THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40—BUSINESS CARDS ROOF REPAIRS and GUTTERS FREE ESTIMATE 644-7742 SUPERIOR ELECTRIC CO. OF GREATER DETROIT Sid Feldman Stuart Weisblatt Office 398-5100 53—ENTERTAINMENT FLAMENCO guitarist available to entertain. 274-9082. FREDDY SHEYER. Singing Guitarist - Violinist. 542-3359. VERSATILE sophisticated party music. 272-7586. MOONDANCE One of the finest bands at reasonable rates. For audition scheduled call - 772-2982 Irving Berlin, Billy Joel, George Gershwin at your next party. Piano Bar Stylings by Jeff Lindau 711 E. Eight Mile Ferndale, Mich. 48220 Singing! Dancing! Reminiscing! B & W LANDSCAPING Thousands of Tunes Need a Piano? I'll bring mine. Lawn Maintenance Clean Up A Great Idea For The Summer Garden/Pool Party Reserve NOW! Bondable Call 646-9531 896-9754 55—ART FOR SALE DOUG'S INTERIOR-EXTERIOR PAINTING Patch work. Work all areas. 675-0852 Dali etching — 2 Nudes (From Song of Songs). Valued over $1,000, Sac- rifice. 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WESSERUNG CONST. ready been purchased and WOOD DECKS, GARAGES. that it would not sell any All Concrete and Masonry Repair. additional weaponry to Licensed Builder. Argentina during the cur- Free Estimates. rent fighting. The Los Angeles Times 674-3584 474-1980 and the Associated Press PARTY HELPER & quoted unnamed sources this week as saying BABYSITTING Serving parties, graduations, Argentina was receiving weddings, etc. Your home, new weapons from pri- office, banquet halls. Excellent vate dealers "and such service. Excellent references. diverse countries as Is- rael and Libya." 569-2465 The reports claim that Is- ADDITIONS rael has sold up to 24 jet fighters to Argentina to re- and place planes lost during the REMODELING Falklands conflict. ) 644-7742 Free Estimates NICE JEWISH BARTENDER University of Michigan student, graduate of Uni- versity of Michigan Bar-. tending School, available to tend your bar and assist at your parties. Call 626-1550 Paper Losses JERUSALEM (ZINS) — The Bank of Israel lost $300 million in 1981 and an addi- tional $70 million during the first quarter of 1982 be- cause it continues to hold assets in European curren- cies, which have fallen in value in relation to the U.S. dollar. Friday, June 11, 1982 69 End to Saudi Appeasement Sought NEW YORK (JTA) — The Anti - Defamation League of Bnai Brith is cal- ling on the Reagan Ad- ministration to end the "ap- peasement" of Saudi Arabia that has been a hallmark of U.S. policy in recent years under Democratic and Re- publican Administrations alike. According to Abraham H. Foxman, ADL's associate national director and head of its international affairs division, there has been for almost a decade the illusion that Saudi Arabia is a mod- erate, pro-Western, stable friend of the U.S., a reliable ally, and a partner in America's Middle East peacemaking efforts. Foxman made public a 40-page ADL Research Re- port documenting a long re- cord of anti-American ac- tions by the Saudis which have resulted in a 1,159 percent increase in the price of world crude oil over 1973 (from $2.70 to $34), have sabotaged the Camp David peace process, and financed such anti-American, pro- Soviet elements in the Mid- dle East as Syria, Iraq and the Palestine Liberation Organization. The report, titled "The U.S. - Saudi Relation- ship," was presented at a session of ADL's 69th an- nual National Commis- sion at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York. "It is time for Washington to recognize that the Saudi regime is . . . dependent on the United States for its se- curity and survival," the ADL report said, this "un- derlying reality," it went on, is "too often forgotten by U.S. policymakers in Wash- ington who have fallen all over themselves to meet Saudi demands and to pass Saudi litmus tests" without requiring reciprocal treat- ment from the Saudis. The record shows, the ADL report said, that "in moments of crisis, when the security and the survival of the Royal Family and its re- gime are clearly at stake, the Saudis inevitably turn to the United States. The ADL report added: "Saudi policy is based on two considerations: fear and weakness. Fear and the knowledge of their own weakness prompts the Saudi princes to pay protec- tion money — 'baksheesh' — to the pro-Soviet revolu- tionary forces in the Arab world." The ADL set forth the following "Bill of Par- ticulars" pointing out that Saudi Arabia: Has waged sustained eco- nomic warfare against the U.S., the Western industrialized nations and lesser developed countries for a decade or more; has refused to sup- port the Camp David peace process. despite this country's repeated pleas to do so and despite the 1978 sale of sophisti- cated American F-15 military jets to the Saudis and the 1981 sale of F-15 KENNETH BIALKIN enhancement equipment, 1,177 heat-seeking Side- winder air-to-air mis- siles, seven KC-135 tanker planes, 22 ground-based radar sta- tions, and five AWACS surveillance. planes. Also Saudi Arabia broke relations with President Anwar Sadat of Egypt after he signed the peace treaty with Israel; — Finances pro-Soviet enemies of the U.S. in the Arab world — Syria, Iraq and the PLO; has flirted diplomatically with the Soviet Union; has permitted Soviet over- flights of its territory, and allows the transshipment of Soviet war supplies for revo- lutionary Iraq through its territory and ports. Saudi Arabia also is financing reconstruction of the Iraqi nuclear reactor de- stroyed by the Israeli Air Force in the summer of 1981, and is financing the building of an Islamic atomic bomb by Pakistan. It also has refused to per- mit the establishment of U.S. military bases on its soil for the defense of Saudi oil fields and the entire Per- sian Gulf; put extreme pres- sure on Oman to withdraw permission for the U.S. to use Omani territory for military maneuvers related to the defense of the Persian Gulf (The Saudis and other Gulf states under Saudi influence offered the Sulta- nate of Oman $1.2 billion if Oman would cancel the agreement allowing the U.S. access to its territory and military facilities.) • The Saudis insist that Israel, not the Soviet Union, is the main threat to Saudi and Persian Gulf security; objected to, and for a time blocked, American oil purchases to fill the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve; de- nounced the U.S. effort to rescue the American hos- tages held by the Kho- meini regime in Iran as "American military ag- gression"; repeatedly be- lied its claims to "mod- eration" by calling for jihad — holy war — against Israel and by dis- seminating blatant anti- Jewish propoganda. The whole "conventional wisdom" of Saudi Arabia as a moderate, stable, pro- Western friend and ally of the U.S., the ADL report -says, is propagandist mythology promulgated by an array of pro-Saudi friends and paid agents active on the American scene. Among these, the report says, are lawyers, public re- lations experts, an array of State • Department "Arabists," former ambas- sadors who have served in Arab capitals, and major oil companies such as Exxon, Texaco, Mobil and Standard Oil of California, who are pertners in the Arabian - American Oil Co. (ARAMCO). ARAMCO, ADL states, "has, in large measure, shaped the way Americans and their gov- ernment perceive Saudi Arabia and the Saudi Royal Family." The ADL report was pre- pared by Jerome H. Bakst, director of the agency's Re- search and Evaluation De- partment. In a related develop- ment, the ADL called on the United States to con- demn Saudi Arabia for severing relations with Costa Rica over the lat- ter's decision to move its Israel embassy from Tel Aviv back to Jerusalem. Meanwhile, Nathan Perlmutter, national direc- tor of the ADL, warned that "neutral arms salesmen" pose a greater danger to Is- •ael and the Jewish people than outspoken anti- Semites. The "soberest" lesson for the Jewish community, came according to Perlmut- ter, in the debates over the sale of AWACS reconnais- sance aircraft to Saudi Arabia and proposals to supply modern U.S. weaponry to Jordan. "It was a debate in which anti-Semitism figures late and only incidentally and whose stench exceeded its substance. The Saudis were not nearly so much helped by anti-Semitism as they were by Semitically neutral arms salesman," Perlmut- ter told 400 ADL leaders attending the agency's four-day National Commit- tee meeting. Perlmutter, in his an- nual report, said Ameri- can Jews are questioning who their real friends are. In that connection, he noted that "The more liberal one's Christian theology, the less likely is that person to harbor anti-Semitism; the more fundamentalist, the more likely to harbor anti- Semitism." But, Perlmutter added, "the theologically liberal National Council of Churches, long a leader in Christian - Jewish dialogue, has — again — adopted positions favorable to the Palestine Liberation Organization, ignoring Is- rael's security and ignoring the PLO's resolve to undo the Jewish State." On the other hand, he said, "theologically conser- vative fundamentalists .. . support Israel's security needs. The one is aca- demically sympathetic to religious differences but in action is allied with those who would kill Jews; the other is academically unac- cepting of our religious dif- ferences, but in our need be- comes a friend in deed." Meanwhile, Kenneth Bialkin, a New York attor- ney, was elected national chairman of the ADL, suc- ceding Maxwell Greenberg of Los Angeles who held that post since 1978. Bial- kin, 52, is chairman of the American Bar Association's Section on Corporation, Business and Banking Law. Last week, two ranking State Department offi- cials told the assembled ADL leaders that the East - West Madrid talks have become a weapon with which to call the Soviet Union to account for human rights violations. Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for human rights and humanitarian af- fairs, and Lawrence Eag- leburger, undersecretary of state for political affairs, addressed an ADL luncheon honoring Max Kampelman, chairman of the U.S. dele- gation to the Madrid meet- ing on the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and to the U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. The national meeting also heard a jurist who is one of America's leading Constitutional authorities, warn against, "tinkering with the fundamental law of our land" to permit prayer in public schools. California Supreme Court Justice Stanley Nosk said that advocates of a pro- posed Constitutional amendment to introduce prayer in public schools are steering this country towards a form of state- sanctioned religion. At the same time, lead- ing Evangelical Baptist official, James M. Dunn, executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee on Public Affairs, de- nounced "quick fix evangelism" and warned Americans of all faiths to beware of high powered "hucksters" of religion who "prey on people while claiming to pray for them." The national meeting was the occasion to introduce a new, comprehensive secon- dary school curriculum "to help students recognize, re- sist and reject the blan- dishments and propaganda" of right and left extremist groups. The ADL Curriculum, entitled "Extremists Groups in the United States," is a three-part vol- ume containing 14 lesson plans on how to identify and combat extremist ideology and organization. `Shalom Dallas' DALLAS (JTA) -- The Jewish Federation of Greater Dallas has or- ganized a "Shalom, Dallas" program to locate, welcome and bring Jewish newcom- ers into the rapidly growing Dallas Jewish community.