THE JEWISH NEWS (USPS 275-520) Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Postmaster: Send address changes to The Jewish News, 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $15 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher ALAN HITSKY News Editor CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager HEIDI PRESS Associate News Editor DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the 11th day of Kislev, 5740, the following scriptutal selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Genesis 28:10-32:3. Prophetical portion, Hosea 12:13-14:10. Candle lighting, Friday, Nov. 30, 4:44 p.m. VOL. LXXVI, No. 13 Page Four Friday, November 30, 1979 SENSATIONAL HEADLINES Had there been less of an urge to sen- Arabs travel daily to industries operated by Is- sationalize the headlines there could have been raelis. The 100,000 Arab job-holders are more a reduction in suspicions among people and a important to this problematic development better understanding of social and political val- than the Arab mayors who are expected to re- ues. turn to their posts or to be ready for replace- Had black-Jewish relations been treated as a ments by equally qualified successors. human factor in life and not defined as an "is- The fact remains, insofar as the Israel situa- sue," there could never have developed the con- tion is concerned, that the Israeli courts operate fusions that react with discredit to many in legally and the people observe their rulings. leadership in this country. They did in the Elon Moreh instance and will in Had the arrest- of a mayor of an important the case of the Nablus mayor. The fact remains Arab city in the territory administered by Israel that there is need for a solvable approach to been judged in legal terms, the anger that was disputes and it is in the best interests of Israel generated by attacks on Israel would have been and the Arabs to reach an accord. The fact re- averted. mains that Jordan is already the Palestinian Even the resignations of 25 mayors of other state and if and when a pact can be made with cities in the areas populated by Arabs could Hussein as it was with Sadat there will be an have been treated with greater respect for end to quarreling. human reactions had the treatment of the news Then there also will be an end to sen- been accompanied by the fact that 100,000 sationalized headlines. But, will there? RELIGIOUS DIGNITY Respect for Hanuka and Christmas, while the two do not collide calendar-wise thi§ . year, jus- tifies the advance admonition to adherents to all faiths that mutual respect in no sense jus- tifies or requires observance of Jewish festivals by Christians and the Christian holy days by Jews. The holiday spirit that will predominate Hanuka will inspire enthusiasm among the youth and the elders will observe the Macca- bean festival with them. Christians will have an interest in Hanuka, just as Jews will be affected by the Christmas spirit. There will be gift-giving and the ex- change of greetings as well as gifts. But this need not fuse the two festivals. The respect for religious preferences will ever remain-a basic rule and a duty, yet this time of year there must be separation and this is the time to emphasize the mutual respect while denoting the necessity of a separation in the best interests of the faith- ful. On many occasions there have been conflicts over the basic ideal of separation of church and state, of respecting the faith of others while remaining faithful to one's own. In the past there have been incidents of unpleasantness, when Jewish children refused to participate in Christmas plays and programs. Those who un- derstood the realism of the situation credited the Jewish youths- with the right to separate themselves from un-Jewish religious practices, and in the more pragmatic environments there was the emphasis on obligations in schools — and this applied to other -environments — not to introduce religious practices in public affairs. This is the time to alert parents and children to be prepared for the separation. The friend- ship for Christians is a supreme need, a great desire, an obligation. The adherence to faith- fulness in Jewish observance remains strong. Hanuka for Jews, Christmas for Christians, is not an absurd slogan. It can be adhered to while exchanging good wishes and gifts. This is the human, the American, the respectful way. THE HAVERIM HOMES Dedication, Sunday, of the third Haverim by a second in Oak Park on Meadowlark. The Home serves to emphasize an important corn- third home has begun to function on Marlow in munity obligation to the handicapped in the Oak Park and will be dedicated formally on area of retardation. Sunday. The plight of the large number of unfortu- In welcoming the new development there is nates has long been ignored. Long ignored, be- cause it was misunderstood. The needs of the the duty not only to support the three homes but retarded were treated ignorantly on a national also to recognize the great need to support the scale. Resultantly, the Jewish retarded simi- total movement for the retarded. While the new larly suffered from an ignorance that was per- home was made possible with family gifts as a mitted to dominate an otherwise progressive memorial to Seymour Gilmore, it should not be forgotten that facilities are needed for many society. The errors are being corrected. The retarded more adult retarded; that, having established who are in the hundreds of thousands nation- the homes, the movement needs generous sup- ally are receiving due consideration nationally. port. The progress already made in this field In the process, increased Jewish interest is ac- should encourage increased assistance to this cause on the most generous scale. corded a serious social problem. The Jewish retarded, the young and the el- There is an awakening to this great need and derly, number in the hundreds. The Association it is to the credit of a responsible community for Jewish Retarded began its services with the that a commendable encouragement is being first home established on Evergreen, followed given to a pressing need. , Pantheon Books Series Illustrated Einstein, Freud Biographies for Beginners An authoritative biographer and a skilled artist combined their efforts to produce a fascinating book, "Einstein for Beginners" (Pantheon Books). In the vast selection of cartoons, in an accumulation of facts, all in pictorial fashion, the story of Dr. Albert Einstein is presented here so impressively that the reader is certain to gain historical data while learning much about the eminent scientist's theories and achieve- ments. Dr. Joseph Schwartz, associate profes- sor of physics at the City University of New York, authored the selected text. The illustrator is Michael McGuinnes, who has gained wide status with his work. The Einstein story commences with an analysis of the background of anti- Semitism and its effects on the framer of the Theory of Relativity, the attacks upon him as a Jew and the affronts to the Jewish people. Appropriately, therefore, the book commences with this quote from Einstein himself: . "If relativity is proved right the Ger- ALBERT EINSTEIN mans will call me a German, the Swiss will call me a Swiss citizen and the French will call me a great scientist. If relativity is proved wrong the French will call me a Swiss, the Swiss will call me a German and the Germans will call me a Jew." The Einstein book is part of a series on famous personalities published by, Pantheon. Another book of great interest in this series is "Freud for Begin- ners." The author of the Freud book is 411- novelist poet and art historian, . Appignanesi, a native of Montreal who now resides in London. The illustrator is the Latin American designer Oscar Za- rate. Here, too, the Jewish aspects are noted and the controversial aspectS of Freudism are fully noted. The analytical methods developed by Freud are illustrated and defined in the collection of drawings and cartoons. The many factual inserts in the Freud volume include "Little Dictionary" based on Charles Rycroft's critical dictionary of psychoanalysis. SIGMUND FREUD In both the Einstein and Freud vol- umes are included suggestions for further reading, books by and about the two personalities and related data. The value of this series becomes apparent. It is a most illuminat- ing introduction of a new type of biographical publishing:.. -