vl
The Anti-Defamation League
,N.,‘
N
ett4
and
The National Council of Jewish Women
Greater Detroit Section
invite you to
.Examine the Issue of Prayer in the School
Addressing the social, religious, legislative, moral and education
aspects of this issue will be our panel:
• JOE STROUD, Editor, Detroit Free Press
• REV. HARRY T. COOK, Rector, St. Andrew Episcopal Church
• BILL BRODHEAD, Former United States Congressman
• HOWARD SIMON, Executive Director, American Civil Liberties Union, Michigan Chapter
• DR. SEYMOUR GRETCHKO, Superintendant, West Bloomfield School District
Panel Moderated by
DR. SHARON HOWELL
Oakland University, Department of Rhetoric, Communication & Journalism
29901 Middlebelt Road, Farmington Hills, Michigan
Co-Sponsored by:
The Jewish News, Ecumenical Institute for Jewish-Christian Studies, Hadassah,
Jewish Community Council, St. Andrew Episcopal Church, Women's American ORT,
Oakland County NOW, Temple Emanuel Social Action Committee, Birmingham Unitarian Church,
B'nai B'rith Michigan Regional Council
No charge- Public Welcome
For further information or questions please contact
the NCJW offices at (810) 258-6000 or the Anti-Defamation League offices at (810) 355-3730
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Consultation
■
Jerusalem (JTA) — Israeli bus
drivers last week began a train-
ing course on how to deal with
terrorists.
A group of 100 drivers for the
Egged bus line attended a one-
day, seven-hour seminar, learn-
ing how to identify potential
terrorists, conduct body search-
es and hand-to-hand combat, and
stop their vehicles in an emer-
gency.
Israeli buses have, over the
years, been a favorite target of
terrorists.
Some 7,000 drivers will un-
dergo the training, with refresh-
er courses offered every 18
months, according to Army Ra-
dio.
In addition, Israeli officials are
reportedly considering the possi-
bility of stationing security per-
sonnel on all buses.
Torahs Stolen
In Hungary
Tuesday, February 7, 1995
7:15 PM
Adat Shalom Synagogue
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#.7..goa,7 „ , 7t;o New
Terror Training
For Bus Drivers
Sales
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Budapest (JTA) — Seventeen
torah scrolls valued at more than
$100,000 were stolen recently
from the synagogue in the east-
ern Hungarian town of Debrecen.
The theft of the 17th century
scrolls was not discovered until
several days after it occurred, lo-
cal sources said, because the De-
brecen Synagogue remains dosed
for the winter.
Hungarian police officials are
investigating the case, but no sus-
pects have been found.
Gusztav Zoltai, executive di-
rector of the Hungarian Jewish
community, said in an interview
that he believed the burglary was
not an anti-Semitic act, but a case
of theft for money.
In December 1993, a collection
of Judaica valued at some $200
million was stolen from the Bu-
dapest Jewish Museum.
Two suspects in the case, both
of them Romanian citizens, were
arrested in Vienna and Frank-
furt last August.
The stolen treasures are now
on exhibit in Budapest's Jewish
community headquarters build-
ing, located next to the Tabac St.
Central Synagogue at the en-
trance to the former Budapest
Ghetto.
Religious Displays
On Court Docket
Washington (JTA) — In a poten-
tially explosive case involving the
display of a Ku Klux Klan cross
on public land, the U.S. Supreme
Court is expected this term to
clarify the use of religious dis-
plays on public property.