Lincoln Towers Manager Is Ticketed By Fire Dept. LILA ORBACH Special to The Jewish News T Al Kushner: Calling it a career. Alvin Kushner Will Retire From Community Council Alvin M. Kushner, executive director of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit for the last 141/2 years, has announced his retirement. Kushner will leave his position March 1, at the age of 62. "I've worked more years than any of my predecessors in this job, so I figured I could leave," Kushner jok- ingly told The Jewish News this week. He said he began to consider retirement at age 62 more than a year and a half ago, well before his heart attack of last May. And, he insists, the heart attack had nothing to do with his decision. "I have had no subsequent pro- blems and I have felt very well. I've been functioning as if nothing ever happened." What is calling him now is a chance to take it easy, catch up on his reading, and possibly teach and volunteer. Kushner fondly recalled substitute teaching in Mt. Clemens when he, his wife Ruth, and their young family first came to Michigan from New York City to operate a USO club for the Jewish Welfare Board. That was in 1957. Now he would like to teach a college course on Jewish concerns, black-Jewish relations, or community organizations — "areas, theoretically, where I am a maven. In 1963, Kushner joined Detroit's Jewish Community Council as an assistant to executive director Walter Klein. He left 3% years later to head the Pittsburgh Jewish Federation's Community Relations Commission and returned to Detroit in 1973 to succeed Klein. Continued on Page 12 he manager of the Lincoln Tower apartments was issued a series of local and state cita- tions this week for disconnecting the building's fire alarm, locking the stairwell doors and failing to have a fire evacuation plan. His actions could have led to a major disaster last Sun- day, the Royal Oak Township Fire Deparment reported, when a fire flashed through an eighth floor apart- ment, forcing the evacuation of residents and causing several cases of smoke inhalation. At least one resident remains in Providence Hospital in fair condition. Merle Trepp, who manages the ten-story, 480-unit highrise on Lin- coln Blvd. near Greenfield, told authorities he turned the alarm off to avoid confusion. But fire fighters said he made a dreadful mistake — risk- ing the lives of the buildings 500 (mostly Jewish) residents, all of whom are over 50 years of age and many who were unaware there was even a fire. "Turning off the alarm is definately a no-no," said Royal Oak Township Fire Chief Tyrone Jarrett. "It hampered our evacuation plans and people weren't aware of the in- herent danger. He had absolutely no fire evacuation plan. If that's not cor- rected, it could lead to a misde- meanor?' The origin of the blaze, which began in apartment 804, is still under investigation. "It was probably caus- ed by a faulty electrical heater located in the bathroom," said Chief Jarrett. It took the nearly 50 Royal Oak Township and Southfield fire fighters less than 45 minutes to bring the fire under control. "It had the potential to be very deadly," said Keith Kramer, a Royal Oak Township fire fighter. "It was a difficult fire to fight because it had to be fought from the inside out. The smoke and heat conditions at points were called untenable but the guys pushed through it and put the fire out. It could have been a major disaster?' Now the clean-up begins. Several of the windows on the eighth and ninth floors have been boarded. Black soot lines the outside of the northwest wing of the building. Some floors suf- fered serious water damage and many of the ceilings and carpets will have Continued on Page 12 Phone Rates Are Dividing W. Bloomfield LILA ORBACH Special to The Jewish News L ast week, Ilene Monast of West Bloomfield dialed her doctor in Southfield and was put on hold. It turned into a costly phone call. In fact, just about every time Monast lets her fingers do the walk- ing, it turns into a long distance call. You see, Monast lives on the other side. While her home is within the West Bloomfield boundaries, it's without the telephone exchange system other West Bloomfield residents enjoy. Her phone number begins with 683, considered to be a "Pontiac exchange" but located in the eastern portion of West Bloomfield Township, causing all calls to Continued on Page 12 ROUND UP No Recognition From Vatican Amsterdam (JTA) — Vatican recognition of the State of Israel cannot be ex- pected soon, according to Car- dinal Johannes Willerbrands, president of the Vatican's Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews. The Dutch-born Willer- brands reportedly conveyed that message to Dutch Catholic bishops visiting Rome last week. Willerbrands had been ask- ed about the prospects of Catholic-Jewish dialogue. He replied that a sharp distinc- tion must be made between religious and political dialogue. A religious dialogue must take priority, but a political dialogue is not expected soon, nor is Vatican recognition of Israel, the cardinal said. He added that by no means do all Jews in the world identify with the State of Israel. Moving Closer On West Bank Tel Aviv (JTA) — Labor Par- ty hawks and reportedly King Hussein of Jordan have moved closer to agreement that some form of territorial compromise is necessary for the West Bank, which Israel captured from Jordan in the Six-Day War. Israeli Absorption and Im- migration Minister Yaacov Thur disclosed at a news con- ference Jan. 4 that King Hus- sein of Jordan has hinted he is ready to concede Israeli rule over some of the West Bank as part of a peace agreement. The minister said the king's attitude was reflected in the "London Document," the summary of talks held secret- ly in London last year bet- ween Hussein and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. Thur is a supporter of the relatively hawkish Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin of Labor. An ideological ally, Labor Central Committee member Micha Goldman, has proposed that the party sup- port annexation and introduc- tion of Israeli law in areas of the West Bank that are in- cluded in the Allon Plan. The plan, formulated by the late Yigal Allon, foreign minister during the mid 1970s, calls for Israel to re- tain portions of the West Bank vital to its security while withdrawing from heavily Arab-populated areas. The plan never was of- ficially part of a Labor Party election platform. Kurds Poisoned Amnesty Says New York — Iraqi security forces have poisoned at least 40 Kurds opposed to the government, according to Amnesty International. Citing "reliable sources," the human rights organiza- tion alleged that a common rat poison was used. Amnes- ty called on the Iraqi govern- ment to investigate the reports. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5