I NEWS I The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith in cooperation with The Jewish Community Center JEWS IN AMERICAN CINEMA 1898 - 1989 A Unique Photographic Exhibition Author, The Jewish Image in American Film MARCH OF THE LIVING JEWISH TEENS AGES 16.20 Experience YOM HASHOAH — Holocaust Remembrance Day in Auschwitz Celebrate HOM HA'ATSMAUT Israel Independence Day in Israel APRIL 22 • MAY 4, 1990 An informative meeting with video tape about the program will be held Thursday, December 14 — 7:30 P.M. United Hebrew Schools Sigmund and Sophie Rohlik Building 21550 West Twelve Mile Road Southfield, MI 48076 For further information, contact Rabbi Bruce D. Aft, Agency for Jewish Education — 352.7117 66 - FRIDAY:LECEMBER.8,-1989 Polls Show Who Israelis Trust Tel Aviv (JTA) — A recent poll indicates that Israelis trust the armed forces, the courts, universities, police and the rabbinate, but have little faith in politicians, the Histadrut, the press and big business. The survey was carried out by Israeli Democracy, a publication of Tel Aviv Uni- versity's Diaspora Institute. "The supposition behind this (trust index)," explained Professor Ephraim Yuchtman-Ya'ar, dean of the TAU Faculty of Social Sciences, "is that the vital- ity of democracy in a country facing an ongoing struggle to survive depends, primari- ly, on the faith placed by its citizens in the central in- stitutions on which it was founded." Confidence in 12 institu- tions was measured in the surveys, taken in July'1987 and August 1989. Approx- imately 1,200 Jewish respondents aged 18 and over were contacted, ex- cluding residents of kibbut- zim and the territories. Ya'ar attributed the in- crease of trust in the police to their involvement in na- tional security matters. Higher marks for the rab- binate indicate a strengthening of the religious trend in Israeli society. Ya'ar suggested that in- stitutions such as political parties, seen as serving narrow interests, rate less trust than those perceived as serving society as a whole. Peres Seeking • 'Peace Front' Jerusalem (JTA) — Labor Party leader Shimon Peres has announced that he will try to create a "peace front" with the religious parties in the Likud-led coalition government. Peres, who is vice premier and finance minister, did not indicate which parties he had in mind when he made his proposal in a last week to the Labor Party's dovish Mashov faction. But Peres is said to feel an affinity with the ultra- Or- thodox Shas and Degel HaTorah parties, which, like Labor, support territorial compromise in principle. "Labor has two alter- natives for the future," Peres told his party col- leagues, "to go with the Likud, and then be dragged