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November 04, 1983 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1983-11-04

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

Your own name is
good as gold and
all the status you
need! Now you can
have it written in 14K
plumb gold on a 15"
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, November 4, 1983 3

Record Initial Gifts Boost 1984 Campaign

When the mind is in
doubt, slight influences
impel it hither and thither.

(Continued from Page 1)
mobilization for unity in
Jewish ranks.
Alfred Taubman, Mar-
tin Citrin, Bill Berman and
a number of their associates
joined in adding to the ap-
peal for action in behalf of
Israel and the scores of
causes locally and nation-
ally.
The enthused assembly
of Allied Jewish Campaign
leaders applauded the de-
scription of the locale, the
Marjorie and Max Fisher
home, as a "social institu-
tion more than a home."
Dinitz told the
gathered leadership that
"Israel must have an
open and frank dialogue
with American Jewish
leadership," calling it es-
sential "in these trying
times."
The former Israeli am-
bassador to the U.S. dis-
cussed the Lebanese situa-
tion, saying he believed that
what can be achieved is "not
to solve the problem, but to
pacify it." He said a pro-
longed cease-fire should be
the immediate goal.
He reminded the audi-
ence that Israel never re-
quested U.S. troops be sent
to Lebanon. Israel, he said,
only later asked that the
United States be a part of
the multinational force.
"We must never depend

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9
10 a.m.-8 p.m.

A % of all sales will benefit Hadassah's
projects in Israel and the United States

for our security on foreign
troops," Dinitz said, adding
that it is one element that
makes the U.S.-Israel rela-
tionship unique..
Dinitz said it was Is-
rael's experience that no
one would come to inter-
vene on behalf of Israel
"when the chips are
down." He reminded the
audience of Israel's ex-
perience in 1967, when
President Charles De-
Gaulle of France and
President Lyndon
Johnson of the U.S. re-
fused to become involved
in the events leading up
to the Six-Day War.

"It is interesting that
those who suggest that Is-
rael's security be guaran-
teed from outside aren't Is-
rael's friends. If American
troops were to die for Israel
it would be the beginning of
the end of a warm relation-
ship between the United
States and Israel."
He added that Lebanon
has no real strategic value
to the West, but the U.S.
cannot retreat there or it
will appear to be giving in to
terrorism.
Dinitz warned that "a
period of pressure" is about
to begin for Isarel. He said a
pro-Syrian government

Judge Rules Conversion
for Pilots Not Biased

FT. WORTH, Tex. — A
helicopter transportation
company did not illegally
discriminate against a Bap-
tist pilot by requiring that
he convert to Islam before
flying into Mecca, according
to a decision reached last
week in a U.S. District
Court here.
Dynalectron Corp. proved
that non-Muslims would be
unable to perform such a job
safely, Federal Judge David
Belew ruled last Wednes-
day. Non-Muslims caught
flying into Mecca are be-
headed, testimony revealed.
Wade Kern, the pilot who
filed the suit in 1978,
charged that the firm had
fired him following his re-
fusal to convert. Kern died
' in 1980, but the suit was
continued by his widow.
A similar lawsuit, by

two doctors in Houston,
charges that the Baylor
College of Medicine de-
nied them employment at
the King Faisal Hospital
in Saudi Arabia because
they are Jewish.
Dr. Lawrence M. Abrams
and Dr. Stuart Lindey claim
they were prevented from
taking part in a lucrative
exchange program between
the school and the hospital
solely on religious grounds.
The trial, which was to
begin in a federal - district
court in Houston this week,
has been postponed by
Judge James De Anda be-
cause of a conflict in
scheduling.

may emerge in Lebanon, or
Israel may be asked to make
concessions in response to
Syrian concessions in Leba-
non. "The only concern Is-
rael should have is concern
for the security of her
northern settlements," he
said.
Dinitz reviewed the
problems facing Israel in
the Middle East: the
majority of the 150 mil-
lion Arabs are still at war
with Israel, the problems
of Lebanon, Jordan and
the "cool" peace with
Egypt, Israel's economic
crisis.
He admonished the Cam-
paign leaders that "our abil-
ity to fight these pressures
must be based on our ability
to say 'no.' " He pointed out
the interrelationship be-
tween Israel's foreign
policies and her internal
strength or weakness, say-
ing that all Jewry is Israel's
partner in creating a better
Israeli society.

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Essay Contest
on Chofetz Chaim

NEW YORK — As part of
its year-long program to
commemorate the 50th an-
niversary of the passing of
the Chofetz Chaim, the
Union of Orthodox Jewish
Congregations of America
is sponsoring a Chofetz
Chaim Essay Contest. Six
cash prizes will be awarded
for the winning entries.
Students between the
ages of nine and 18 may
submit short essays on the
life and thought of the
Chofetz Chaim, Rabbi Yis-
roel Meir HaCohen, and
their relevance to the con-
temporary Jew. The
suggested theme for the es-
says is "The Words of the
Chofetz Chaim: A Message
for Today." Entries should
be no longer than two typed
pages.
All essays submitted to
the Chofetz Chaim Con-
test should include the
writer's name, address,
age, grade and school.
The deadline for all
entries is April 2, 1984.
Send entries to Chofetz
Chaim Essay Contest,
NCSY, 45 W. 36th St., New
York 10018.

We admire our fathers
quite too much. It shows
that we have no energy in
ourselves, when we rate it
prodigiously high. Rather
let us shame the fathers by
superior virtue in the sons.
—Emerson

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