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On the issue of violence and television, Schorr said, "Tele- vision needs and wants vio- lence. Nothing succeeds on TV like violence in entertainment and the news. While television presents the dramatic and the violent, it ends up encouraging the dramatic and the violent." Schorr cited John Hinkley Jr.'s shooting of President Reagan as a case study of a child of the television age act- ing out his frustration. Schorr said it is up to the public to change the way the news is presented. "It is up to the people to tell the networks . and the people in Washington that they have to be more re- sponsible." Concerning the violence, Schorr urged the public to say, "That's enough. It isn't news- worthy anymore." Speaking of the personal di- lemma facing a journalist, Schorr said, "It's a highly com- petitive business. Our job is to get information. People don't want us to know what we want to know." Schorr said the government often tries to withhold the news on the grounds of na- tional security. "Secrecy isn't good for the people," he said. "The prospect that someone may know is the best monitor of the government. The people who keep the secrets are not •always the best people to de- cide." Schorr said twice in his career he killed news stories because "I found myself in a relationship that was not the usual adversary journalist. re- , lationship." The first time was in Hol- Daniel Schorr: Facing dilemmas. land when he decided his story about the royal family of Hol- land would betray peoples' trust and cause enormous un- settlement in their country. The second time was in Po- land when he thought harm would come to Polish Jews as a result of information he sol- icited from them by speaking Yiddish. "Because I was speak- ing to them Jew to Jew, I ac- cepted a different relationship. I had confidences to keep." When asked if he would show the same compassion if he was not Jewish, Schorr hedged, "Maybe, maybe not." Schorr, 70, was awarded three Emmy Awards for excel- lence in journalism. He said he prefers the printed word over television in presenting the news and plans to write a book on the impact of television and the effects of violence on the public. New Israeli Dams Trap Scarce Water YEHONATHAN TOM MER Special to The Jewish News E shtaol, Jerusalem Hills — The week-long storms in November which brought Israel almost half its annual rainfall, sig- nificantly raised the Sea of Galilee's receding shoreline, and helped to replenish the country's diminishing under- ground reserves. The rains did not end Israel's four-year drought, but they focused pub- lic attention upon the country's a cute water shortage. week's that During downpour, more than 1.8 bil- lion cubic meters (equivalent to Israel's total annual water needs) were lost in runaway flood waters flowing into the Mediterranean Sea and spil- ling across the Negev Hills and Arava salt plains into the Dead Sea. According to Giora Dori, di- rector of the Jewish National Funds' land reclamation ac- tivities for the central region and an expert on Israel's water resources, the JNF provides one third of the capital outlay for water storage construction in Israel — the remaining two-thirds equally shared by Israel's Water Resources Authority and the agriculture ministry. Two reservoirs which are currently being constructed at Kedma near Kiryat Malachi in the north-western Negev, and Chai'un near Moshav Paran in the central Arava, are part of constant land reclamation ac- tivities to trap and conserve surplus winter flood waters in this arid region. - When completed, the Kedma reservoir will accommodate 600,000 cubic meters of purified waste waters for use by farming communities of the