WHY BUY A FORD FROM ANYONE ELSE BUT PHIL SCHOSTAK BEST DEAL—SERVICE & LOCATION A NICE JEWISH BOY .. . ORDER YOUR '75 FORD NOW! 75 Cars Now Available FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT BIG DISCOUNTS AT AVIS FORD OPEN MONDAY and THURSDAY TIL 9 P.M. 29200 TELEGRAPH AT 12 MILE, SOUTHFIELD Bus. 354-3000 Res. 559-5584 Public Opinion Asked on Development Plan for Western Wall NEW YORK—The Israel In- ternational Information Coun- cil is soliciting public re- sponse to new plans for de- velopment of the Western Wall area of Jerusalem. Information about the pro- posed development and a questionnaire will be mailed to anyone who sends a stamped, self-addressed en- velope to: Rabbi Rubin R. Dobin, Israel International Information Council, PO Box 11, Lawrence, New York 11559. ADL: Colleges, HEW Discriminate in Their Affirmative Action Programs WASHINGTON—The Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith has charged the U.S. Department of Health, Edu- cation and Welfare with "allowing reverse discrimi- nation to continue spreading unchecked, in violation of its obligations under law." Testifying before the House of Representatives' special subcommittee on education last week, Bernard A. Kut- tner, chairman of ADL's na- tional discriminations corn- snitman's leisure suits are beauts Although you play in your leisure suits, at Shifman's we take our leisure suits very seriously. So seriously, we stock the best. This Pierre Cardin, for instance. It's a corduroy. Looks like a million and fits like only a Cardin can. The price is just $115. Of course, Pierre Cardin isn't for everyone, but Shifman's is. And that's another reason we take our leisure aNtAti4- .4 404108Mazm5•00..*4& suits so seriously. Shifman's has leisure suits for every style, taste 4. and size man. Every price range, too. - What a beautiful way to go. - mittee, said that "many peo- ple are being denied their legal rights and — unlike victims of 'traditional' kinds of discrimination—are being deprived of government aid to redress these wrongs." Until August 1972, when ADL began filing complaints with HEW of preferential treatment and racial quotas in college admissions and employment practices, he said, the federal agency "gave no indication that it was at all concerned about its fundamental responsibil- ity to correct the problem which it had helped create. HEW's performance since then has not been much bet- ter." Kuttner said, "The more than 100 pattern and practice cases which we reported existing in post-secondary education institutions have injured thousands of vic- tims." "Why it took 10 months to answer these complaints is particularly difficult to un- derstand, since the cases in- volved no complex questions of law and required no ex- tensive factual investiga- tions," he said. Of the more than 100 ADL complaints, 34 related to _preferential treatment in ad- missions to undergraduate, graduate and professional schools. These included nu- merous documented instances of outright racial and ethnic admission quotas, Kuttner said, "As of today, more than two years after the first com- plaint of preferential admis- sion was presented to HEW, no response of any sort has been received . . . with re- spect to these 34 instances," he said. Kuttner further charged that HEW is "applying a double standard," requiring reverse discrimination com- plainants to document their complaints to a degree not expected of other discrim- ination complainants. "We believe that HEW is unfairly requiring those who complain of reverse discrim- ination to do investigatory work which is properly the role of the government in these instances." Citing cases where there are written documents in which university hiring offi- cials actually announced a discriminatory hiring policy, Kuttner said "HEW contents itself with a mere admoni- tion to the violator." He added, "there is no in- dication that any formal pro- cedure for monitoring the future behavior of the erring hiring officials has been es- tablished" by HEW. Kuttner also cited ADL's "sharp disagreement" with HEW "as to the legality and propriety of collecting racial and ethnic data in conjunc- tion with monitoring univer- sity employment and enroll- ment for possible civil rights violations." He said "the risk of misuse of this data" by the univer- sity is "so great" that a uni- versity "should not be per- mitted to maintain individual personnel files relating to rates of pay, promotions and other personnel matters in which employes are identi- fied by race and ethnic origins." Kuttner called for either the deletion of HEW pro- visions which give special consideration or that "they be issued with instructions against their usage for pre- ferential treatment, reverse discrimination or implement- ing numerical goals as if they were quotas." ADL, he said, further recommends that "questions as to race, color, ethnicity, nativity or religion do not appear on application forms, and that individuals are at no time required to identify themselves by any of the foregoing, except anony- mously." The ADL, he said, "seeks no special favors for any group. We advocate equal opportunity for all Ameri- cans." Hebrew U. Restoration Work Gets New Facilities, Equipment Shifman's LINCOLN SHOPPING CENTER, 10 1/2 MILE AND GREENFIELD Other Stores: LIVONIA, MALL fVlicidlebelt and 7 Mile MACON1B MALL Masonic and Gratiot CHERRY HILL PLAZA Cherry Hill and Inkster BRIGHTON MALL Grand River and 1-96 JERUSALEM — The cele- brated "recurator" at the Jewish National and Univer- sity Library.— the device for restoring old manuscripts — has a new home. The department of restora- tion has inaugurated new quarters on Hebrew Univer- sity's Givat Ram campus. A five-room suite houses the recurator and other equipment and will enable the restoration department to speed up and enlarge its op- erations. According to de- partment head Esther Alka- lay, these include the world's most advanced methods of mending antique paper and vellum. The recurator, invented by Mrs. Alkalay, strengthens and patches crumbling paper with overlapping its existing parts, in a matter of mom- ents. Recently restored was a THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS first edition of the Shulkhan Arukh (Code of Jewish Law), dated Venice, 1574. The library also acquired a vacuum fumigating ma- chine for disinfecting books. Insects and mold are a seri- ous problem, and removing them is the first step in res- toration. The machine works on an ethyl oxide and freon gas mixture. Medals Series Ends NEW YORK — A medal struck in tribute to Jerusalem completes the "Medallic His- tory of the Jewish People" issued by The Judaic Heri- tage Society. "With this medal," said Robert Weber, president of the society, "we conclude a 120-medal epic which, each month for the past five years, has traced the history of the Jewish people from its very begin- nings to the present." Friday, October 4, 1974-9 , X 17 C