Yo! VIM WM IP ;IP ! !Ill MAI IMAIrlitoti 14 WIT flans 'YaAsover Neilornit for i-ocr Jews in -Military Services - ZAP ClV3L - 131!" f Weizmann, Develops Devices for Soldiers Handicaped in War REHOVOT — A total of 10 devices to ease the plight of wounded soldiers at the Re- habilitation Center of Tel Hashomer Hospital have been developed by the scien- tific services department of Weizmann Institute. Spurred to action by a tele- vised report shortly after the Yom Kippur War on the problems of war-wounded soldiers, the unit, headed by Daniel Barak, has been doing its best "to make independent living possible for these men." between Southfield S. Telegraph. Because Barak's depart- ment deals with the creation, adaptation and maintenance of scientific instruments for institute scientists, it is quali- fied to help find individual solutions for the needs of the handicaped. Minor adaptations of al- ready-existing gadgets help amputees perform b a sic motor functions. For ex- ample, for a young man amputated above the elbows, the institute workers devel- oped a rotating handle which allows his spoon to remain constantly horizontal, thus preventing spilling; replaced the knob on his typewriter with one that he can easily grasp with the hook of his prosthesis, thus permitting him to rotate paper without difficulty. Twenty - four - hour bedside care is no longer essential for the paralyzed patient whose push-button has been replaced by a far more sen- sitive switch that is activated on very slight pressure from palm or chin. Bedside tables have been improved to include a sur- face that rotates 360 degrees, which makes it possible for prone patients to read. NEW YORK—Full sedorim for entire Jewish military families and solo sedorim for small groups of men at isolated posts will be con- ducted as the result of world- wide Passover arrangements made by the National Jewish Welfare Board and commu- nity groups throughout the U. S. for Jewish military personnel, their families and sick or wounded perSonnel in Veterans Administration hospitals. Sedorim will be conducted by full-time and part-time Jewish chaplains and Jewisn military lay leaders, using kosher supplies and religious materials provided 'by JWB's commission off. Jewish chap- laincy and the JWB' women's organizations' s e r v ices to more than 500 overseas and domestic military installa- tions and to Veterans Admin- tration hospitals and other federal facilities for hospital- ized veterans. Among the supplies shipped by JWB for Passover observ- ances are religious literature, hagadot, as well as quanti- ties of ma t z at , wine and canned k o s her Passover foods. To help Jewish families in the military prepare for Pass- over, JWB provides a cas- ducted by chaplains. In some will be brought to the pa- sette recording for use by hospitals, the cassette record- I tents' bedside over the hos- Jewish chaplains, Jewish mil- ing of the Passover melodies pitals' public address system. itary lay leaders, and presi- dents and p rogram chairmen of military sisterhoods. One side of the cassette describes the preparation for the seder in the 'home. The other side has the most popular Pass- over melodies and the order of the seder. The JWB women's organi- zations' services, which has a Solo Seder program, has shipped special -packets of holiday foods and literature for Jewish servicemen sta- tioned at i s o l a t e d areas throughout the w o r Id and men on duty at remote weather and radar stations. The Jewish chaplains and Jewish military lay leaders served by JWE's commission on J e wish chaplaincy will conduct Passover services in K or e a, Frankfurt, Heidel- berg, Ramstein, Kaiserslau- tern, Munich and Stuttgart, Germany; the United King- dom, Okinawa, the Philip- pines, Hawaii. Panama Can- al Zone, Taiwan, Thailand, Japan, Alaska and installa- tions in the continental U.S. Jewish patients in VA hos- pitals will also participate in festival observances c o n - N. Y. Bar Assn. Voluntary Quota Support Hit by AJC ongress ' I Be safe on your vacation NEW YORK — A report trip—buckle up and live. by the committee on civil rights of the Bar Association of New York supporting the Voluntary adoption of racial quotas by employers, college admissions officers and hous- ing developers was assailed by the American J e w i Congress as "urging private citizens to become r a c i al Robin Hoods and . . . engage in the same kind of discrim- Springfresh, bush-style ination against innocent in- pants suit in easy-going dividuals which created the situation they seek to completely care free remedy." polyester knit. Roomy pockets, self belt. White with new-leaf green, bright blue • 4c • i,;% • • or brown. stantial prior discrimination are legally permissible in such areas as employment, education and holising." The American Jewish Con- gress reply took issue with this recommendation, which it described as support for "do-it-yourself quotas — that is, quotas instituted by pri- vate 'parties or institutions on their own initiative and not as part of a remedial or- der imposed by a court or administrative agency." The study described the Bar Association recommen- dation as "an ill-conceived Voicing its "profound con- proposal, justified neither by cern" at "a report emanating the cases nor by wise de- from s u c h a prestigious mands of social policy." source," the A.JCongress de- clared that it opposed the Bar Association recommendation "not only because of the pol- icy position it expresses but because we believe the un- derlying legal analysis which accompanies it to be, in many instances, either misleading or erroneous." the perfect gilt . Sizes 8-18 Great wardrobe pick me-up at only $ 25 The AJCongress analysis, a. 24-page document, w a s written by Lois Waldman, as- sociate director of the or- ganization's commission on law, social action and urban affairs. The Bar Association report, 22 pages, was pre- pared by the association's committee on civil rights, chaired by Maria L. Marcus. 1 In its report, the N.Y. Bar committee declared that "vol- untary programs using quotas for ameliorative purposes to correct the effects of sub- • BANKAMERICARD • MASTER CHARGE or • JACQUELINE Bias Fought on Radio WILE AT COOUHGE Odk Par k • NEW ORLEANS MAIL 15600 W. TEN MILE .SOUTHFIRD TELEGRAPH A f MAPLE Birmingham NEW YORK — To combat anti-Semitism in the Spanish- s pe a king 'community, the American Jewish .Commit- tee's interreligious affairs de- partment radio commentaries are b e in g translated into Spanish and aired regularly by a New York City station. I a subscription to THE JEWISH NEWS 17515 W. 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