[ Times Reporter Contrasts Lebanon, Israel • 14 Leon Charney: Camp David Accords 'Special Counsel' 40 Microwave Ovens Are Changing The World Of The Kitchen 80 New Sanctuary To Be Dedicated 12 THE JEWISH NEWS FEBRUARY 22, 1985 SERVING DETROIT'S METROPOLITAN JEWISH COMMUNITY THIS ISSUE 40• Arabs Selling `Protocols' at WSU 'Yes' Vote For Women Rabbis BY TEDD SCHNEIDER Staff Writer While the majority of Conserva- tive rabbis in metropolitan Detroit voted in favor of the ordination of female rabbis by their governing body, the Rabbinical Assembly, a number of supporters expressed doubts about the current viability of such a measure for their congregations. Births B'nai Mitzvah Classified Ads Editorials Engagements Obituaries Purely Commentary Danny Raskin Singles Synagogues Women's News 65 66 67 4 59 79 2 45 58 34 51 "I still see that the issue of a woman rabbi is problematic," Rabbi Stanley M. Rosenbaum, of Cong. B'nai Moshe in Oak Park said. "I wish there had been more thought given to a reso- lution of the Halachic aspects of this issue, rather than an avoidance of them," the rabbi said, referring to last week's announcement that the 1,100 rabbis who constitute the Assembly had approved in a mail ballot the ac- ceptance of woman rabbis graduated from the Jewish Theological Semi- nary. "How much good it will do, I don't know," the rabbi of the Downtown Synagogue, Noah Gamze, said Friday. "Even many Jewish women who con- sider themselves liberated may feel uncomfortable in front of a female rabbi." Rabbi Gamze added that the thought of a woman leading a Conser- vative congregation did not upset him Continued on Page 8 CLOSE-UP JEWISH LEPRECHAUN After sampling other spotlights, versatile Ron Coden laughs with local tavern patrons. Story On Page 25 BY JEFFREY GUYER Staff Writer The B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda- tion at Wayne State University and the Muslim Students Association (MSA), described in the AIPAC (American-Israel Public Affairs Committee) College Guide as "the most blatantly anti-Semitic of the major anti-Israel groups on campus," have found new fuel for their old battles. Hillel is criticizing the MSA for selling copies of The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, an anti- Semitic canard which remains a basic staple in the arsenal of bigots, even today, according to Richard Lobent- hal, executive director of the Michigan Region of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. According to Mouhamad Naboulsi, chairman of WSU's Muslim Student Affairs Committee and past MSA president, the MSA has the right to sell anything it wants and that it is up to the reader to determine if it is false or not. "I will not defend the book," Naboulsi said, "but I will defend our right to sell it. Let the public buy the book and they will decide whether it is false or not. Hillel has no right to tell us what to do." Hillel director Rabbi Louis Fin- kelman agrees. "Sure ; they have every right to sell it. If they want to associate themselves with this kind of racism, they are free to do it. The First Amendment allows them to sell it. However, the First Amendment also allows us to protest it." Continued on Page 30