Ammint THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, November 1, 1974-13 SMALL BEQUESTS BUILD A STRONG ISRAEL If the tradition of including the Jewish National Fund in the. Will of every Jew were invariably followed, sufficient resources would be accumadated to ensure the future of the young Jewish State on a sound basis of land development, social welfare, and justice. A bequest to the Jewish National Fund should be as traditional as having a Blue Box in one's home. ) You may want your bequest to b'e dedicated to. afforestation, to a village, a Nachlah, to a children's play area, to perpetual yahrzeit or kaddish,' or to some form of permanent tribute in the names of persons dear to you. Consult the Foundation for Jewish National Fund, 22100 Greenfield, 968-0820. They will gladly co-operate with you in working out plans to meet your Special requirements, in strict privacy. Paper Errs on Photographs events honoring Alan E. Schwartz and Ira Kaufman. NEW YORK (JTA) — The The photographs and their admission by City College captions appear below. President Robert Marshak- after repeated denials—that racial and ethnic criteria were used to select students for enrollment in the accel- erated program of the col- lege's center for biomedical education, confirmed what the Bnai Brith Anti-Defama- tion League "has already learned in its continuing probe of this scandalous sit- uation," the ADL's associate director and general counsel, Arnold Forster, declared last Butzel Award winner Alan E. Schwartz, center, greeted week. at annual Jewish Welfare Federation meeting by Federa- Forster added: "If the tion President Mandell Berman, left, and Max M. Fisher, ADL decides that the situa- who made the presentation. tion can be resolved only by * * * litigation, we will proceed in that direction." Forster made that state- ment after Marshak conceded at a meeting of editors and reporters from City College's five student newspapers that the selection of students for the September 1974 class was made from a list of four ethnic groups — white, black Asian and Hispanic. Marshak pledged that "it will not hap- pen again." When the list was reported A recent Israel Bond dinner honoring Ira Kaufman, netted $1,540,000. Shown are, from left, Nathan Feldman, last summer by City Uni- dinner chairman; Kaufman; guest speaker, Ambassador versity Chancellor Robert Yeshayahu Anug; and Maxwell Jospey, dinner co-chairman, Kibbee, Marshak flatly de- The Jewish News regrets that two photographs were transposed' in the issue of Oct. 25. The photographs were of recent community RE-ELECT the WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP ADMINISTRATION JOHN N. DOHERTY, Supervisor BETTY SUE DUPREE, Clerk LILLIAN SUE WARNER, Treasurer JOHN F. WARREN, Trustee WALTER J. -WHITMER; Trustee RICHARD C. EYLER, Trustee CONTINUE RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT VOTE Discrimination in CCNY Biomedical School Admissions EXPERIENCED - QUALIFIED TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1974 VOTE 1 Pd. Pol. Adv. Harassed Soviet Jewish Engineer Dreams of Sending Sons to Bar-Ilan RAMAT-GAN—In Novosi- birsk, in southern Siberia, 500 miles north of Mongolia, a skilled mechanical engi- neer, forced to work as -a draftsman, is dreaming of coming to Israel and Re day sending his two sons to study at Bar-Ilan University here. The engineer, Alexander Roisman, and his family heard of the university through Dr. Ira Hammerman of New York, who has recent- ly come- to 'Israel to lecture in biophysics at Bar-Ilan. He heard of the Roismans when he wrote to five Jewish scien- tists who were having _diffi- culty in getting exit permits from Russia. The only one who replied was Roisman, and they have been corres- ponding for. 11/2 years. Roisman and his family have been struggling alone to rediscover their Judaism and for three years to gain per- mission to leave Russia. Since applying he has lost his engineering job and his wife, Raiza, a surgeon, and his sons have been harassed. Roisman, himself, has painful IS IT TRUE THAT CANADIANS HAVE SKINNY ARMS? It is true that Lou Myles suits, which come from. Toronto, have smaller armholes than any ordinary suit you've ever seen. In fact, the Lou Myles suits we sell have less material everywhere, so there's no extra material to make either you or your suit look - bulky or baggy. We buy Lou Myles suits because we think they fit and look better than any ordinary suit. You can buy Lou Myles suits only one place in Michigan—at Van Dyke Clothiers in Warren—no matter what size your arms are. Clothiers for Men Van Dyke Clothiers for Men in Warren and Utica. Next Door Shops in Warren, Utica, Pleasant Ridge, Birmingham, Mt. Clemens. and Eastland. Van Dyke Formal Wear in Warren. (Call 536-7248 for location closest to you.) nied it. Dr. Kibbee issued his report after several groups charged that the accelerated medical training program_ was giving preference to black and Hispanic appli- cants regardless of academic standing. The ADL made that charge July 12, after Forster de- manded in a letter to Alfred A. Giardino, chairman of the board of higher education, that the center for biomedi- cal education admit "highly qualified" applicants w h o were excluded because they are white. Forster referred at t h e time to Dr. Kibbee's report and to "information obtained through our own investiga- tion of the program" which, he said, established that "all too frequently considerations of race dominated the admis- sions procedure." He pointed out that the se- lection procedures had re- sulted in the September 1974 class consisting of 27 whites and 41 "minority" students. He said that replacement for those who declined to accept places in the program was made along strictly racial lines—"black for black and white for white." gallstones, but is afraid to enter a Soviet hospital. The Soviet authorities claim that Reisman has had access to secret research and thus cannot be allowed to emi- grate, in spite of documents that Roisman has proving he never had such access. The Roismans are deter- mined to live in Israel as Or- thodox Jews. In a letter Rois- man, who has had no reli- gious training, wrote: "Dear friend, you have sent me a treasure—the Haggada. "The Jewish tradition was interrupted almost every- where in Russia many years ago . . . We had to learn everything anew. I had read the Bible (in Hebrew) with the help of a Hebrew diction- ary. This work took about five years. I made this work alone, without a teacher, even without some parallel text (translation) .. . "Then I set to study the prayers. I understand them, but I cannot read fluently. Though I didn't ever see a Passover Seder I had re- stored one for our family." Persons wishing to write to the Roismans (in English or Hebrew) may do so at USSR 630049, Novosibirsk 49, Ul. Kropotkina 94/1, k.v. 31, Al- exander Roisman. Letters in support of their emigration may be sent to USSR, R.S.F.S., Moscow, 6 Ogarev St., Minister of In- terior Nikolai Sochelokov. Letters should be sent by reg- istered mail. JNF Picnic Site JERUSALEM—Visitors to the Kennedy Memorial, in the hills of Jerusalem, will be able to stop nearby at the new picnic site being set up by the Jewish National Fund, on the road leading to the memorial from M o s h a v Aminaday.