041,4, • • 1992J 6to 0 •••••••••••• choose Early Dealer Demo I From! CLEARANCE SALE! JCCouncil Meeting Airs Racial Debate PHIL JACOBS Managing Editor T Sedan de Ville Stock #2247 Black \Ai/black leather . . OR SMARTLEASE A New '92 Sedan de Ville $460 SA Month 36 Month Lease down payment GMAC LUXURY SMARTLEASE 36 Months. First pymt. plus $500 ref. sec. dep. and plate or transfer due on delivery. 4% state tax additional, 36,000 mile limitation. 15' per mile excess charge over limitation. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end. To get total pymts. multiply pymt. by 36 months. - R OGER RIME CDILLAC I - 696 AT VAN DYKE 7 5 8 - 1 8 0 0 if ■ N 9' G oicivigt,,f,, „ tors go' MASTER DEALER D IRIENW Nestelfitrawn-. GLASS CLOUDED INSULATED UNITS?? r-$io oo OFF I I ,975707 OFFI ON EACH ON EACH WIND IDOOR WALD I 10 Year Warranty I ( Loffer expires 6/15/92 NOW OPEN•SOUTHFIELD 24055 W. 10 Mile (E. of Telegraph) 353-1500 W. BLOOMFIELD FARMINGTON 5731 W. Maple 31205 Grand River 855-3400 476-0730 FREE ESTIMATES All services guaranteed Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354 6060 - 20 FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1992 his year's Jewish Community Council annual meeting took on the tone of a town meeting as WTVS talk show host Brent Triest directed a panel and about 150 people in attendance through a frank discussion on racism. "Bridging the 8-Mile Bar- rier" brought out an array of facts and emotions that car- ried the audience to the heart of some of the prob- lems facing Detroit and its suburbs. The panelists for the pro- gram, co-sponsored by the Race Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit, in- cluded University of Mich- igan-Dearborn chancellor Blenda Wilson, Temple Israel Rabbi M. Robert Syme, and Edward Hustoles, deputy executive director of planning for the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments. Ms. Wilson opened the discussion by calling for people of all races and ethnic groups to work on each other's similarities, not dif- ferences. She said whites and blacks were quietly learning to live together more than most thought. She said the issue wasn't only racial but economics. How many white people, she asked, would live in the same neighborhood as whites making one-tenth of their income? Mr. Hustoles was more in- sistent that racism was "alive and well" in this area. He said Eight Mile Road was a barrier between blacks and whites, and he cited econ- omic statistics. Mr. Hustoles said the number of blacks living in Detroit was 74 per- cent of the Detroit popula- tion, with a median income of $17,000. The black population of Oakland County, he said, was seven percent. In Macomb County, the black population is one percent, a number that hasn't changed in more than 20 years. Rabbi Syme said even when different ethnic groups visit downtown Detroit, they tend to stay together instead of mingling. "If we go to the Fox, Jews stay with Jews and Chris- tians sit with Christians and blacks with blacks." Other audience members criticized the role of Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, some blaming him for the division among the races. There were also those who supported the mayor. Mr. Hustoles talked about how. the mayor lived a life of racial oppression and how he fought through that oppres- sion. Still others blamed real estate agents for steering black and white clients away,, from certain neighborhoods. Agnes Scott, a West Bloomfield resident and 1, community projects vice--- r president for Channel 56, was emotional in her com- ments about how Detroit's mayor and city council have° largely ignored the needs and safety of its children. "The streets are not safe for kids walking to school," she said. "Kids are afraid tp go to school for fear of what could happen to them along the way." It was, however, the words ' of Ms. Wilson that seemed to leave an important impres- sion on the audience. She said racism doesn't begin to explain how people a_y supposed to live with one another. "Let's talk about where we I come together to live and how we can do this." Each audience member was given a copy of "The Detroit Principles," an outline of solutions for peo- ple interested in improving race relations. Council president Jeannie Weiner was re-elected to a' second consecutive one-year term. She will be joined on the board this year by vice, , presidents Alexander Blumenberg, Howard I. Wallach and Allen Zemmol, secretary Andrew Zack and -) treasurer Elaine Driker. NEWS rmmmil"-- Housing Costs Soar In Israel Tel Aviv (JTA) Escalating housing costs sent Israel's cost-of-living `i index spiraling upward by 1.8 percent in April. The increase was higher than expected and at least half of it was due to the ris- ing price of housing„, economists said. But many housing units are unoc- cupied, possibly because they are too expensive or are in areas were jobs are in short supply.