100 Friday, March 21, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS GOT A QUESTION? Call the Je ish Information Ser vice 967-HELP - Monday-Friday 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. In cooperation with these Jewish Welfare Federation member agencies: •Fresh Air Society •Hebrew Free Loan Association •Jewish Community Center •Jewish Community Council •Jewish Family Service •'Jewish Federation Apartments •Jewish Home for Aged •Jewish Vocational Service and Community Workshop •Midrasha—College of Jewish Studie •Resettlement Service •Sinai Hospital •United Hebrew Schools . ,',;!',!:',ofoWPAI:etiMt:MOUJOHIgek))55tttiN40)):CC( MVAMICIPMPola NOTEBOOK From Saudis In The Sky To Wiesel In Germany BY VICTOR M. BIENSTOCK Weizmann & The Elephant Dr. Chaim Weizmann, the first President of Israel, never forgot the poverty of his youth in Poland, Abba Eban recalled re- cently. In the early days of Israel's statehood, he recounts, the government of Burma wanted to give to the new na- tion's first president the gift of an Indian elephant. Weignann diplomatically declined the offer. "Weizmann told me," Eban ex- plained, "that back in Mottel, Jews on principal would never accept a present that eats:' Elie Wiesel In West Berlin In his capacity as chairman of the US. Holocaust Memorial Committee, Elie Wiesel recent- ly visited West Berlin for the first time and the Germans hailed the event as a triumph in the long effort to achieve German-Jewish understanding. Weisel's visit was for a •meeting of the Holocaust com- mittee's German-American Council which is composed of six Americans and six Ger- mans: Council spokesman Peter Petersen, a Christian Demo- cratic Bundestag deputy, told the press that it was a great success that after years of hard work, cooperation had been achieved with 'VViesel,• a Buchenwald survivor who had long refused contacts with Germans. The West German half of the Council has decided, he said, to contribute to the development of the Holocaust Memorial Museum to be erected in Wash- ington. The German members, of the Council will attend meetings with the architects in Washington next June. • The Council also discussed plans for a conference of Holocaust teachers in the United States and Germany and for a summer camp for German, American and Israeli youths. Wiesel, according to German, press services, said that while his first visit to West Berlin had filled him with sadness, at the same time it awakened hope within him. The German- American Council, he said, will work to overcome the terror of the •past, but that terror can- not and must not be forgotten. The Computer & The Torah After thousands of years in which his only tools were quill pens made from turkey feath- ers, the sofei; or Hebrew scribe, thay soon have to learn to use the computer. A few innova- tive sofrim have developed a computerized optical scanning system to identify missing let- ters or words, cracked ink and other defects that make sacred scrolls invalid. Scanning Ibrahs and mez- zuzahs for defects is an ar- duous, time-consuming task, which the scribes have had to perform by checking every .`isa us c is \t`i single letter in the scroll. "lb locate all the mistakes is hard," Rabbi Yakov Basch, executive director of the Vaad Mishmereth Stare, the Council for Safeguarding the Scribal Arts, told. the Wall Street Jour- nal. "What a computer is bet- ter for is that it's exact. It's also going to save us a lot of time." The Vaad is seeking investors to form Identiscroll, Inc., to operate 14 mobile scanning units here, in Israel and Europe to permit wider inspec- tion of old Thrahs and mez- zuzahs. According to Rabbi Basch, computer training may eventually be part of the education of aspiring scribes for whom the Vaad maintains a school in Brooklyn. Computers will not eliminate jobs for the sofrim; on the con- trary, Rabbi Bosch expects they will provide more jobs for the 200 or so men who work as scribes in this country correct- ing the increased number of scrolls they will be able to handle. . But Rabbi Aryeh Schecter, a Brooklyn scribe who teaches Hebrew calligraphy, has his doubts. "If the post office has trouble sorting the mail with a computer," he argues, "we're sure to have trouble." • Bargain-rate Luxury El Al, Israel's airline, with a load factor, of 80 percent, which makes it the envy of most other airlines, recently in- troduced a new business class which provides a number of first-class features for a mere $180 over the one-way econo- my fare. A 35-seat up front sec- tion• is reserved for this 'class, providing passengers with ad- ditional space, free drinks and separate lavatory facilities. But 92 percent of El Al's passengers are toutists and on- ly 8 percent are business trav- elers. El Al doesn't expect the new rate to bring a spate of business travellers but it does give the economy-class flyer a way to upgrade his ticket. Full first-class, after all, is $4,422. David Schneider, El Al's general manager 'for North America, admits that his pro- posal for a slogan to advertise the new category was rejected by the brass. It read: "For $180, you can fly like a mensch [as in V.I.P.]" From Camel to Flying Palace His grandfather' got around on fleet cancels but King Fand of Saudi Arabia will travel in style the world has never seen. Although the flow of petro- dollars has dwindled to a trickle and the kingdom has had to tighten its belt, cutting the pay of government workers by 30 percent,' the king is spending about $150 million to outfit the most lavish Flying 1,,p,hqqa sit c+,-,