SEPTEMBER 14, 1951
THE CANADIAN JEWISH REVIEW
NESCAFE
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as much as
a pound
Even the 4 oz, jar � though costing far less � makes as many cups as a whote pound of ordinary coffee. The big 12 02. family size jar saves even more.
No waste with Nescafe � you make just what you use. No messy grounds. 'Nescafe is specially pro-oessed to stav fresh to the last spoonful.
COFFK
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of NMIfr Milk tad** �tpradttrtw^
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After sixteen weeks of suspended publication because of negotiations
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in connection with a chance of management;'The Jewish Morning Journal, Yiddish-language uaily morning newspaper, of New York, is being published by a new corporation, the Associated Jewish Journal, Inc., of which Benjamin G. Browdy is president and Benjamin Glazer is board chairman. David L. Mekler will remain as editor-inrchief. '
Mr. Glazer said that for more than fifty years 'the paper :had played a role in the impartial presentation of Jewish News. The publication, he asserted, would "report every happening in Israel," record daily the activities of all Zionist bodies in the United States and "lay greater emphasis on the every-day activities of the American Jewish community." It would "above all," he said, "continue to serve as a spiritual link between the Jewish people in Israel and the Jewish people in America."
WATE R
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JDC In Tunis Aid 150 Youngsters To Learn Trades
BY SYLVIA HURWITZ
In the frail but talented hands of little Jules Baranez, 14-year-old Jewish youngster of the hara (ghetto) of Tunis, can be read the finely integrated results of the Joint Distribution Committee's apprenticeship program there. Jules, until a few months ago indistinguishable from the hundreds of other dirty, ragged urchins who swarm through the twisting alleys of Tunis' Jewish quarter, today is gainfully employed and on the way to recovery from a crippling childhood disease. The amazing change in his life has come about because he passed through the processing machinery of JDC's Apprentissage des Jeunes Juifs (Jewish Youth Apprenticeship) which, since its establishment a year ago, has begun to revolutionize the Jewish community of Tunisia with funds from the United Jewish Appeal.
The story really begins last sum-, mer, when JDC sought to find some sort of beneficial activity for hara youngsters who, despite the many vacation camps set up by "Joint," still could not be accommodated in them. The experimental solution took the form of a program which assembled 100 adolescents, 75 boys and 25 girls between' the ages of 14 and 17, for supervised education and recreation activities every afternoon-.
None of these "forgotten" children had ever been to school and few could read or write. But they were quick to learn, and their devoted instructors, illiteracy conquered, even began to give Hebrew lessons to supplement the daily sports and swimming programs. The youngsters were fed, too, given fresh, clean clothing- and medical attention. By the end of the three-month summer period they had been transformed into normal human beings. But what was to be done to keep them that way? It was to answer this all-important question that the idea of the Apprentissage was conceived.
Emile Taieb, a young Jewish lawyer, volunteered to head the program. Because he is a former Tunisian swimming champion and is idolized 4>y the young people of Tunis, he had little trouble convincing the youngsters who had taken part in JDC's summer experiment that learning useful trades with a small starting salary paid by JDC was preferable to spending their time .begging on- the streets. Since its beginnings less than a year ago, the apprenticeship scheme has come a long way. Now 150 boys and girls are actively employed and most of them, like Jules Baranez, have justified the con>-fidence placed in them. Employers besiege the Apprentissage with demands for young helpers. Twelve "graduates" of the training program have already gone to Israel, equipped with valuable skills to contribute to their new nation.
Jules Baranez' case history il-
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lustrates how radically the lives of Tunisia's Jewish youths are altered the moment they come into contact with the program. When he entered the Vocational Guidance Center to be tested, Jules was a pitiful sight, dirty, pinch-faced and stunted from undernourishment, painfully timid, his wasted right hand hanging limply at his side. The tests and interviews revealed an unusual result. Jules wanted desperately to draw pictures and do lettering. (Moreover, he seemed to have real talent. But who would hire a youngster with a crippled arm who wanted to be an artist? Finally Mr. Taieb and the social �worker attached to Apprentissage interested a commercial artist in taking young Jules on trial. Within a month the crippled youn-gster had proved his worth. The artist called Mr. Taieb to announce that Jules had displayed enough promise for him to begin to pay half his salary. And today Jules is using both hands to earn his living, including his heretofore useless right hand. When Jules was interviewed by thp Apprentissage to determine his vocational aptitudes, the social worker noted his disability and arranged for him to be examined by p. physician from the JDC-supported OSE clinic. An operation was recommended and was successful enough to permit almost full use of his right hand. Scores of other Jewish youngsters, once written off as delinquents, are taking their places in society as proud, productive citizens.
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