Winning By Degrees Perils Of Pluralism Page 79 Page 34 THIS ISSUE 50c SH NEWS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY JULY 11, 1986 / 4 TAMMUZ 5746 Problems Portend Ruin Of Mubarak CLOSE-UP VICTOR M. BIENSTOCK Special to The Jewish News Improvement of relations with Egypt, Prime Minister Shimon Peres told the Knesset recently, was Is- rael's foremost foreign policy issue. But even as he spoke, events in Egypt were rapidly outrunning the possibility of improvement through any Israeli action and were creating the strong probability of a major se- curity problem for Israel where one has not existed since the signing of the Camp David peace accords seven years ago. Egypt's Defense Minister, Field Marshal Abdel Abu Ghazala, flew to Washington in June to warn Secre- tary of State George Shultz and De- fense Secretary Caspar Weinberger of the gravity of the situation in Egypt and the need for aid. He was to be followed by Kamal Ganzouri, Egypt's planning minister, to discuss possible measures the United States could take to ease the domestic pres- sures on the Mubarak regime which is encountering mounting criticism, disaffection and opposition. Egypt, says Paul Jabber, head of the Middle East program of the Council on Foreign Relations, is pressing against "the outer limits of its resources." Its situation, he re- ports, has been. aggravated by the negative economic developments of recent months. "For President Hosni Mubarak's government," he warns, an economic crisis is almost inevit- able in the near term, and a major political explosion only slightly less likely." The collapse of the Mubarak, regime would have far-reaching ef- Continued on Page 20 Cash Crunch Doesn't Shut Interfaith Agency DUAL LOYALTY: Myth or menace for American Jews? See Page 14 4. HEIDI PRESS Local News Editor The report of my death was an - exaggera- tion," the Ecu- menical Insti- tute for Jewish-Christian Studies quotes author Mark Twain in its May-June news- letter. Rev. James Lyons And- so too is the demise of the Southfield-based institute which aims at fostering dialogue between Christians and Jews. In May, the Detroit Free Press gave a dreary picture for the future of the institute, headed by Rev. James R. Lyons and based in the North Congregational Church. Since then, friends of the institute have banded together to create a plan which will keep the four-year-old agency alive. The agency sponsors a speakers bureau, offers forums for youth, adult study groups and for dialogue between men's and women's groups and clergy; houses a research library for persons interested in studying Christian-Jewish relations and ulti- mately aims at combatting theologi- cal and social anti-Semitism. Continued on Page 22 s. Amazing Marketplace • Births 87 84 B'nai Mitzvah 74 Business 86 Engagements 72 Obituaries 102 Danny Raskin 56 Singles .85 .Synagogues 64 Women 70