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April 14, 1978 - Image 27

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-04-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Fairy, April 14, 1178 77

TIE DETROIT JEWISH !MRS

(Readers Forum)

Materials submitted to the Readers Forum must be brief.
The writer's name will be withheld from publication upon
request. No unsigned letters will be published. Materials will
not be returned unless a stamped, self-addressed envelope is
enclosed.

Rhodesia-Israel
Parallel Feared

Editor, The Jewish News:
It is clear that President
Carter is the captive, wil-
lingly or unwillingly, of the
extreme liberationist forces
of the world The recent ex-
perience with Rhodesia is a
case in point and it augurs
poorly for Israel.
Even though an internal
agreement has been
reached, President Carter
will not support its im-
plementation.
Pushed at the behest of
the outside militant forces,

Kubelik Lauded

Editor, The Jewish News:
"He is one of the greatest
conductors" and "tonight's
concert is one of the forest
we have heard in years" ...
these were among the com-
ments heard last Saturday
after the concert of Rafael
Kubelik, who conducted the
Bavarian Symphony Or-
chestra at Hill Auditorium
in Ann Arbor.
They performed the
Ninth Symphony by Gustav
Mahler, Maestro Kubelik,
Czech by birth and a citizen
of the world, is a champion
for the Mahler symphonies.
He and the Bavarian or-
chestra made excellent re-
cordings of all the Mahler
symphonies several years
ago and upon my interven-
tion sets of them were do-
nated to schools of higher
learning in Israel.
Maestro Kubelik con-
ducts the Israeli Philhar-
monic Orchestra quite fre-
quently. Some years ago he
directed three concerts of
the Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra during the May
Festival in Vienna. Later
on, the Austrian press, re-
ported that the Maestro had
asked the directors of the
festival to forward his fees
to "General Dayan for the
widows and orphans of the
Six-Day War."
Maestro Kubelik is a
great conductor and also a
great composer, people who
know him call him "a gent-
leman dedicated to human-
ity."
Marguerite
Kozenn Chajes

Survivors Hold
Govt. Positions

JERUSALEM (ZINS) —
Several Holocaust sur-
vivors hold high positions in
the Israeli government: jud-
icial advisor Prof. Aharon
Barak (Kovno Ghetto), di-
rector of the Prime Minis-
ter's office Dr. Eliahu Ells-
sar (Radom Ghetto), advisor
to the Foreign Ministry
Dr. Meir Rosenne
(Tchnerowitz) and Israel's
new ambassador to the UN
Prof. Yehuda Bloom
(Bergen,Beb3en).

the guerrillas, hard-line
states, petro-dollars and
Andrew Young, President
Carter will not rest until a
bloody war overthrows the
moderate internal forces.
Translated to the Mid-
dle East, it means that
President Carter will not
rest until Arafat has es-
tablished an independent
state that threatens the
overthrow of Israel, ir-
respective of any alterna-
tive settlement reached
between Jew and Arab.
Both from his religious
point of view, the issue of oil
supply and his self-image as
the modern Messiah, it is in
President Carter's interest
to oversee the destruction of
Israel.
F. Meisel

Israel Flexibility
Underplayed in
Press: Yariv

Skokie Ordinance Still in Effect

CHICAGO (JTA) — A
Federal Court of Appeals
ruling last Thursday which
ended a 45-day stay against
a planned Nazi march in
suburban Skokie left unaf-
fected a Skokie village ordi-
nance which will make it
impossible for the tiny Nazi
party to stage its march on
April 20, Hitler's birthday.

A Skokie ordinance
which the Circuit Court did
not reject, requires that ap-
plications for a parade per-
mit be made at least 30 days
before a march.
The Nazis have still not
applied for a permit
The contested ordi-
nances banned groups
that preached hatred or
wore military style un-
iforms to march, or pass
out hate literature and
also required any group
planning to demonstrate
to have $300,000 in liabil-
ity insurance.

The appeals court said it
would rule within 30 days
on the Skokie village appeal
against a lower court ruling
that the three ordinances
violated constitutional
rights of free speech, free-

dom of assembly and equal
protection under law.
Meanwhile, three persons
were injured in a brawl at a
Nazi meeting on Chicago's
South Side last Friday.
Thirty masked and
hooded members of the
Progressive Labor Party in-
vaded the meeting swinging
ax handles and lead pipes.

They broke in after two
women appeared at the
locked front door and asked
to be adm:

TEL AVIV (ZINS) — Dr.
Moshe Hartman, director of
the Strategic Institute at
Tel Aviv University, pro-
jects that by the year 2000
Jews will make up only 52
percent of the population of
Israel and the administered
territories.
This was based on an an-
nual aliya of 25,000. With-
out that aliya, the Jewish
percentage of population
will be 47.5.

Orthodox Open
Placement Office

NEW YORK — The Rab-
binical Alliance of America
has opened a placement
bureau to provide profes-
sionals to serve in Orthodox
synagogues and schools.

Gen. Aharon Yariv, di-
rector of Israel's Institute of
Strategic Studies, called at-
tention to Israeli Premier
Menahem Begin's recent
conciliatory position in
peace talks, pointing out
that Begin has made a great
many concessions and has
shifted his position dramat-
ically from the original plat-
form on which he won the
election. On the other hand,
Yariv said, President
Anwar Sadat of Egypt has
not changed his position
over the past year.

Nosher's delight

the whipped cream cheese that
spreads happiness around

Jordan Fears
W.B.'s Return

CAIRO (ZINS) — The
newspaper Al Ahram re-
ported that Crown Prince
Hassan oTJordan, brother of
King Hussein, is opposed to
the return of the West Bank
to Jordan.
The Kingdom of Jordan's
800,000 Palestinians make
up 40 percent of Jordan's
population. Hassan fears
that the 700,000 Palesti-
nians on the West Bank will
provide an overwhelming
majority and trouble for

_Jordan.

Fluffy Philly is the whipped cream cheese that
comes out of your refrigerator ready to spread
happiness. Makes your bagel more delicious. And
it won't crumble your cracker or matzo. Won't tear
your bread. Because Philly is the tasty, lighter,
smoother, fluffier cream cheese that spreads like a
charm, even when cold.

Take your choice of Philadelphia Brand whipped
cream cheese–Plain, Onion, Chives, Pimento or
Smoked Salmon. All with satisfaction guaranteed or
your money back from Kraft. You get what
you pay for.

K ALL CERXIFIED KOSHER

Dv.... d gnats Corperatior

....

Freddy Sheyer
398-2462

Bare Majority
in Year 2000

WAYNE, N.J. (JTA) — A
leading Israeli official
criticized the press and
some world leaders for un-
derplaying Israel's flexible
stance in its peace talks
with Egypt.

Yariv spoke at an
emergency assemblage cal-
led by the Jewish Federa-
tion of North Jersey, in re-
sponse to the apparent shift
in United States relations
with Israel. The assembly
was attended by various
elected officials, clergymen
and high-ranking Israelis.

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