EDITORIAL Real Days Of Decision It's a question that surfaces every time there is a story on the financial woes of Yeshiva Beth Yehudah in this newspaper. Why do we have to give so much attention to a school that needed a $100,000 Federa- tion loan to pay teachers? We're told that the Yeshiva represents such a small segment of Jewish Detroit and that what happens in Oak Park hardly mat- ters to a Reform Jew living in West Bloom- field. But what happens at Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, Akiva, Hillel or any other Heb- rew school should be of interest and should be important to every Jew living in metropolitan Detroit, especially to every Jew who donates money to the Allied Jew- ish Campaign. The mere fact that the Yeshiva or any other school in this community is under embarrassing financial strain should raise the alarm in all of us. With the Federa- tion's Days of Decision upon us, we call upon this community to understand that the need for pledges and funds is critical. Day schools cannot do it alone, not now. Both the highly touted Tauber and Giles reports have called for restructured Jewish education in this community. Without the dollars needed to successfully implement the plans, however, reports can become in- effective. In a down economy, the only way to adequately fund Jewish education is through a fundamental change in alloca- tion priorities. Within this context, we urge the com- munity to take these upcoming Days of Decision seriously. It's important. But in the long term, we ask that the Federation also consider decisions — decisions that change the percentage this community keeps versus sends overseas. That percentage needs to be examined and modified. breakdowns. Of course it is better for a child to have two parents. Of course the family structure is important. No one argues with that. But what about the high rate of divorce in suburban white society? That also results in single-parent families headed by unwed, poor women. What about the loss of moral direction that has allowed us to place profit before people, and short-term gain before long-term sensibility? Unwed mothers did not cause the S&L scandal. Inner-city gang members are not responsible for the international arms race, the plundering of natural resources by multinational corporations, or the poli- cies of government that prop up foreign despots because it's good for American business interests. America 1992 — be it black or white, Christian or Jewish — has largely lost its way. "Murphy Brown" is not perfect. But morality is not the purview of conservative Republicans alone. We all need to examine the values we live by and how, on an in- dividual basis, they contribute to the cur- rent state of affairs. As for Dan Quayle, he gets what he de- serves on "Saturday Night Live." Dry Bones messi414 MOVEMENT 151146 NATURAL iit-subr JewtS1-4 ftSSIMISM 6 FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1992 t uve 14AD 1146 REGULAR DRIVE. AN)D -T1-16n) 114E IsPAL Ei-i6RGemcy cAmONIGIQ amp -11.ke'm 11-16 suMki• oLi The situation with Yeshiva Beth Yehudah is symbolic of all forms of Jewish education in this community, not just day schools. It's time, finally, to invest in our Jewish future here in Detroit. The long- term loss, economic and political for Israel, is much greater if we don't. Quayle's Egg When Vice President Dan Quayle criticized unwed TV mom Murphy Brown for having a baby, he stumbled across the line that normally separates Washington's fantasized view of the world from Hollywood's. It was also a case of the wrong messenger delivering an incomplete analy- sis. Still, he was touching on a topic eminently worthy of public discussion: the social consequences of personal values and actions. The vice president was playing the stalk- ing horse for a White House that has done little to reverse the long economic decline that has contributed mightily to the breakdown of inner-city family life. More- over, the Bush administration, held hostage by anti-choice conservatives, has helped to eliminate the abortion option for women, unwed as well as married, who have good reason for seeking to end un- wanted pregnancies. In the aftermath of the Los Angeles riots, the vice president's "Murphy Brown" speech was blatant pandering to white voters who would prefer to blame inner city unwed mothers for the law-and-order breakdown than to deal seriously with the festering conditions that produce such Dry Bones Svr ih A Jeum$4 ovvrmtsT! *mu) AR€ 11 44T N O1. 1140 ■ (. ;Sila stL • (o , wiL,L we Jeti,.. 1 se FREE FM – n4E CURSE Or CLikib RAIS ► K) G Ac-ruAWe ? f 111.11111. PLANNING A Res likeRE T ', AND NEEDS t4oVR 1444.1, DR1v6.,..),uxukt.) LETTERS Bush Editorial Was Appreciated Thank you very much for your May 22 editorial on George Bush. Unfortunately, it is typical of some Jewish elements to bury their heads in the sand whenever danger approaches and to just hope it will go away. George Bush and James Baker are enemies of the Jewish people and the State of Israel. Their record speaks for itself. As a result of this record, every attempt should be made to defeat them at the ballot box. The State of Israel gained nothing from the Bush ad- ministration by allowing 39 missiles to fall on their civilian population unan- swered, and neither will American Jews for. wagging their tails. Dr. Jerome Kaufman Bloomfield Hills Finkelman Story Was Not Accurate The May 22 front page ar- ticle, "WSU Hillel Rabbi Quits After Cuts," attempts to assert a cause and effect relationship that does not ex- ist. Mr. Hitsky would have the reader believe that Rabbi Finkelman quit because In- ternational Hillel could not continue its financial sup- port. Nothing could be fur- ther from the truth. As a member of the ex- ecutive board of B'nai B'rith Hillel of Metro Detroit, I believe the community should be informed that the board had decided to continue the day-to-day operations despite the reduction of funding. Rab- bi Finkelman's decision to take a pulpit is entirely in- dependent of the actions of ' B'nai B'rith International. This article suggests only a reflex reaction by our director. His departure leaves a gaping-, void for students, faculty, and the community at large that our executive board will be ( hard-pressed to fill. We wish "Elly" the verTjj best in his new challenges as a pulpit rabbi and expect that he will serve his new con- gregants with the same spirit and dedication with which he has served our community. Paul E. Rochlen- West Bloomfield Is Hebrew Memorial Still Necessary? Elizabeth Applebaum's_ May 15 article on the Hebrew Memorial Society raises some issues about the legitimacy of their purpose. The society was created to provide free burial to those] people who could not afford a proper burial. lbday, if a per-- son can not afford a burial, the Michigan Department of Social Services will pay for it This is the reason that there is no other Hebrew Memorial left in the cities of America, only in Detroit. From my years in Lansing I know that it is against state law for a funeral chapel to own their own cemetery. Does Hebrew Memorial Chapel get around this because of their special non-profit status? The Jewish News article Continued on Page 10