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June 15, 1984 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-06-15

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

18 Friday, June 15, 1984

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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Continued from preceding page

of Islam and within the
Arab world," he said, "is be-
tween militant, crusading,
medieval Islamic countries"
— 'bad' Iran, 'good' Saudi
Arabia, 'bad' Libya — and
what I would call, for lack of
a better term, '20th
Century-oriented Arab
countries' — 'good' Egypt,
'bad' Syria, 'good' Jordan."

The Concord.Mariner SGTM
makes the bulky sportswatch passé.

"In the long run, Saudi
Arabia is much worse as far
as Israel is concerned than
Syria because of its raving
Islamic attitude, because
they are crusaders, because
they have a theological op-
position to the very exist-
ence of Israel."
As for American efforts to
change Israeli society and
politics, "it's none of their
business. I don't see why Is-
raelis should be involved in
changing America and I
don't see why Americans
should be involved in
changing Israel."
The only Americans who
can have a voice in Israel, he

said, are Ameican Jews "to
the extent that they feel
part of the family." But "it is
extremely essential that
they talk directly to the Is-
raelis rather than talking
directly to American public
opinion. This is not a tech-
nical point. I see all the dif-
ference in the world be-
tween a petition initiated by
Boston Jewish intellectuals
appearing in the New York
Times and the same petition
appearing in the Jerusalem
Post and quoted the next
day in the New York Times.
If you have anything to say,
say it to the family."

A.J.M.

Candidacy recognized,
LaRouche ideals criticized

BY ROBERT SEGAL

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A Perfect Gift For Father's Day

Now that the Federal
Election Commission has
decided Lyndon H.
LaRouche is entitled to fed-
eral matching funds in his
quest for the Presidency, it's
time to try to talk sense to
the uninformed.
LaRouche, head of bizarre
cult, cut his political teeth
as a member of the
Trotskyite Social Workers
Party nearly 40 years ago.
This former Marxist
teacher and theoretician
has drawn followers to sev-
eral groups. At one time, he
functioned as the head of
the National Caucus of
Labor Committee. He now
claims 30,000 members for
his National Democratic
Policy Committee.
Young Jews sucked into
the LaRouche vortex will
find themselves campaign-
ing on an anti-Jewish plat-
form with the understand-
ing that if and when a Nazi-
like drive against Jews is
unleashed, they will be im-
mune to such horror pro-
vided they repudiate their
Jewishness.
Some who have traced the
LaRouche operations as-
siduously identify him as a
man in his early 60s, born in
Rochester, N.H. and known
formerly as Lyn Marcus. In
1976 he drew 40,000 voters
in his run for the
Presidency. This time
around, he may be more
successful. By injecting
candidates into local school
board elections in New Jer-
sey and New York, the
LaRouche clan has acquired
new skill in conducting
political campaigns.
Are the LaRouche cultists
fooling the naive by pre-
senting themselves as a Na-
tional Democratic Policy
Committee? Charles Man-
att, chairman of the Demo-
cratic Party, refers to them
as "this fanatical cult." In
response, LaRouche refers
to his opponents as the tools

of lesbian and radical cau-
cuses.
Indulgence in violence,
references to a conspiracy
against him, and a deep
commitment to his anti-
Semitic program seem to
consume LaRouche. Some
who have cut ties with his
cult report on the courses he
has mounted for attacking
rivals physically. Knives
and rifles are in the arsenal;
terror tactics are taught;
harrassment of political ri-
vals is encouraged.
He has had a running
quarrel with the Anti-
Defamation League and a
running love affair with the
Liberty Lobby, one of this
nation's most anti-Semitic
propaganda bases. Zionism
he characterizes as racism;
the Holocaust he dismisses
as a Jewish myth; Jews, he
tells his cohorts, killed
Jesus.
A Seven Arts Feature

Yiddish theater
gives archives
to Hebrew U.

Jerusalem (JTA) — A
cache of material on the.
Yiddish theater will be
transferred shortly from the
archives of the Israel Goor
Theater and Museum to
Hebrew University, follow-
ing an agreement reached
this week.
The material includes
programs from the Katzet
Theater, the Yiddish drama
troupe which formed at the
Bergen-Belsen concentra-
tion camp immediatdly
after World War II. Scripts
aid texts from Yiddish
theaters throughout the
world as well as private col-
lections of various Yiddish
actors are also part of the
cache.

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