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October 29, 1982 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1982-10-29

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

16 Friday, October 29, 1982

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

"Preferred & Well Qualified"
The Highest Rating from the
Oakland Co. Bar Assoc. Poll

RETAIN

rO
ti

AL

48th DISTRICT COURT

Paid for by the Committee to Retain Judge Bernard A. Friedman
P.O. Box 962, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48013

Traffic Violations
Knesset Topic

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
The Knesset voted by a sub-
stantial majority to lift the
immunity of its members
facing traffic violations.
The self-imposed disci-
pline was applied in the face
of growing public pressure
and Attorney General Yit-
zhak's Zamir's warning that
he would crack down on vio-
lators by publicly asking
parliament to lift the im-
munity of 15 of its members
currently charged with
breaking traffic rules.

I

1

The Detroit Chapter of
The American Technion Society

cordially invites you to attend its

34th Annual Dinner

Thursday, November 11, 1982

Honoring the contributors to the

Benard L. Maas
Michigan Dormitory

.

Canadian Upholds Palestine
State Based on Secure Israel

MONTREAL (JTA) — A
Cabinet minister told a
gathering here of Arab stu-
dents from the United
States and Canada that
"Canada is not opposed to
the creation of a Palestinian
state and does not exclude
such a creation" but that
"the security of Israel is the
central issue in the Arab-
Israeli dispute."
Those remarks were
made by Pierre de Bane, the
Minister of Fisheries, who
represented the federal
government at the conven-
tion of the Association of
Arab-American University
Graduates last weekend.
Addressing the several
hundred delegates, most of
them from the United
States, de Bane said Canada
also supports President
Reagan's efforts to establish
self-rule for the Palesti-
nians on the West Bank and
Gaza in association with
Jordan.
He did not say under
what conditions Canada
would support a sover-
eign Palestinian state.
The attendance of federal
and provincial government
ministers at the gathering
drew sharp protests from
the Jewish community be-
cause they shared the plat-
form with officials of the
Palestine Liberation
Organization.
Among the latter was Dr.
Fahti Arafat, head of the
Palestine Red Crescent,
who is a brother of PLO
chief Yasir Arafat, and
Shafiq Al-Rout, a ranking
PLO official from Beirut.
On Saturday night, some
800 Jewish students
marched through
downtown Montreal to the
Sheraton Center Hotel
where the convention was
held to protest the PLO

Play Presented
Despite Ban

Guest Speaker
YITZHAK RABIN,
Former Prime Minister

State of Israel

Congregation Adat Shalom

29901 Middlebelt Road
Farmington Hills

Cocktails 6:15 p.m.

Dress Optional

$100 per person for the
Dormitory Fund

Dinner 7:15 p.m.

R.S.V.P.

Technion Office

559-5190

TEL AVIV (JTA) — The
Neve Zedek Theater Group,
defying a ban imposed by
the government-appointed
film and theater censorship
board presented the pre
mier performance of
Hanoch Levin's new satiri-
cal work "The Patriot" said
subsequent performances
would go on as planned de-
spite a police order to cancel
it.
Neve Zedek is an experi-
mental fringe theater. "The
Patriot," a cabaret style
production rather than a
play, offended the
authorities by its irreverent
treatment of such sacred
cows in Israeli life as
nationalistic feelings, reli-
gion and the West Bank set-
tlements.
Meanwhile, a private
members bill calling for the
end of censorship of cultural
activities in Israel passed
its first reading in the
Knesset Wednesday by a
vote of 44-43.

The world is before you,
and you need not take it or
leave it as it was when you
came in.
—James Baldwin

presence in the city.
While the demonstra-
tion was in progress, the
Quebec government's
Minister for Inter-
governmental Affairs,
Jacques-Yvan Morin,
addressed the conven-
tion. He said that peace in
the Middle East could not
be achieved except on the
basis which would satisfy
Israel's security needs
and "a homeland for the
Palestinians."
Arafat, who addressed
the convention Friday,
claimed that the Israeli in-
vasion of Lebanon was "an
important moral victory for
the Palestinians." He said
the crucial struggle is ap-
proaching which "I think
will be political, we hope it
will be political."

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