■■■.
, Al■ML.

Friday, September 12, 1980 33

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Absence from those we
love is self from self — a de-
adly banishment.

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New Republic Magazine Backs
Israel's Rights to Jerusalem

The New Republic, in its
current issue, comments as
follows on Israel's just
rights to Jerusalem:
There is a lynch mob in
New York. It is called the
United Nations, and Israel
is the intended victim. Is-
rael is practically the UN's
sole business. The resolu-
tions of support for the
Palestinians long ago dis-
pensed with those gracious

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little provisos about Israel's
security; the Palestinians
may now play for the whole
thing.
How sad for the Basques
that they are not Moslems,
and for the Kurds that their
bit of desert is dry, and for
the Afghans that their op-
ponents are not Americans
or Jews. They, too, might
have rights on the East
River.
The resolutions at the
United Nations have done
much to create the new
political climate in which
the wickedness of Zionism
has become mere com-
monplace, but they are only
words. The Israelis know
that, and have found some
comfort in the fact, while
they go about their search
for an unsuicidal policy on
Palestinian nationalism.
But the Palestinians, too,
know that the resolutions
are only words, and they
have lost patience.
Israel has been scolded
enough; now it must be
made to pay. Not words,
but sanctions, is the new
PLO demand. When the
Israeli Knesset passed its
ill-advised Jerusalem
law recently, the PLO's
UN representative made
his move. It quickly
emerged, however, that
the votes for economic
sanctions could not be
found in the Security
Council. The PLO agreed
to make do with a resolu-
tion instructing member
nations with embassies in
Jerusalem to remove
them to Tel Aviv. The
resolution passed, as will
the next one, and the one
after that.
But the moderation of
this resolution, like all
Palestinian moderation to
date, was a ruse. The resolu-
tion called not for attitudes
but for actions; which is to
say, it was not words, it was
sanctions. The Nether-
lands, Costa Rica,
Guatemala, El Salvador,
and the few other nations
with embassies in
Jerusalem were urged not
to make representations to
the government of Israel,
but to take measures to
punish it.
And the United States,
which is pledged to veto
sanctions against Israel, did
not even vote against. It
abstained. Secretary of
State Edmund Muskie ap-
peared in the hall on behalf
of the Democratic candidate
and did his best to save the
Jewish vote. He ad-
monished the delegates that
they were damaging Camp
David, which of course they
knew, and then he raised
his hand in abstention and
damaged it some more.
Muskie was not troubled
that the resolution failed to
distinguish East
Jerusalem from West,
or that the New Israeli
law did no more than de-
scribe, however provoca-
tively, a political realtiy
that has existed for over a
decade. The Saudis were
calling for holy war, the

SHIRLEY & JACK FREED & FAMILY

.

and

JUNE & SEYMOUR RUBENSTEIN & FAMILY

of

PILLOW TALK

Iraqis were getting the
bomb, but what the secre-
tary had to stop were the
movers who might appear
for Begins's office furniture.
The shuttle diplomacy
of Henry Kissinger made
at least one lastirg con-
tribution to the peace
process in the Middle
East: it established as an
axiom of all subsequent
negotiations that
(Continued on Page 34)

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ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
JEWISH WELFARE FEDERATION OF DETROIT

Nominees to the Board of Governors

Pursuant to the by-laws of the JEWISH WELFARE FEDERATION OF_DETROIT the following list
of nominees, selected from the membership of the Federation, eligible for election to the Board of
'Governors of the Federation, for a three-year term ending in 1983, has been presented to the
Executive Director not less than thirty days prior to the Annual Meeting which will take place on
Monday, October 6, 1980, at B'nai David Synagogue, Southfield at 6 p.m.

FOR RE-ELECTION

Judge Avern L. Cohn
Samuel Frankel

Miriam Hamburger
David K. Page

Stanley D. Frankel

FOR ELECTION

Joel D. Gershenson
Samuel Hechtman

Emery I. Klein
Joel D. Tauber

Other persons may be nominated by petition or petitions signed by not fewer than 25 members of
the Federation and filed with the Executive Director of the Federation not less than ten days prior to
the date of the Annual Meeting. Only one person may be' nominated in each petition and no
nomination shall be valid unless the nominee shall have consented to be a candidate.

1980 NOMINATING COMMITTEE

Mandell L. Berman

Chairman

N. Brewster Broder
Lester S. Burton

Dr. Milton H. Goldrath
Jessie Stern

Consideration of Amendments to the By-Laws

Pursuant to the By-LavVs of the JEWISH WELFARE FEDERATION OF DETROIT the texts of
amendments to said By-Laws are herewith published. The membership of Federation will meet
Monday, October 6, 1980, at 6 p.m. at the Annual Meeting, held in Congregation B'nai David,
24350 Southfield Rd., Southfield, Michigan, to vote on adoption.

ARTICLE III

Section 4. Executive Committee
There shall be an Executive Committee consisting of the following:
(a) (No Change)
(b) (No Change)
(c) The Chairman of each Budget and Planning Division and the Chairman of the
Conference of Divisional Chairmen. The Chairmen shall be selected from the mem-
bers of the Board of Governors.

ARTICLE V

Officers

Section 1.
The officers of the Federation shall consist of a President, no more than five (5) Vice-
Presidents, a Treasurer and a Secretary, all of whom shall perform the usual services
appertaining to their respective offices. and such other functions as may from time to time
be designated by the Board of Governors. The President, the Vice-Presidents and the
Treasurer shall be elected by the Board of Governors for terms of one (1) year each and
until their successors are elected and qualify; provided, however, and effective one year

after the adoption of this section, that a member of the Board who will have served
six (6) consecutive terms as Vice-President and/or Treasurer shall not be eligible for
re-election as Vice-President or Treasurer until one (1) year has elapsed from the
expiration of such last term. The Executive Director of the Federation shall act as

Secretary thereof.

By-Laws available at office of Jewish Welfare Federation, 163 Madison, Detroit.

JEWISH WELFARE FEDERATION
OF DETROIT Sol Drachler, Executive Director

163 Madison Avenue, Detroit 48226

965-3939

