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August 29, 1986 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-08-29

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

NEWS

F. Ma.*

- re.;•piewiced.wriesmeo

1 1 IC

onset of the talks was a tac-
tical error.
He said that after a breach
of relations of 20 years, "It
would have been preferable to
raise this issue in a more
restrained manner — and not
put the Israeli demands im-
mediately to two low-level of-
ficials who had no mandate to
discuss this matter."
He indicated that Soviet
Jews would have benefitted if
demands for their better
treatment would have follow-
ed officials efforts at improv-
ing relations.
But Mordechai Lador,
Israel's ambassador to Fin-
land, was quoted as saying
"that the door remain open"
and Israel-Soviet contacts
would be maintained via the
Dutch and Finnish foreign
ministries.
In announcing Soviet in-
tentions, a spokesman said in
Moscow that a second day of
meetings in Helsinki was can-
celled because Israel insisted
on raising "political ques-
tions" including a statement
urging improved treatment
of Soviet Jews.
Peres responded that Israel
will continue to stress that
issue. He said the Soviets
could participate in the Mid-
east political process "only
when and if it established
diplomatic relation with
Israel."
In Jerusalem, political
sources took the Soviet state-
ment with a grain of salt.
They said the Soviets have
not said their final word, 'and
the contacts would continue.
They explained the Soviet
comments were an attempt to
appease the Arab countries.

The release denounced wit-
nesses opposing the measure
as "imported lesbians from
anti-male and pro-abortion
queer groups in San Fran-
cisco." The hearing audience
was described as "a sea of
hard, Jewish and (arguably)
female faces."

Fueling further outrage is
the disclosure that the settle-
ment, as well as Schmitz's
$30,000 in legal bills, will be
paid from California state
funds. Although the State
Senate had previously cen-
sured Schmitz, its Rules
Committee had voted in ex-
ecutive session to pay for the
settlement.

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Ex-Legislator Apologizes
To California Jews

test his views during legisla-
tive hearings on a proposed
anti-abortion measure.

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Los Angeles (JTA) — A
former California legislator
last week issued an apology
to Jews, women and homo-
sexuals as part of a $20,000
settlement in a defamation
suit against him here.
According to the World
Jewish Congrss Unit on the
Documentation of Interna-
tional Anti-Semitism, the
apology by former State
Senator John Schmitz was
read in open court in settle-
ment of a $10 million defama-
tion suit arising from a press
release issued by Schmitz's
office in 1981.
Schmitz, a former member
of the ultra-conservative
John Birch Society, had
issued the news release after
a feminist attorney had hand-
ed him a chastity belt to pro-

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Peres Discusses Abrupt
Ending Of Soviet Talks

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Prime
Minister Shimon said last
week that the quick ending to
the Israeli-Soviet talks in
Helsinki and the Soviet re-
sponse caused him little
worry.
But Peres told Israel televi-
sion that he was left with
questions. Did the Soviets
think, he asked, "that they
would come, they would talk
and we would be silent, or
that we would say the things
they want to hear?"
"I don't think the Russians
came because they thought
that we wouldn't say any-
thing, or that they would
stop the talks because we
said something," he added.
"They're not such big
cowards and they're not so
naive."
The Soviets announced
' that further talks were off
because Israel insisted on
discussing internal Soviet
matters, such as the treat-
ment of its Jews.
Peres said Israel reserved
the right to discuss Soviet
Jewry. "I think that we must
raise it at every meeting from
the beginning, and later on,
without fear and without con-
cern," he said.
Diplomats in Europe and
Israeli officials offered differ-
ing explanations for the sur-
prise Soviet announcement
that further talks were off.
As Israeli delegates were
returning home from the
90-minute meeting with a
Soviet team in Helsinki, an
unnamed Senior American
diplomat in Bonn told Israel
Radio that Israel's raising-of
the Soviet Jewry issue at the

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