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September 06, 1974 - Image 42

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-09-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Bias Charged by Jewish Group
in NY Employe Firing Practice

ployes about such dismissals.
Rosen said the AJAPW had
contacted a number of key
Jewish civil s e r v i c e em-
ployes, asking them for in-
formation.
Subsequently, the AJAPW
made a formal complaint to
Mayor Beame, the city and
state commission on human
rights and the Department
of Justice civil rights division
concerning hiring and firing
practices in the city's office
of neighborhood government.
The_ AJAPW asserted that
John Carty, Jr., named by
the Beame administration as
director of ONG, dismissed
38 employes, of whom 36
were Jewish and that, shortly
afterward, he hired 33 new
employes, none of whom
were Jewish.
Rosen asserted that while
during the prior administra-
tion of Mayor John V. Lind-
say, the ONG office had 35
per cent in Jewish employes,
t h e Beame administration
reduced that to 17 per cent.
Rosen said ONG was
y-
money
where
your
'' Put your
chosen
for the first study be-
-- \ heart is —
cause it is an agency "di-
IN AMERICA
rectly involved with the
neighborhoods of New York
I U.
City, where Jews have a
major stake for survival."

NEW YORK (JTA) — A
spokesman for Mayor Abra-
ham Beame said that city
officials were looking into
charges that a "dispropor-
tionate number of Jewish
employes" were being dis-
missed or were being laid
off "for budgetary reasons."
The spokesman added that
the city administration had
no reason to believe the
charges were true.
The charges were made by
the Association of Jewish
Anti-Poverty Workers. The
agency's executive director,
S. Elly Rosen, asserted that
in recent months the agency
had received m any com-
plaints from Jewish city em-

Bonds Honors Shelley Winters

38—Friday, Sept. 6, 1974

MUSIC BY

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HELEN ZINBERG
The hair you pluck will come back to haunt
you. Before you tweeze again, remember
this Quotation from one of the foremost
medical authorities on the subject of human
hair:
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advised." Why not? Because the long term
penalties for continued plucking can be so
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is available to you. This
you pull out.
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

CUSTOM FURNITURE &
CARPET CLEANING
ON LOCATION

Actress Shelley Winters, second from left, was applauded
by 'more than 300 leaders of the Jewish community Aug. 26
as she was presented with the State of Israel Bonds Masada
Award. The presentation, accompanied by dinner and a
fashion show,. was made by David Pollack, general chair-
man of the Greater Detroit Committee for State of Israel
Bonds, at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. Shown, from left, are Pol-
lack, Miss Winters, Mrs. Paul Borman and Mrs. Pollack,
chairman of the Detroit Women's Division of Israel Bonds.
For the first time since the inception of the Israel Bond
Drive a $2,000 payment for the purchase of Bonds was the
admission requirement. More than $1,000,000 was raised
during a 60-day period, with the help of a committee of
more than 75 women.

Phone
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Ex-German Head
Wants Guarantees
for Mideast Peace

JERUSALEM (JTA)
Former West German For-
eign Minister Gerhard
Schroeder said Monday that
he favored international guar-
antees to protect Israel's
security and facilitate a Mid-
dle East peace settlement.
Schroeder stated this view
after he and a six member
delegation of the Bunde-
stag's foreign affairs com-
mittee ended a meeting with
Premier Yitzhak Rabin. He
said they had a wide-ranging
and "frank" talk on the Mid-
dle East situation.
Schroeder, who is a leader
of the Christian Democratic
Party opposition in Bonn, is
in Israel with his parliamen-
tary delegation. He said the
purpose of the visit was to
find out what the West Ger-
man parliament could do to
further a Middle East peace
settlement.
Schroeder headed a sim-
ilar group on a visit to Egypt
earlier this year after which
he said his impression was
that Presidtint Anwar Sadat
sincerely wanted peace.
Schroeder said he thought
that multi-lateral guarantees
of Israel's security plus Is-
rael's defense capability of-
fered the best protection.
Don't envy the man who That view has been rejected
gets ahead — study his tech- by Israel as ineffective in a
nique
crisis situation

.

for quality photographs
' and fast service
call me at

Weaving Needlepoint
& Embroidery

Technion Friends to Hear Talk
on World Energy Supply

The Detroit Chapter of the
American Technion Society
will host a program meeting
8 p.m. Wednesday at the
Northland Inn.
Dr. Henry J. Gomberg,
president _ of KMS Fushion
Inc., will speak on "New De-
velopments in the World En-
ergy Supply". Dr. Gomberg
was graduated from the Uni-
versity of Michigan, where he
later became the first chair-
man of the department of
nuclear engineering. He re-
received a BSE in 1941, and
MSE in 1943 and a PhD in
electrical engineering in 1951.
At Ann Arbor he was as-
sistant director and director
of the Michigan Memorial
Phoenix Project, the univer-
sity's institute for the de-
velopment of peaceful uses of
nuclear energy (1947-61.)
From 1943 to 1945, Dr.
Gomberg was with the Naval
Ordance Laboratory as both
a civilian employe and as an
officer (USNR.) In 1961 he
was Carnegie Visiting Pro-
fessor at the University of
Hawaii.
Dr. Gomberg became dep-
uty director of the AEC's
Puerto Rico Nuclear Center
and a professor of physics at
the University of Puerto Rico
in 1961. He was aoppointed
director of the nuclear cen-
ter in 1966, a positiOn he held
untile he became president of
KMS Fushion in 1971.
Dr. Gomberg is a fellow
and past member of the ex-
ecutive committee and the
hoard of directors of the
American Physical Society,
the Institute of Electrical
and Electronic Engineers, the
American Society of Engi-
neering Education, and a Fel-
low of the American Public
Health Association.
The meeting is open to the
community at no charge. P.:;-
freshments will be served.

MAX SCHRUT

OOOO •••• OOOOO




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