36 October 17, 1975
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Study Shows School Busing Has Little Affect on Jews
NEW YORK (JTA) —
Jewish families with school-
.:-Lge children have been gen-
erally unaffected by exist-
ing or pending court-or-
dered plans for mandatory
busing for public school in-
tegration in five cities where
reports have been provided
to the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency in a telephone sur-
vey.
Jewish communal agen-
cies in three of the five cities
have participated in varying
degrees in community-wide
efforts to plan for peaceful
implementation of court-
ordered busing for school in-
tegration.
The five cities include two
in which public demonstra-
tions and violence have been
the response to busing pro-
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grams — Louisville, which
has 8,500 Jews, and Boston,
which has 180,000 Jews.
The other three cities
studied were Pittsburgh,
which has 45,000 Jews;
Wilmington, Del., which
has 8,500 Jews; and De-
troit, which has 80,000
Jews.
Alvin Kushner, executive
director of the Jewish Com-
munity Council of Metropol-
itan Detroit, and Herman
Brown, executive director of
the Jewish Community
Council of Greater Boston,
reported that most Jews in
those cities had long since
moved to the suburbs and
were unaffected by the
school busing there.
Jewish communal involve-
ment in the five cities has
ranged from active partici-
pation in offering proposals
for integration plans to
keeping a low public profile
on the issue.
The most intense Jewish
participation in the five ci-
ties appears to have taken
place in Boston, where the
community council joined
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WASHINGTON — If
Jewish teenagers are like
their non-Jewish peers,
nearly one in four — girls
and boys alike — will con-
tract a venereal disease dur-
ing the next 12 months.
Bnai Brith has moved to
expand an educational cam-
paign directed toward Jew-
ish youth about VD.
Initiated two years ago,
the campaign has been given
special attention by the
40,000-member Bnai Brith
Youth Organization and in-
tegrated with Operation
Stork, a 50-city program of
Bnai Brith Women aimed at
preventing birth defects.
A guidebook, "VD Doesn't
Have to Be — If You Know
What It's About," explains
the disease.
Callers who use the toll-
free hotline are given spe-
cific information — includ-
ing names of local clinics
and physicians who treat
young \TD victims without
notifying their parents. The
phone number is
1-800-523-1885.
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The Detroit Council is
represented on the Coalition
for Peaceful Integration
formed a number of years
ago when debate started on
an integration plan.
Lewis Grossman, Coun-
cil president, is a Coalition
member.
The Coalition, which had
received a federal grant to
act in an advisory capacity
to the school board, to help
the board understand com-
munity concerns arising
from the busing plans.
Americana Complex
1, 2, 3, 4
Greenfield N. td 9 Mile
VD Campaign
with four other agencies —
the Council of Churches, the
Social Action Commission
of the Boston Diocese, the
NAACP and the League of
Women Voters — to form a
Massachusetts Coalition for
Human Rights to support
integration.
The Detroit Jewish
Community Council has
not taken any position on
the integration plan which
the Detroit school board
recently submitted to the
federal district court,
Kushner said.
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