14 Friday, January 7, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS CARS TO BE DRIVEN TO ANY STATE M C 12598 5 I.C.C. DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 4713 Horger at Michigan Ave. P.O. BOX 1264 Dearborn, Mich. . 48126 Tel. 584-5000 f ZOA Asks Blumenthal for Boycott, Mideast Clarifications (Continued from Page 1) e xpanded xpanded its overseas sales under his guidance and which has possibly through its sub- sidiaries, participated in the boycott, calls for some Li WV 1. 4 Wittni ifotti m Nancy Zimmelman Was Interviewer of M. Blumenthal lov e .and now is tile but- time fp alert auk._ we ... /dee youoiorrn.... Lie orec 4068 welt e /wont_ 614 ea.st k0.4.1 s . 4• PIPAIlk..4, ../4 PAPh.i J. 0 ,411,41 - re7ey "(1 L". 34 ,a0,,,,o,...494 clarification." The Washington Post reported Saturday that Blumenthal would be questioned during his Senate confirmation hearings on allegations that employment appli- Reference in Purely Commentary, two weeks ago, of an interview with Treasury Secretary- designate W. M. Blu- menthal in a Southfield high school paper was clarified this week by Nancy Zimmelman, who informed The _ Jewish News that she was the in- terviewer, at age 14. She explained that the article appeared in the Thompson Junior High School paper (not in the Southfield High School paper) and that the incor- rect headline which ap- peared over her story, "Jewish immigrant makes it big in U.S.," was written by another stu- dent. Miss Zimmelman writes that there was no mention of Blumenthal's religion in the article. ON 1.09. *AI ION P.041 Wei., 04 10.44 ,or YESHIUATH BETH 'VENDA NT. A. presents THE TORONTO BOYS CHOIR 4 . "The Toronto Pirchei" in a gala filled evening which will include THE KOL YISROEL and ERIC ROSENOW and His Continentals Oak Park High School Auditorium Sunday, January 23, 1977 at 7:30 P.M. - tickets: $10, $7.50, $5.50, $3.50 for information and reservations call: 557-3393 534-9239 _ 398-5772 399-9140 NO ^6 "nee ^ref! Met1 "ye 'Ye, 'Yee "reir."Nr. •reY, "reil rien "reil "Yer ?Ye, 'len filen ?ion "nen 'ion !ill& &eV We" "ref11Yet r7e117Y0 PF- cation forms for Bendix- Siyanco projects in Saudi Arabia required. "proof of religion" in the form of a baptismal certificate "or a properly executed letter of faith by chaplain of your choice." At a House hearing in 1975, Rep. Benjamin Ro- senthal (D-NY) noted that this was in violation of federal law, regu- lations and government policy. In June, 1975, two Jewish applicants filed complaints with the Equal Employment- Opportunity Commission charging that they were barred from employment by Bendix- Siyanco because they were Jews. The complaint was filed on their behalf by the Bnai Brith Anti- Defamation League. Justin Finger, assis- tant director of the ADL's civil rights division, was quoted by the Post as say- ing that while Bendix does not control the Saudi . government, it was_not a Bendix function "to handle discriminatory activity for the Saudi Arabians." Finger added that the case in question was likely to be settled and that Bendix had since removed the religious question from its applica- tion forms and adopted an affirmative action pro- gram policy for the Sau- dian project. The Post also quoted a Bendix spokesman as saying that Bendix had merely transmitted in- structions from the Sau- dian government and withdrew the religious question before the ADL complaint. According to the Post, the spokesman described Blumenthal as "entirely opposed to dis- crimination. The PoSt said Bendix has been "studiously neutral" in the Middle East conflict. It manufac- tures antennas for Hawk " AJCommittee to Study Issues Affecting Jewish Families BY BEN GALLOB (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) A three-year study on Jewish concerns about family life will be made by the American Jewish Committee, one of its offi- cials told the annual meeting in Dallas of the AJCommittee's executive council. In announcing plans for the study, Marvin Riseman, chairman of the agency's Jewish com- munal affairs commis- sion, said that 10 prob- lems which could lead to "the attrition of the Jewish community," were currently affliciting the Jewish family in America. The study will examine the ways in which_chang- ing family patterns in so- ciety at large are affect- ing Jewish families, and their effects on the transmission of Jewish values and identity to children. Riseman asserted that "the close-knit, extended family gi-oup that has characterized Jewish life, and that was responsible in large part for the sense of Jewish identity being passed along to each suc- ceeding generation of children, is disintegrat- ing." He asked whether the Jewish family could be bolstered or whether "we must look for new .chan- nels to ensure—Jewish continuity." He listed the problems as that "more Jews marry later than_-members of other groups; most Jewish singles groups no longer operate solely for the purpose of 'matching,' and 'Mese groups now are supportive of singles and the single way - of life.' " Declaring also that the divorce rate is rising among Jews, Riseman said "there appears to be no stigma for the failure of marriage, and there is no presumption of per- manence." He also declared that the Jewish birth rate is falling and that childlessness "has become socially ac- ceptable." Financial suc- cess, "rather than the rearing of children, has become, for many, the major goal of the family" among American Jews, he said. He said also that "the degree and intensity" of Jewish family interaction has decreased, though it continues to be higher than that of other reli- gious and social groups, and that there is less socializing across_Jewish generational lines, "partly as a result of geo- graphical mobility." He said the agency's study will examine the impact of the rising di- vorce rate, single-parent homes, working mothers, the women's liberation movement, family mobil- ity and the impact of tele- vision. The study also will consider federal and state laws, public policies and Jewish communal serv- ices in terms of their im- pact on the Jewish family, he said. missiles which the U.S. sells to Israel, Saudi Arabia and Jordan. Blumenthal, whose parents were Jewish, is a Presbyterian. He has been quoted as urging the U.S. to halt arms ship- ments to the Middle East because "arming these nations is a foolish policy for which we and they will ultimately pay a price measured in blood." Israeli Receives Research Grant REHOVOT, Israel The National Multiple Sclerosis Society of the U.S. has awarded a six- month research grant of $25,000 to Prof. Ruth Arnon, head of the Weiz- mann Institute's Chemi- cal Immunology Depart- ment. in earlier research, Prof. Arnon, in associa- tion with Prof. Michael Sela, president of the Weizmann Institute and a leading immunologist, studied the suppression of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) by the use of a synthetic basic copolymer (Cop 1), a substance made up of a chain of identical, re- peated amino acid units. The current project in- volves investigation of the cellular mechanism of immune 'reactions in- volved in EAE and its suppression. MOVING? „• : HOUSEHOLD SALES : . IN YOUR HOME : ESTATES LIQUIDATED :,620-4 1R 7E 6N 9E EAGLE • • SCM Typewriter SALE your trade worth $50-$100 New Office furniture and supply dept. Big Discounts Add'n Type 342-7800 399-8333 342-1221 BUY NOW! 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