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August 05, 1977 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1977-08-05

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

Family Medicine
Parley in Israel

JERUSALEM—Some 70
physicians from all over Is-
rael gathered at Shaare
Zedek Hospital in Jerusa-
lem for an all-day seminar
on "Problems in Family
Medicine: Reviews and Up-
Date." Among the partici-
pants were six Arab doc-
tors from East Jerusalem
and two from Hebron.
The seminar gave the
family physicians an op-
portunity to hear nine of
the country's top specilists
report on recent devel-
opments in family medi-
cine. one of the newest of
medical disciplines.
Among the subjects dis-
:cussed were: evaluation of
the unborn baby's well-
being: the overuse of anti-
biotics: overexposure to the
sun as a cause of skin can-
cer: diagnosing abdominal
pain: new aspects of gas-
troenterology: and chronic
diarrhea in children.
Dr. Moshe Weinberg.
head of the department of
family medicine/ at Shaare
Zedek. directoy, of the Ro-
mema Kupat Holim Clinic
and organizer of the semi-
nar, reported that the West-
ern orientation to family
medicine Is slowly gaining
ground in Israel. The West-
ern approach views family
medicine as a continuity of
care wherein the doctor
does not -lose" control of
his patient when he goes to
a specialist or enters a hos-
pital.

Hebrew U. Makes
Low-Temp. Device

JERUSALEM—Physicists
at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem_ have devised a
new dilution refrigerator
which creates continuous
temperatures as low as any
in the world, and is more
flexible and economical
than others now in use.
Working in the nuclear
physics laboratory of the
university's Racah Institute
of Physics, a research team
led by American oleh Dr.
John Hess, has spent four
years designing and build-
ing the helium-3 dilution re-
frigerator which can now
be applied to all the fields
of low-temperature re-
search being pursued at pre-
sent. This includes the tech-
nical frontier of obtaining
temperatures below one
thousandth of a degree
above absolute zero

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 5, 1977 17
"A friend is someone who still enjoys the show."
can see through you and
—Farmers' Almanac

INS Promises Nazi Case Speedup

WASHINGTON (JTA )-
The U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service
(INS), under heavy congres-
sional pressure to speed the
investigation and deporta-
tion action against more
than 100 alleged Nazi war
criminals living in the
United States on Wednes-
day, said it is on firmer
ground now to expedite pro-
ceedings against them.
The promise came at a
House subcommittee hear-
ing that followed an in-
vestigation started last
April by the General Ac-
counting Office (GAO)
whether officials of the Jus-
tice Department, the parent
agency of the INS, or other
U.S. officials deliberately
blocked action against the
alleged Nazi criminals. The
GAO is an arm of Con-
gress.
Under questioning by
Rep. Joshua Eilberg
(DPA.), who described the
INS role over the past 25
years as "disgraceful, - the
new INS commissioner,
Leonel J. Castillo, told the
subcommittee that the files
of the Nazis will be opened
both to the GAO and to the
subcommittee's own per-
sonnel.

Castillo testified that new
procedures have been set
up that will bring "all exist-
ing files and materials con-
nected with the Nazi war
criminal program" from
New York and other dis-
trict offices to the central
office in Washington.
"From -now on," he said,
"the review of these files
will be accomplished by at-
torneys rather than in-
vestigators."

In addition, the sub-
committee received a state-
ment submitted by the
State Department's deputy
administrator for security
and consular affairs, John
H. DeWitt that "sound,
standard procedures and ef-
fective working relations
have now been developed"
to obtain testimony. DeWitt
said ghat the "Soviet govern-
ment has made a serious ef-
fort to be cooperative and
helpful" although "the So-
viets do not have a full ap-
preciation of our eviden-

Teachers Meet
for History Parley

NEW YORK—Scholars in
the area of Jewish history,
principals of Hebrew day
schools offering a combined
program of Hebrew and
(273'C.).
general studies, and Jewish
Such bone-chilling zones history teachers met in an
are the world of low-tem- all-day history workshop
perature physics research, which dealt with the 500 -
where molecular movement year period of Jewish his-
is slowed almost to a halt tory (1000-1500) which serv-
(at absolute zero all molecu- ed as the transition period
lar motion does stop) and for Jewish migration from
the scientists can observe the Middle East to the Eu-
processes that are other- ropean continent.
wise hidden from them.
The workshop conference.
by the National
Director Named sponsored
Conference of Yeshiva Prin-
cipals, an affiliate of Torah
by AJCongress
Umesorah, the National So-
NEW YORK—The Ameri-
ciety for Hebrew Day
can .Jewish Congress has ap-
Schools, met at the Hebrew
pointed Nathan Z. Dershow-
Day School of Sullivan Coun-
itz as director of its Com-
ty at Kiamesha Lake, N.Y.
mission on Law, Social Ac-
The teachers and princi-
tion and Urban Affairs. He pals in attendance decried
will succeed Joseph B. Rob-
the lack of teaching tools
ison, who has retired but
such as texts, workbooks
will continue with the con- -and related materials
gea-i-ed specifically for this
gress on a part-time basis
historical period.
as director-emeritus.

tiary requirements. -
The hearing before the
House judiciary sub-
committee on immigration.
citizenship, and inter-
national law of which Eil-
berg is chairman was in-
formed that INS in-
vestigators have been in Is-
rael, meeting with 45
witnesses regarding 10
cases. Efforts also have
been made to obtain testi-
mony in Romania and
France.
Earlier in the hearing,
Victor Lowe, director of the
GAO's general government
division, charged that "Our
progress on this assign-
ment" of reviewing the INS
investigations -has been se-
verely hampered by prob-
lems and delays in getting
access to needed records."
Despite the sub-
committee's support, he
said, "We have not been
given proper access to in-
vestigate files and other re-
cords. Without proper
access to basic information
for our work we cannot in-
dependently develop or veri-
fy information and the Con-
gress cannot have adequate
assurance as to the C__QM-
pleteness of our work. -

Nevertheless, Lowe told
Rep. Sam Hall Jr. (D-Tex.j
before "12 months are up
we'll have a report on each
one of these cases" for the
subcommittee. Delays in
the completion of in-
vestigations, Lowe testified,

were caused by court ac-
tions and legal conflicts
among other things.

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Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman
(D-NY) questioned Castillo
and INS General Counsel
David Crosland why -not
even all the witnesses"
have yet to be questioned in
the case of Bishop Valerian
Trifa although proceedings
Were instituted 27 months
ago. Trifa is the former Ro-
manian Iron Guard leader
who is living in Grass Lake,
Mich.
Castillo, a President Car-
ter appointee, said "I don't
1 863-2388'
know why we didn't move

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