r October 17, 1975 35 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS I Jewry on the Air Ever-y participant in a survey of a representative group of Conservative rab- bis reported they experi- enced "many areas of great fulfillment" in the rabbi- nate but many also reported they suffered from rabbinic isolation. ative Judaism, the scholarly quarterly published by the Rabbinical Assembly, the association of Conservative rabbis and the Jewish Theo- logical Seminary, the Con- servative school. The publication sent a 10-point questionnaire to more than 60 rabbis — all ordained since 1967 — and 28 replied. The findings were re- ported by Rabbi Stephen C. Lerner, editor of Conserv- Rabbi Lerner said the picture which emerged from the "collective self- portrait" was one of By BEN GALLOB (Copyright 1975, JTA, Inc.) This Week's Radio and Television Programs VISTAS OF ISRAEL Time: 6:30 a.m. Sunday. Station: WOMC - FM (104.3) Feature: Israel culture and literature. A calendar of events in the Jewish com- munity follows. * * * MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 6:35 a.m. Sunday. Station: WXYZ (1270). and Time: 10:45 p.m. Sunday. Station: WDEE (1500). Feature: An address to the Jewish community. * * * RELIGION IN THE NEWS Time: 9:05 a.m. Sunday. Station: CKWW * * * HIGHLIGHTS Time: 9:45 a.m. Sunday Station: Channel 2 Feature: Prof. Arie Vardi, pianist and director of the Rubin Academy of Music in Tel Aviv, Israel, will per- form and discuss music in Israel. Felix Resnick, who will conduct the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in the annual Balfour Concert of the Zionist Organization of Detroit, also will be inter- viewed. * * * ETERNAL LIGHT Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday Station: WWJ Feature: Part Three of the "Jews in Colonial America" series. * * * WJR's Karl Haas at Carnegie Hall LUBAVITCH JEWISH HOUR Time: 10:30_p.m. Sunday. Station: WNIC (1300) and WNIC-FM (100). Feature: Rabbinical re- marks, Jewish music. * * * INTERVIEW IMPROMPTU Time: 11 p.m. Sunday. Station: WDEE (1500). and Time: 12:15 p.m. Wednes- day. Station: WQRS - FM, (105.1). Feature: A notable in the Jewish community will be interviewed. * * * RELIGIOUS SCOPE Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday. Station: Channel 9. Feature: News in the Jew- ish commurlitv4 ROZHINKES MIT MANDLEN Time: 9 a.m. Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. Station: WIID (1090). Feature: Israeli and Yid- dish music, news, inter- views, recipes and other fea- tures. Short talks will be presented by rabbis from the Detroit Jewish commu- nity. A Jewish News staffer will give a brief report. * * * "IF NOT NOW . . ." Time: 7 p.m. Tuesday Station: WDET-FM (101.9) Feature: An interview with a notable in the Jewish community. * YIDDISHE SHTUNDE Time: 9 a.m. Wednesday. Station: WIID (1090). Feature: Yiddish lan- guage program of music and interviews. and Time: 9 a.m. Friday Feature: Yiddish with Al Naftal and Sonia Popowski. Envoy Toon Gets Jerusalem Home KARL HAAS Karl Haas, originator of Radio Station WJR's award- winning "Adventures in Good Music" series which is heard on 30 U.S. stations and the Armed Forces net- work, has been signed to do five special two-hour pro- grams entitled "Adventures in Good Music" in New York's Carnegie Hall. The monthly programs will begin in November with Haas playing piano, doing commentary, and conduct- ing an orchestra. Haas, who has been with WJR for 17 years, now divides his time between Detroit and New York. In addition to activities with the Detroit and Miami symphonies, Haas also works with "Festival at Sea" cruises twice a year, a pub- lic television project in Pittsburgh, and other pro- grams. WASHINGTON — The State Department agreed in principle to allow the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv to rent an apartment in Jeru- salem so that Ambassador Malcolm Toon will have a place to stay overnight dur- ing his regular visits to the Israeli capital. Although Jerusalem is Israel's capital, the U.S. and several other Western coun- tries maintain their embas- sies in Tel Aviv because of Jerusalem's sensitive status. The U.S. supported the 1947 UN partition plan call- ing on Jerusaelm to be in- ternationalized, and since then there has not been an official change in U.S. pol- icy. Toon has a residence in Herzlyia, and the long trip to Jerusalem was becoming tiresome, the sources said. State Department offi- cials said that there is a pos- sibility that the U.S. Em- bassy in Tel Aviv will take an apartment in Jerusalem for the use of "embassy per- sonnel." HUSBAND WANTED Conservative Rabbis Report 'Great Fulfillment' U.S. Urged to Halt Lebanon Fight NEW YORK — President Ford was urged by the head of the Zionist Organization of America last week "to un- dertake all possible diplo- matic measures to halt the Pan-Arab Islamic aggres- sion against Lebanon, and particularly the Arab-Mos- lem attack against the Christians in Lebanon." Dr. Joseph P. Sternstein, president of the ZOA, termed the attack on Leba- non's Christians a manifes- tation of "inherent Arab in- tolerance against other faiths, minorities and races," and a "serious threat to peace in the Middle East." In a telegram to the White House, Dr. Stern- stein told the President that "all evidence points to involvement of outside Arab states such as Syria, Libya and others in arm- ing, encouraging and as- sisting the attackers Federation Probes NY Jewish Issues NEW YORK (JTA) — A series of conferences will be sponsored this year on is- sues of Jewish population, pre-marital counseling, Jewish singles, the single- parent family and alcohol- ism by the commission on synagogue relations of the Federation of Jewish Phi- lanthropies. Rabbi Isaac N. Trainin, director of the commission, said in announcing the con- ferences, that a meeting on the relationship of the rabbi to the Jewish social worker would focus on resettlement of Soviet Jews in the New York Jewish community, and that the changing inner structure of the Jewish com- munity would be discussed at a conference on the rela- tionship of the Jewish Y to religious institutions. He said that in addition to the Jewish Singles Newslet- ter, published by the com- mission, which now reaches about 3,000 subscribers, a guide on programming for Jewish singles will be pub- lished soon. He also reported that the commission was assisting in the coordination of free and comprehensive Federation Employment and Guidance Service vocational pro- grams, available to syn- agogue members, and that plans are being considered to utilize federation camps for special weekends for Jewish families and singles. against the Christians in Lebanon." "The crushing of the Christian position in Leba- non is bound to be a prelude to war against Israel," the ZOA leader stated. Dr. Sternstein made known at the same time that he has called on the Na- tional Council of Churches to join with the ZOA in mobilizing public opinion and arousing both houses of Congress to the "dangerous developments in Lebanon." Hebrew U. Friends Honor 2 Doctors NEW YORK — Dr. How- ard A. Rusk and Dr. Walter A.L. Thompson will each receive the Torch of Learn- ing Award of the American Friends of the Hebrew Uni- versity at the annual Medi- cal Division Dinner Tues- day. Rep. Morris K. Udall (D- Ariz.) will be the guest speaker. Dr. Rusk, chairman of the Department of Rehabilita- tion Medicine and director of the Rusk Institute of Re- habilitation Medicine at New York University Medi- cal Center, has advised over 48 nations on rehabilitation services while working on behalf of the United Nations and other international or- ganizations. He is contribut- ing editor to the New York Times and Medical World News. Dr. Thompson, chairman of the Department of Ortho- paedic Surgery at New York University Medical Center, has assisted in the rehabili- tation of wounded soldiers in Israel since the Yom Kip- pur War, and, as a consult- ant to the Israel Ministry of Defense, is helping the gov- ernment to develop its pro- grams in orthopaedic reha- bilitation. Murdered Jewish Olympian Cited CLEVELAND (JTA) — Senator Hubert H. Hum- phrey (D-Minn.) and Israel Supreme Court Justice Haim Cohen joined 800 Clevelanders in a memorial ceremony for Cleveland- born David Berger, one of 11 memberS of the Israeli Olympic team murdered by Arab terrorists at. Munich on Sept. 5, 1972. An original sculpture by David Davis depicting the tragedy was dedicated Oct. 5 in memory of Berger who was 28 at the time of his death. "committed and con- cerned men finding satis- faction in certain (gener- ally the same) areas and unhappy in others; of men, who, despite the vaunted diversity of Conservative Judaism, do share certain approaches to such issues as Jewish law and Jewish tradition; of men who are at once more traditionally observant and more exper- imental, more liberal than their congregants." TO TAKE HIS MATE WINING AND DINING AT. . . . David Ganus' Delightful Hungarian Village SANYIKA'S FAMOUS GYPSIES SERENADE HER Blk. N. of 1-75 (S'fld. to 1-75 N. to Springwells) 843-5611 Major Credit Card Accepted. 1001-Springwells — 1 He also reported that "a significant number" of the 28 rabbis declared they had become "more liberal both in attitude and in pattern of observance as a result of their contact with their con- gregants over a period of years." 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