10 Friday, December 5, 1980 THE DETIPTIfY411H1 HOY4 U.S. Papers Denounced Paris Bombing NEW YORK — More than half the nation's 50 top circulation newspapers made no editorial comment on the Oct. 13 Paris synagogue bombing. The 22 which did comment were , unanimous in denouncing the terrorist attack. Editorial reaction to the bombing was the topic of the latest Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith "Big government with the Nazis during World War II; • The Paris bombing was part of a broader pattern of terrorism in Europe and the rest of the world; • The French govern- ment should be more vigor- ous in combatting neo- Nazis and terrorism; • Pro-Arab, anti-Israel attitudes of the French gov- ernment may be contribut- ing to anti-Semitism. Some of the papers praised the French people 50" press survey of the treatment of events which directly concern the Jewish community. The 22 newspapers sounded several themes in their comments: • Anti-Semitism in France was not surpris- ing considering French history from the Dreyfus affair in the 1890s to the cooperation of the Vichy Palestinians Key to Peace? NEW YORK — An argument against Palesti- nian self-determination is presented by Oberlin Col- lege Prof. Steven E. Plaut in a recent edition of the New York Times. Plaut, who claims that self- determination for the Palestinians is not the key- to peace in the Middle East, as many believe, states: "The true key to peace lies in convincing the Arabs of the futility of trying to de- stroy Israeli self- determination . . . The fact must be faced that Palesti- nian `self-determination' has become a euphemism for the liquidation of Israel. Like 'white power' and `states rights,' in this coun- try, Palestinian rights' has become a racist buzz word disguising the intention of supressing the rights of an- other group. "Of course, Palestinians, like white folks, do have rights. But these do not in- clude the violent destruc- tion of Israel — the only `right' the PLO seeks to exercise." r e re re JERUSALEM — The first graduates of a leader- ship training program for students from development areas, conducted jointly by the Sephardic communities department of the World Zionist Organization and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, have started to work in their home corn- munities, contributing their skills to narrowing the social gap. The leadership training program is operated by the university's dean of stu- dents office. Students who come from Israel's develop- ment towns and depressed neighborhoods are singled out for this program and re- ceive material and aca- demic aid along with a cultural-academic program designed to encourage them to return to their home areas after graduation and take an active leadership role in their communities' public life. A total of 270 students participate in the program this year, including 50 who study social work, 10 law students, 50 in natural sci- ence and agriculture, 90 in humanities, 70 in social sci- ences and four in medicine and dentistry. Body Fluids Flow Studied r e re re re .e re re re re re .0" re re re re re re re ‘0- A-0-0-0•Y• the perfect gift. . . a subscription to THE JEWISH NEWS 17515 W. NINE MILE ROAD Suite 865 Southfield, Michigan 48075 Please send gift subscription to: NAME ADDRESS STATE FROM OCCASION ❑ $15 enclosed • ‘,"4911-0"0-0"46)-44;•0-01e49w-Ov-01(49-A4914.40x4P-s-01<42-40-4.60 ZIP _ JERUSALEM (JTA) — Rabbi Yitzhak Hutner, a leading Orthodox educator and talmudic sage, died Nov. 28 at age 74. Sidney T. Eder Sidney T. Eder, president of M. E. Trucking Co. in De- troit, died Dec. 3 at age 65. A native Detroiter, Mr. Eder was a vice president of Madias Bros. industrial waste, paint and janitorial service. He was 33rd Degree Ma- son, a member of Daylight Lodge of the Masons, Cres- cent Shrine Club, Moslem Temple, Arabian Horse Troop, Metropolitan Club of Livonia, and a former offi- cer and board member of the Scrap Dealers Association of Detroit. He leaves his wife, Do- lores; a sister, Mrs. Joseph (Gertrude) Katz of Ann Ar- bor; three step-children, nieces and nephews. L. Mendelsohn JACOBO TIMERMAN NEW YORK — The Argentine daily newspaper La Opinion, confiscated by the military government from its exiled owner, Jacobo Timerman, has been sold for $5 million. The paper, founded in 1971 was purchased at an auction last month by Juana Ivanoff de Inocente, an Argentine business- woman. Timerman was arrested in April 1977 and kept in detention until September 1979, when he was stripped of his citizenship and expel- led from Argentina. Timerman currently lives in Israel. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — Louise Mendelsohn, who won many awards for her contributions to architec- ture, is dead at age 87. Widow bf - German ar- chitect Eric Mendelsohn, Mrs. Mendelsohn won an award for her work since 1953 to establish a National Museum of the Building Arts. Congressional" action to build such a museum in Washington is pending. - r RAMAT-GAN — Bar- Ilan University has doubled to 25 the number of English-language under- graduate courses being taught this year at the uni- versity. The courses in science, so- cial science, mathematics and Jewish studies are de- signed for studentS from the United States' and other English-speaking countries who are studying at Bar- Ilan. University officials re- port the most popular courses in the English- speaking program are Tal- mud, Bible, and Jewish Phi- losophy and Tradition. NEW YORK — Student journalists from across North America will gather for the 10th National Editors Conference of the Jewish Student Press Serv- ice Dec. 28-30 in New York. Participating in the con- ference will be some 75 editors of Jewish student and young adult publica- tions. Among speakers who will address the conference are Arthur Hertzberg, Gary Rosenblatt and Sol Stern. Rabbi Hutner was born in Poland of a distinguished rabbinic family. As a young man he published a learned work on the laws of the Nazirite which earned him the praise of leading tal- mudic scholars. Later he settled in the U.S. with his family and founded the Rabbi Haim Berlin Yeshiva, one of New York City's leading schools of advanced talmudic studies. Rabbi Hutner has played a major role in Or- thodox high school educa- tion in the U.S. Oswald Mosley Led Anti-Semitic Acts in London PARIS — Sir Oswald Mosley, who led distur- bances in London's Jewish neighborhoods during World War II to arouse anti-Semitism, died Dec. 2 at age 84. Nazi leader Adolf Hitler attended the marriage of Sir Oswald to Lady Diana Mit- ford. JWB Grants NEW YORK (JTA) — Scholarships totalling more than $50,000 have enabled 30 students — all future staff members of Jewish community centers and Jewish Ys — to enroll in professional graduate schools of social work in universities and colleges. To: The Jewish News 17515 W. 9 Miie Rd. Suite 865 Southfield, Mich. 48075 English Classes Up at Bar-Ilan Student Press Meets in NY I ORDER TODAY laNa CITY Timerman Paper Sold to Argentine Businesswoman Students Aid Deprived Areas REHOVOT — How ir- regularities in mucus fluid- ity and accumulations can lead to breathing difficul- ties and loss of hearing, and Record-Breaking how disruptions in blood flow in heart attack or Bond Dinner , stroke may result from NEW YORK — Speaking blood vessel wall changes, at a national Israel Bond are two of the questions dinner which produced a being probed by Prof. Ale- record-breaking $57.5 mil- xander Silberberg, first in- lion for Israel's economic cumbent of the Joseph and development, Israel Prime Marian Robbins Chair of Minister Menahem Begin Biorheology at the Weiz- declared that Israel should mann Institute. The holder of the newly- be treated by the U.S. and the West as a faithful and established chair, endowed by the Robbins family of stable ally. The dinner honored Jack Chicago and their friends, is D. Weiler of New York, studying how the biorheol- prominent American ogy, or flow properties of the Jewish leader. With the re- body's fluids and tissues, as- cord sale, the Israel Bond sures man's health and how Organization surpassed the abnormal characteristics $5 billion sales figure since may be altered to restore proper functions. its inception 30 years ago. 3 ?-re.../Prer0- 044"0 -401 for participating in a rally protesting the synagogue bombing. Three of the pap- ers said that violent repris- als would only lead to more violence; one paper pointed out that violent reprisals were likely to follow in the absence of government ac- tion. Rabbi Hutner, Talmud Scholar JUST 9Y From Paste in old label To Effective date NAME Please Allow Two Weeks