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March 16, 1984 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-03-16

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

8

Friday, March 16, 1984

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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COLOR
PASSPORTS

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LEO
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Israel Teen Mission - completing 11th and 12th grades
38 days with 22 days touring Jerusalem, Eilat, Tel Aviv, the Galilee
Joirit program with Israeli Teens

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Call 661-0600 for brochure of these programs and Camp Tamarack and Camp

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THE GREATEST
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Will Jews take Hart?

Continued from Page 1

be the key if Hart wins Illinois."
Hart does not appear to have in-
fluential Detroit Jews joining his
bandwagon yet, but that may also
change in the next few weeks if the
bandwagon continues to roll.
Several persons reportedly con-
nected with the Hart campaign told
The Jewish News this week that they
were contributors, but not active in the
campaign. The Israeli government
had a similar problem according to
this week's Newsweek magazine:
"Although he has generally sup-
ported Israel in the Senate, Hart
abruptly canceled a planned trip to the
Jewish state last year. At the time, the
Israelis mistakenly read this as a sign
that Hart had decided against running
for President and dropped him from its
list of important contacts. As a result,
when Hart won in New Hampshire,
embarrassed Israeli diplomats in
Washington could not even find his
home phone number.
The final blow came when oppo-
sition Labor Party member and former
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban,
who knows Hart, offered in tongue-
in-cheek fashion to supply Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir with the
Senator's private number."
Arthur Magida, assistant editor of
the Baltimore Jewish Times, reported:
Last year, Hart received the De-
nver Regional Bnai Brith's "Man of
the Year" Award of the Denver-based
Commission on International Jewish
Affairs for his work for Soviet Jewish
dissidents. Since his first race for the
Senate in 1974, according to Gary An-
tonoff, former president of the Denver
Jewish Federation, Hart has had
"strong" support among the state's
43,000 Jews. "Gary's relations with
the Jewish community have been ex-
cellent. He is extraordinarily bright
and is considered by everyone to be
strong on Israel."
Indeed, Hart's voting record in the
Senate reflects a commitment to Is-
rael. Of 35 major bills that have af-
fected Israel since Hart came to the
Senate, he has voted for 33 that bol-
stered the Jewish state. (He did not
vote on two bills.) Among these meas-
ures were assurances of generous eco-
nomic and military assistance to Israel

and resolutions against selling F-15s
and AWACS to Saudi Arabia and
F-16s and Hawk missiles to Jordan.
He has urged the U.S. to tighten its
criteria on admitting PLO members
into the country. In 1975, he was
among 76 Senators who signed a letter
to the White House opposing the Ford
Administraiton's "reassessment" of
U.S. relations with Israel.
For the candidate of new ideas,"
Hart seems to be a traditionalist on the
Middle East. Israel, he has said, is "a
strategic asset to our national secu-
rity." If Hart ends up in the Oval
Office, he would "try to get the nation

GARY HART

back to the mainstream of our rela-
tionship with Israel, which is a solid,
dependable, reliable relationship. It is
totally dependent upon trust and
goodwill, common values and common
understanding. Our relationship with
Israel is not just the right thing to do.
It's in our interest to do it and per-
petuate it."
Hart would restrict American in-
volvement in Lebanon to diplomacy.
Syria, he said, "does have legitimate
concerns about its security and its bor-
ders and those concerns ought to be
heard and ought to be satisfied. We
ought to be dealing much more openly
with Syria and urging the Gemayel
Government to do the same."

Seder Plate in Exhibition

i 4

;

$;
"

A

vja gorfgalkgrilq

JERUSALEM (JNI) —
Plans to develop an opera-
tive program to counter the
1975 U.N. resolution equat-
ing Zionism with racism
were revealed last month
during a meeting between
30 concerned World Zionist
Organization (WZO) and
Foreign Ministry officials
and Israeli academicians. A
committee for this purpose
will be headed by Uzi Nar-
kiss, chairman of the WZO
information department.



•fir

■ s• V 1Y 1t tiv

":4•.,44

• 3 freshly prepared gourmet Kosher meals
daily • 2 traditional Seders with Rabbi
& Cantor • Tennis courts on
premises • Complimentary golf • Tea
Room • Entertainment • Cocktail parties
• Basketball, volleyball and shuffleboard • Pool • Huge
ocean beach • Children's program • Men's & women's health
spas • Every room with ocean or bay view • Magnificent synagogue on
premises • Cabanas available
Under the same excellent hotel management for the 5th consecutive Glatt Kosher Passover.

AT THE COMPLETELY REFURBISHED op

UVI II I
9N THE OCEAN AT 67TH ST., MIAMI BEACH, FL 33141

In N.Y. State, call (212) 599-2324
Out of State, TOLL FREE 1-800-223-2624

Hotel
Beach and
Tennis Club

Group to Counter
UN Resolution

Hunger Crisis

4,A-1

This Passover Seder plate, from the turn of the
century, is part of the Judaic collection from Czechos-
lovakia that is touring the U.S. The exhibition will be
brought to the Detroit Institute of Arts in the spring of
1985.

BOSTON (JTA) — Boston
Mayor Raymond Flynn, vis-
iting Temple Israel, an in-
terfaith center for the col-
lection and distribution of
food and clothing, told the
congregation that the twin
problems of hunger and
poverty had reached crisis
proportions in the Boston
area.

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