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July 29, 1977 - Image 43

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1977-07-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Readers Forum

UHS Hebrew Class Rapped

Editor, The Jewish News:
I am - 11 years old, and I
read the article "United
Hebrew Schools All-Hebrew
Class is Successful" (July
8). I was in the four-day-a-
week program, and I found
certain differences between
what was reported and
what actually happened.
According to the article
the class was conducted
only in Hebrew. I think that
ut 70 percent of the
ss was in English. I
agree with the article's de-
scription of Mrs. Gold-
schlag being "effervescent,
encouraging and enthusias-
tic." I learned more in the
four-day-a-week program
than in the • three-day-a-
week program. I would
have liked to learn more.
But even though we were
told that we would learn
conversational Hebrew, I

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don't think this promise
was kept.
You mentioned that the
students that did not drop
out of the class stayed be-
cause of their "willingness
to sacrifice an extra after-
noon per week." I know at
least three kids, including
myself, who would hay g, .
liked to drop out but their
parents wouldn't let them.
Ilka Warshawsky

Join• Officials
Name Project

JERUSALEM—The official
naming of the Brookdale
Housing Project for the
Aged and Community Cen-
ter in Giloh, Jerusalem,
took place recently with the
participation of Mayor
Teddy - Kollek, Donald M.
Robinson, vice president
and president-elect of the
American Jewish Joint Dis-
tribution Committee; Ralph
I. Goldman, JDC executive
vice president ; Harold.
Trobe, director of JDC-Is-
rael; and Israel Katz, direc
tor of the Brookdale In-
stitute.

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Arab Newspaper
Appears in Europe

LONDON—The first Arab-
ic-language daily news-
paper in Europe, the eight-
page Al Arab, is being pub-
lished in London. It is
aimed at the 50,000 Arabs
living in the British- capital,
and the one million Arabs
visiting or working in Eu-
rope.
The paper claims to be
"a forum fo4 free and unfet-
tered opinion without ideolo-
gical. or political basis."

Magazine Issued
for Jewish Deaf

NEW YORK—".Our
Way," a religious magazine
treated specifically for Jew-
ish deaf students and
adults, features information
on laws, customs. stories
and news of special interest
to the Jewish deaf.
For information, write Na-
tional Council of Synagogue
Youth, 116 E. 27th St.. New
York, N.Y. 10016.

Artist Minne Fry
Exhibits in London

BY DORA FRAENKEL

Special to the Jewish News

LONDON—The Centaur
Gallery in Highgate Village
was filled to overflowing
for the opening of Minne
Fry's paintings. Jewish per-
sonalities, Jewish and non-
Jewish artists, journalists
and - art critics were pre-
sent. .
Minne Fry was born in Jo-
hannesburg, South Africa,
where she received her
B.A. degree in English and
art history. She has liVed in
London since 1955 and has
exhibited in various coun-
tries. Her works have been
bought for public and pri-
vate collections in many
parts of the world.
Tachist and non-fig-
urative, Minne Fry's paint-
ings possess a sensitivity of
color and movement that
conjures up poetry or
music. She believes that
"No art has really to be 'un-
derstood', in so many
words. You don't want to
`understand' a sunset, a
moonlit sky,, even a piece of
music".
Her mkt exhibition will
be held in Johannesburg in
the middle of August.

friday, July 29, 1977 43

Begin Lashes Labor Criticism
OF His Foreign Policy Objectives

JERUSALEM (JTA )-
Premier Menachem Begin
returned from the U.S. and
launched into an angry re-
buttal of criticism levelled
against him by former Pre-
mier Yitzhak Rabin and
other Labor Alignment lead-
ers.
In a brief 'press confer-
ence at Ben-Gurion Airport,
Begin flatly rejected
Rabin's contention that. he
had failed to coordinate
U.S.-Israel policy and there-
by opened the way for an in-
evitable confrontation with
America when the Geneva
conference is re-convened.
Begin attacked the for-
mer Rabin government for
creating a "bitter . con-
frontation" with the US.
which his government, he
claimed, has succeeded in
ending. He said that by
trying to reach an agree-
ment with Washington be-
fore the Geneva confer-
ence, Rabin had actually
asked for American pres-
sure.

"Of course the Americans
were willing to reach a
prior agreement but an
agreement according to
their terms," Begin said.
He also claimed that
Rabin's meetings with Car-
ter- last March were a
"very difficult • conversa-
tion," in contrast, apparent-
ly to the "rapport" that he
`succeeded in establishing
with the President.
"Not only is there no con-
frontation, there is even a
promise for arms sup-
plies," Begin said, and, con-
trary to custom, he men-
tioned 19 Cobra helicopters
for anti-tank warfare as one
"of the most important
items promised." •
He acknowledged that dif--
ferences existed with the
U.S. "They gre well known,
but we did not ask to reach
an agreement with the U.S.
before Geneva," he said.
He reiterated, "We will go.
to Geneva with no pre-
conditions."

In the Middle Ages, Eu-
ropeans came to believe
that Jews possesed a tail
and horns, and had a dis-
tinctive odor.

Begin also lashed out at
former Foreign Minister
Yigal Allon who had criti-
cized the Premier's peace
plan for failing to mention
diplomatic relations with
the Arab states as one of
the aims of negotiations.
Begin contended that this
did not need specification
because it was implicit in
other elements of the plan.
But it was in fact spelled
out in order to avoid _any
doubts, Begin said.
He said the words "diplo-
matic relations" did not ap-
pear in the draft of the
document presented to the
Knesset's Foreign Affairs
and Security Committee
"because of forgetfulness."
However, he said, when he
discovered that those words
were missing, just before
his meeting with Carter, he
ordered that part of the
document re-written.
"Thus the Americans re-
ceived an Israeli document
which specified diplomatic
relations as part of Israel's
understanding of peace,"
Begin said.

Begin also accused the op-
position of leaking" the
document presented to the
Knesset committee. "This
is an act of irresponsibility
and we shall learn the les-
son," he said. -
Meanwhile,
President
Anwar Sadat of Egypt was
quoted by the Middle East
News Agency in Cairo as
saying that he believes if Is-
rael is ready for peace, a
solution can be found to the
question of a Palestinian
presence at the Geneva con-
ference.
"But any solution should
take in ,consideration the
fact that without solving
the Palestinian problem
there will be no permanent
peace in' the area because
it is the core of the whole
problem."

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A review of the 1977 Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel
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took place at Somerset Inn with 60 leaders of the 1977 AJC-
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Martin E. Citrin, president of the JAvish Welfare Feder-
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