8—Friday, July 19, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Jews and Blacks Appeal for Guide on Education (Continued from Page 1) discuss and weigh the various proposals available for treat- ing this most complex issue." Weinberger announced in his letter that Terrel R. Bell, U.S. commissioner of educa- tion, and Peter R. Holmes, director of HEW's office for civil rights, will communi- cate with the signers of the New York letter "in the near future." Wilkins was one of the New York letter signers. Others were Benjamin R. Ep- stein of the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith; Ber- tram H. Gold, American Jew- ish CoMmittee; Vernon Jor- dan, National Urban League; Naomi Levin e, American Jewish Congress; and Cesare Porales, Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund. Marco DeFunis of Seattle had complained in 1971 that he was the victim of- "reverse discrimination" at the Uni- versity of Washington Law School in that he was barred from admission to the school while 37 others, mostly Blacks, were allowed to en- ter despite lesser qualifica- tions. The Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision last April that his case was moot since DeFunis under previous rul- ings pending a Supreme Court test, was allowed to enter the school and was about to be graduated. In disclosing the action taken by the six organizations in New York, Commissioner Norton said that "despite varying positions" they held on the DeFunis case, the groups involved wished to avoid polarization and were in agreement on the goal of "the elimination of all forms of discrimination and the es- tablishment of affirmative ac- tions that will provide equal opportunity within our consti- tutional framework." Meanwhile in New York, the Anti-Defamation League demanded that the City Col- lege Center for Biomedical Education admit "highly qualified" applicants exclud- ed from its September 1974 class simply because they are white. Arnold Forster, ADL's gen- eral counsel, made the de- mand in a letter to Alfred' A. Giardino, chairman of the Board of Higher Education. Forster asserted that a re- port by Chancellor Robert J. Kibbee of the City Univer- sity and "information obtain- ed through our own investiga- tion of the program," estab- lished that "all too frequent- ly considerations of race dominated the admissions procedure." Forster went on to say: "It is clear—as the Kibbee report points out — that changes must be made in the admission procedure to pre- vent future abuses and to assure equitable treatment for all applicants." The letter underscored the gravity with which the ADL views the City College pro- cedure by warning that "it might well spawn another DeFunis case. Forster charged that the goal of producing the best possible doctors — whether for the "inner city" as sug- gested by Dr. Kibbee or for the broader "urban com- munity" as envisioned by City College President Robert E. Marshak—"appears to have taken second place to racial preference." He also pointed out that the selection procedures had resulted in the September 1974 class consiting of 27 white and 41 "minority" students. Forster said that replace- ment for those who declined to accept places in the pro- gram was made along strictly racial lines—"black for black and white for white etc."— from four separate lists label- ed "Caucasian, Black, Asian and Latin." He then went on to list other "obvious examples" of the use of preferential cri- teria: • 10.6 per cent of Caucasians interviewed were invited to join the program, although two-thirds of them had high school averages of 90 per cent or higher, compared to 21.7 per cent of "minority" applicants interviewed, only about one quarter of whom had 90 per cent and over averages. • A total of 106 minority students—and only 30 whites —with averages less than 85 per cent or "no average," were selected for interviews for this six-year accelerated program. All six `of the stu- dents accepted from this category were of "minority" background. As noted in the Kibbee re- port, the chance of being in- vited into the program for those interviewed was twice as high for "minority" appli- cants as for others. Sex Education Plan Blasted in Israel TEL AVIV (JTA) — An announcement by Education Minister Ahartm Yadlin that he intended to introduce sex education in all state schools has raised a storm in re- ligious circles here. Rabbis and yeshiva heads have organized "action com- mittees" to "safeguard the nation's sacred values." They have flooded Yadlin and some prominent Knesset members with telegrams to ban sex education in order to "keep clean the soul of youth and the boys who have not sinned." Yadlin announced the pro- posed sex edtication courses at an international synipo- sium on sex education at- tended by several hundred sexologists, educators and • psychologists from 30 coun- tries. What aroused the ire of religious elements who have denounced the plan as "im- pure- education" is the fact that state-run schools include subsidized religious schools as well as the secular institu- tions. They have demanded a meeting with Yadlin and threatened to create turmoil if he refuses. ZOA. President Vows 'Commitment' Campaign. NEW YORK (JTA) — Claiming that "The Ameri- can Jew has lost his Zionist commitment," Dr. Joseph P. Sternstein, the new president of the Zionist Organization of America, told a press con- ference that during his term of office the ZOA will con- duct an intensive campaign to educate the public and restore that commitment. Dr. Sternstein, rabbi of the Conservative Temple Beth Sholom in Roslyn Heights, L. I., outlined the first step of the campaign: a program of seminars to expose young adult Jews and their families to Zionism, "We are on the eve of a titanic political struggle in the Jewish community out- side Israel and especially in America," said Dr. Stern- stein, citing the pressure which is now building up over this country's position in the Middle East. However, at the very time when American Jewish support of Israel is crucial, the Ameri- can community has failed in two important barometers of Zionist strength, aliya and tourism to Israel, he as- serted. He does not believe "If you don't go on aliya, you are not a Zionist," but Dr. Sternstein said the recent de- cline in aliya indicates an over-all decline in American Zionist consciousness. "The precipitious drop after the October war of American tourism to Israel," said Dr. Sternstein, "is a re- sult of our own failures. 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