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Some minimum deposit requirements may vary. Higher rates may be available for larger.deposits at some institutions. Rates subject to change without notice. — Based on $500.00 deposit. Some minimum deposit requirements may vary. Higher rates may be available for larger deposits at some institutions. Substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal. Rates subject to change without notice. FIRST SECURITY-1-1 SAVINGS BANK FSB Mortgage Loans—Competitive rates guaranteed PLUS interest paid on all conventional mortgage loan tax and insurance escrow accounts. W(101114 FSLIC I 'COW S...11, Mtior. 42 Co. 1100.000 FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1987 1760 Telegraph Rd., Suite 201 Bloomfield Hills, Mi 48013-5815 Just South of Orchard Lake Rd. (313) 338-7700 What Is The Role Of A Jew In Journalism? EQUAL tIOEISNG OPPORTUNITY ithin a few weeks, this reporter will mark the 58th anni- versary of his entrance into professional journalism as a cub reporter on the legendary New York World and the com- mencement of his 59th year as a Jew _in journalism — a career that has straddled the once sharply distinct worlds of Jewish and general-interest news. I cannot say that the fact of my Jewishness (scanty and ill-formed as it was when I went out into the world) did not affect my outlook and give it dimensions it may otherwise not have had in my reporting and interpretation of news. I was always aware of the fact that, being Jewish, I could not detach myself per- sonally and regard with com- plete objectivity develop- ments affecting the Jewish wellbeing. I suspect that the heightened sensitivity to racism, religious bias and pre- judice that lay in my Jewish subconscious made me more alert to discrimination in all its forms against others wherever it was manifested. That I was a Jew had never seemed particularly signifi- cant to one whose contacts with the Jewish world had been limited. But my sense of Jewish kinship flowered when I moonlighted to assist the overwhelmed staff at the Jewish Iblegraphic Agency in processing the cables from Jerusalem on the 1929 Arab riots. It came to fruition the day four years later when Adolf Hitler assumed power in Germany and I forthwith resigned from The New York Herald Thibune to join the JTA. This sense of Jewishness was something that never left me. So much so that no matter what the assignment or for whom I was writing, when I'd done the day's story and gotten the cable off, I went out looking for the local Jews. It had become almost an obsession, and when I ac- companied the Allied Fifth Army in the liberation of southern France in 1944, if I had no other lead, I would check the names on the tomb- stones in the local Jewish cemetery and then seek the survivors. On every assignment I had, I could try to be factual and objective as every reporter must, but in reporting a vitriolic speech by a Father Coughlin or a Nazi Bundist spellbinder in a Yorkville bierhalle in which the Jews were the target, no reporter with any sense of his Jewish- ness could avoid feeling himself attacked. I was no exception. Rare is the man who, on be- ing assaulted, does not try to defend himself. And so I will freely admit that some of my news reports lacked the detachment and objectivity that we are taught are the hallmarks of good reporting. And I am not ashamed to ad- mit that I permitted personal indignation and moral out- rage to show when I reported on man's inhumanity to man, on persecution and discrim- In the era when Dan Schorr and I were breaking in, news of Jewish concern rarely appeared in the general press. ination, regardless of the race or religion of the victim or its locale. I tried to be objective and detached, as my tutors, tough New York city editors, and, later, exacting foreign editors, demanded. It wasn't easy. I learned that there was no such thing as a detached ob- jectivity; each man perceives the scene through different eyes. The best you can do is to report, as honestly as you can, exactly what you saw. Neither when working in the general press, or in the Jewish press, did I consider myself a defender of Jewish causes nor their advocate. I reported the facts as I perceived them (through Jewish lenses, perhaps) and while I did not conceal my personal reaction to anti- Semitism and other forms of racial or relgious intolerance, I never suppressed a story that was factually correct, simply because it unfavorably depicted individual Jews or a Jewish organization. I could not agree with the hush-hush school that wanted to suppress all news that might depict Jews un- favorably. Jews, like everyone else, I believed, must be made aware of their sins and errors to be able to guard against them. They had a right to be stupid as well as smart — as they were — to be thieves as