- cruited for work in North American centers and Ys in an effort to enhance Jewish programing and strengthen Jewish identification. Now in its ninth year, the program has proven to be an effective means of en- riching the Jewish dimension of center programing. The 16 shlikhim include Emanuel Allon of Detroit. He who passes judgment on fools is himself judged io be a fool. —Petiheta Ekah Rabbati With Friendly Greetings and Good Wishes for a very Happy New Year!