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October 02, 1981 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-10-02

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

10 Friday, October 2, 1981

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Iraqi Reactor Raid Contributes to An Uneven Diplomatic Year

By WALTER EYTAN

World Zionist Press Service

JERUSALEM — Dip-
lomatically this has not

THE SMART
CHARTER TO
LAS VEGAS
H.M.H. & F.

557-5145

been a bumper year for Is-
rael.
The steps which have had
to be taken in defense of Is-
rael's security have not
been well received by gov-
ernments or public opinion
elsewhere. Even friendly
foreigners have been out-
spoken in their criticism,
and sometimes condemna-
tion, of what has seemed to

them to be a lack of sensitiv-
ity or excessive harshness
on Israel's part.
Israel has fotind itself
faced with the agonizing
choice between safeguard-
ing its security and curry-
ing favor abroad. Clearly
the former had had to take
precedence over the latter.
The result has been a de-
cline in Israel's "popular-

TERRY ROTENBERG

And The Staff at

GEMINI TRAVEL

ity," as recorded these days
by the pollsters.

In one instance — the
destruction of Iraq's
atomic reactor — world
opinion, on second
thoughts, has begun to
grasp that Israel may
have rendered a service
to all. It has shown up the
inadequacy, even hypoc-
risy, of most measures
taken internationally up
to now to ensure the
non-proliferation of nu-
clear arms. However
much Israel's action may
have been officially "de-
plored," it has brought
about some general
recognition that people
must take more seriously
this threat to humanity's
very existence.

On the debit side there
has also been the Knesset's

Want to Wish All of Their
Friends and Valued Clients
A Very Happy and
Healthy New Year

• Lee Alpern
• Chris Alvarez
• Kathy Beard
• Jane Borgeson

• Karen Gilbert
• Barbara Gold
• Margot Halperin
• Janet Larene

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Saturday 11-3 p.m.

Efficient Planning
For Your Corporate or Pleasure Travel

"Jerusalem Law" which led
to the transfer of all foreign
embassies from Israel's cap-
ital to Tel Aviv. This conse-
quence, lamentable as it
was, had not been foreseen.
It would be disingenuous to
gloss over the setback this
has represented in the dip-
lomatic sphere. One day
Jerusalem is bound to house
all the embassies, even
those which never were
there before, but it seems
clear now that this will be
be for many years.
After the bad news, the
good. The process of "nor-
malization" in Israel's rela-

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IQ

Cocktail in Hurley's,
our contemporary lounge
with nightly entertainment
and dancing on a stainless
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- All-season indoor pool

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Leisurely breakfast in
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service)

Free parking

$37.81 per person,

double occupancy

tions with Egypt has pro-
ceeded smoothly, even if not
always as fast as many may
have hoped. Every pro-
vision of the 1979 peace
treaty has been carried out
with scrupulous attention
by both sides.
Israel has placed great
hopes in President Ronald
Reagan and the new U.S.
Administration. For all his
predecessor's historic role in
achieving the Camp David
"frameworks," Israel had
never felt too comfortbale
with the Carter regime. As
a vaunted "strategic asset"
to the free world, it seemed
likely that Israel would be
more positively assessed by
a President who had a more
realistic, down-to-earth ap-
proach to the Soviet
menace.
The more eagerly

Europe, as organized in
the EEC (European Eco-
nomic Community), has
been striving to play a
political role in world af-
fairs, the less firm has
been Israel's trust in its
motives. Europe's "initia-
tive" of 1980, formulated
in ten points of which
nine favored the Arabs,
has lain somewhat in
abeyance, but the im-
pulse which produced it
is still there.
If the obstacles cannot be
removed, at least they can
be surmounted — and all Is-
raelis are determined that
they shall be.

• 05.1k

SEAGULL
Opening

NOVEMBER 26

(.1 All

Dr. Leo Kall man Retires

At a birthday party given
by his relatives and friends
at Kingsley Inn, Dr. Leo
Kallman announced his re-
tirement after 55 years of
medical practice.
Dr.Kallman is the reci-
pient of the 50-year gold
diploma presented by the
Wayne County and Michi-
gan State Medical Societies.
His many fraternal, secu-
lar and philanthropic
organizations include:
Downtown Synagogue,
Crisis Club, Shriners, Ma-
sons, Lions Club, Zionist

Mini•Vacations. Minutes Away.

Need to get away from it all?
And SAVE GAS, jump into
your car and drive to the
Northfield Hilton for a super
weekend flirig at an un-super
little price. Go ahead - spoil
yourself. You deserve it.

Prime Minister Menahem Begin, right, greets
American diplomat Philip Habib, President Reagan's
special envoy to the Middle East.

HONEYMOONING

• Luxurious room
• Bottle of champagne
• Entertainment and
dancing in Hurley's
•Indoor pool and saunas
• Leisurely breakfast in
Wicker Works (or room
service)
- Free parking

- $70 per couple

Tips and taxes are included!
Call 879-2100 for color
brochures on our
Unwinder and Honey-
- mooning packages.

NORTHFIELD HILTON
5500 Crooks Rd. at 1-75
Troy, Michigan 48098
(313)879-2100

Organization of America,
American Israel Friendship
League, Jewish Braille In- /
stitute of America. Ameri-
can Red Magen David of Is-
rael, United Negro College
Fund, United, Home for the
Aged, American Jewish
Committee, American
Jewish Congress, Project
Hope, Rabbinical Seminary
of America and the Simon
Wiesenthal Center of
Holocaust Studies.
For 10 years he was
examining physician of
the Michigan Athletic
Board and consulting
physician of the Wayne
County Friend of the
Court. For the past 35
years he has been a- con-
sulting physician to the
Wayne County Probate
Court.
Hontiring Dr. Kalman
were: Judge and Mrs. Frank
Szymanski, Judge and Mrs.
Gus Cifelli, Mr. and Mrs..
Clifford Sullivan, Mr. and
Mrs. Forest Youngblood,
Mr. and Mrs. Maury Gras-
kin, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Perlman, Mr. and Mrs. Irv-
ing Goldman, Mr. and Mrs.
Sanford Rosenthal, Mr. and
Mrs. Norton Wisok, Mr. and
Mrs. Myron Alpert, Mr. and
Mrs. David Bernstein, Ber-
nice Barc, Dr. and Mrs.
Yvan Silva, Dr. and Mrs.
Elie Aboulafia, Dr. and Mrs.
Leon Fill, Dr. Bernice Izner;
Drs. Stephen and Rosalind
Cohen.members of the med'-
ical staff of Doctors Hospital
and Fran Keyes, medical
record administrator.

A wise man is a greater
asset to a nation than a
king. -

∎ A'



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