I FOCUS I What Do Jews Want From Jewish Press? GARY ROSENBLATT Editor L CORSICA from $1 7 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ *Lease pymt. based on approved credit on 48 mos. closed end, 60,000 total mileage w/60 per mile extra charge. To get total amt. multiplypymt. times 48. Subject to 4% use tax, 1st mo. in advance, sec. dept. equal to 1st mo. pymt., plate cost extra. HOURS Mon.'& Thu. 'til 9 Tu.. Wed.. Fri. 'til 6 98 300* 42355 GRAND RIVER Just East of Novi Rd., Novi FRIDAY. MARCH 11. 1988 MARLA FELDMAN LEASING MANAGER os Angeles — What does the Jewish com- munity want from its Jewish press? Should American Jewish newspapers be providing more conflict in their coverage or promoting communal institutions — or both? Those were among the topics discussed during a free- wheeling program by four local panelists (two rabbis and two communal leaders) on problems with Jewish newspapers and Jewish or- ganizations. The session took place at the annual American Jewish Press Association editorial workshop in Los Angeles, held recently at the Hillel House on the campus of UCLA. Rabbi Chaim Seidler-Feller, the outspoken Hillel director at UCLA, told the editors he wanted to see more reporting of community conflict in their newspapers. "You aren't real- ly challenging us,' he said. "A newspaper without conflict is not healthy, and I want to read a Jewish newspaper that is interesting enough to make me want to read it, not just look through it." The rabbi called for more investigative reporting, and urged the American Jewish press to analyze and question rather than simply support the decisions of the organized Jewish community. "You should be serving as a check and balance to the Establish- ment," he said. As an observer of Jewish life on campus, Rabbi Seidler- Feller suggested that Jewish university professors are an untapped resource to the organized community, a group that has become alien- ated in its feelings towards Jewish institutions and causes. "We are losing the best and the brightest of American Jewry," he said. "These academics are the most distant from us and they have the highest rate of inter- marriage." He attributed this in part to his belief that "there is a strong anti-intel- lectual tendency growing among American Jews. Soon we'll be totally dominated by businessmen. "Maybe I'm an elitist," he added, "but I sense a great level of mediocrity out there." He said this can be seen on the university campus, where "Jewish students flee classes with Asian students because the Asians ruin the [academ- ic] curve. We're getting soft on Jewish brains." Rabbi Seidler-Feller's most radical suggestion was for the organized Jewish community to develop a body politic not based on consensus, and to take strong stands on issues, even if they alienate some segments of the community. Taking a very different point of view, Steve Huber- man, the executive director of the Los Angeles Jewish Fed- eration, suggested that Jewish newspapers should be strengthening and support- ing the goals of Federation, while acknowledging that it is healthier for the newspap- ers to be independent of "Maybe I'm an elitist, but I sense a great level of mediocrity out there." Federation in terms of finan- cial support. (In Los Angeles, the Federation recently sold its newspaper to a group of private businessmen who are major lay leaders of Federa- tion. About half of the 90 Jewish newspapers in the U.S. are published or subsidized by their local Federation.) Huberman cited a study he did in Los Angeles, which he said is "ten years ahead of the rest of the country," on who needs and reads Jewish news- papers, and among his find- ings: readers of Jewish newspapers are getting older, with 17 percent elderly; there are fewer nuclear families, and more intermarried couples; Jews are becoming increasingly mobile, and it takes up to five years to feel connected to a new communi- ty; Jews are second only to Episcopalians in affluence; at the same time about 15 per- cent of the Jewish population is poor. "Jewish identity today is like a cafeteria," said Huber- man, "with people free to pick and choose." He called on Jewish organizations to. "go out into the marketplace rather than waiting for Jews to come to us." Neil Sandberg, regional director of the American Jewish Committee, called on Jewish newspapers to in- crease their attempts to attract readers unaffiliated with Jewish organizations and to provide more coverage of interfaith activities. "Half