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May 24, 1985 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-05-24

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

10

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, May 24, 1985

‘. 3r-i)Necirsaftwontstimmus..#

4
'.1 t4e

OFFICE
Introducing

isift

LAWRENCE M. ALLAN
President
•GEMOLOGIST/DIAMONTOLOGIST

AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA
IN GRADING & EVALUATION

v uomma._

Consultation in your Difice.
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For information call .. .

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WHAT HAVE YOU DONE
FOR ME LATELY?

MEA/Detroit thinks that's a
perfectly good question . . .

MEA

OFT

SALARY

Lobbied and won a 9% increase in
state education budget.

RETIREMENT

Lobbied and won house passage
of 8% increase, guaranteed 3%
COLA adjustments, paid depen-
dent health care, 30-and-out plan,
OPTIONAL 4% tax-sheltered con-
tribution.

CERTIFICATION

Testified against and halted a legis-
lative move that would have re-
quired every teacher to be recer-
tified every five years.

Stood side-by-side with adminis-
trators and other anti-teacher
forces to allow the attack on your
certification.

SECURITY

Initiated a plan to provide special
state funding to improve school
security.

Denied a security program existed
in Detroit schools, then said it was
not the union's job to try to correct it.

Only one salary increase in the last
five years and that -ecmcelled out
by loss of 10 days pay and another
week's pay delayed because
negotiators FAILED to bargain ad-
justed pay schedule.
Fought all retirement improve-
ments.

JUST THINK WHAT MEA/DETROIT COULD DO AS THE FULLY RECOGNIZED
BARGAINING AGENT FOR DETROIT TEACHERS!

MEA/Detroit . . .

already on the job for Detroit Teachers.

Continued from Page 1

ready been sentenced — were
prepared publicly to express
remorse over their crimes and
undertake to desist from such
action in the future, it would
be both right and proper to
grant them reprieves. This
was particularly the case now
that scores of the most heinous
Arab criminals had been set
free, he said.
He made it clear that he
would take up the matter with
Premier Shimon Peres and
was demanding a debate in the
Cabinet or the inner Cabinet.
Commerce' Minister Ariel
Sharon made similar remarks
to journalists in Haifa Tues-
day. He said that while wholly
disapproving of the actions of
the members of the Jewish
terrorist underground, he
supported their release.
Sources close to the Premier-
said this week that he was not
in favor of releasing the un-
derground members at pre-
sent. The sources said this re-
flected the views of all the
Labor Party ministers in the
Cabinet.
However, if the issue should
come before the Cabinet, in-
formed sources predicted that
those in favor of releasing the
underground members would
win the vote.
They pointed out that Yigal
Hurwitz of Ometz and Yosef
Shapiro of Morasha had long
been advocating the release of
the Jewish underground
members, and they would be
joined in a vote by Josef Burg
of the National Religious
Party and Yitzhak Peretz of
Shas — thus creating a major-
ity, assuming all or most of the
Likud ministers would sup-
port the reprieve.
Technically, Pereg could
block a Cabinet debate by in-
sisting that the issue be dealt
with by the ten-man inner
Cabinet where the five Likud
members and five Labor
members would presumably
square off against one another
and result in a deadlock. If
Peres took this course, though,
it could provoke a crisis in the
coalition government.
In the Cabinet, it is reliably
understood that only one
minister, Likud-Liberal
member Avraham Sharir, ex-
pressed strong reservations
over the terms of the exchange
when they were reported to
'the ministers in April. The
ministers were not required to
vote: the decision was taken by
the inner Cabinet, where the
vote was unanimous, and
merely reported to the full
Cabinet.
Sharir reportedly pressed
for a vote nevertheless, but he

,

received no support for his
demand. In the debate sub-
sequent to the exchange, one
politician who has spoken out
openly against the deal is
Labor's hawkish Avraham
Katz-Oz, a leading member of
the kibbutz movement. But
others, while expressing their
dismay in private, have been
reluctant to take issue pub-
licly with the decision makers.
Zev Schiff of Haaretz, one of
the nation's top military af-
fairs commentators, wrote
that while he would not want
to be in the shoes of Peres or

The trial of the
underground
members is drawing
to a close, with
summation
addresses expected
next week.

Defense Minister Yitzhak Ra-
bin, the exchange was
"humilitating, frustrating .. .
another stinging defeat suf-
fered in the Lebanon war . . . a
great achievement for Jibril
. . . another stage in the proc-
ess of Israel's psychological
weakening which began with
the Lebanon war and will
hopefully end once the with-
drawal is completed."
The reference to Jibril was
to Ahmed Jibril, the head of
the pro-Syrian Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine
— General Command, that
held the three Israeli soldiers
released in the exchange --
Hezi Shai, Yosef Grof and Nis-
sim-Salem — since being cap-
tured in the early days of the
war in Lebanon nearly three
years ago.
Meanwhile, the Supreme
Court ruled this week that the
20 alleged members of the
Jewish terrorist underground
on trial must remain in cus-
tody and refused their bail re-
quest. Their appeal came be-
fore the court because they
have been in custody for a full
year. Many of the wives and
children of those held in cus-
tody, joined by friends and
well-wishers, began a hunger
strike in an encampment op-
posite the Knesset, in an effort
to lobby for public and Knesset
support for their release.
The trial of the underground
members is drawing to a close
with summation addresses by
counsel expected next week. In
the Jerusalem District Court
Tuesday, defendant
Menachem Livni, said it was

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