THE JEWISH NEWS Serving Detroit's Metropolitan Jewish Community with distinction for four decades. Editorial and Sales offices at 20300 Civic Center Dr., Suite 240, Southfield, Michigan 48076-4138 Telephone (313, 354-6060 PUBLISHER: Charles A. Buerger ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER: Arthur M. Horwitz EDITOR EMERITUS: Philip Slomovitz EDITOR: Gary Rosenblatt CONSULTANT: Carmi M. Slomovitz ART DIRECTOR: Kim Muller-Thym NEWS EDITOR: Alan Hitsky LOCAL NEWS EDITOR: Heidi Press STAFF WRITER: David Holzel LOCAL COLUMNIST: Danny Raskin OFFICE STAFF: Lynn Fields Percy Kaplan Pauline Max Marlene Miller Dharlene Norris Phyllis Tyner Mary Lou Weiss Pauline Weiss Ellen Wolfe ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES: Lauri Biafore Randy Marcuson Judi Monblatt Rick Nessel Danny Raskin PRODUCTION: Donald Cheshure Cathy Ciccone Curtis Del6ye Joy Gardin Ralph Orme c 1986 by The Detroit Jewish News (US PS 275-520) Second Class postage paid at Southfield, Michigan and additional mailing offices. Subscriptions: 1 year - $21 — 2 years - 539 — Out of State - S23 — Foreign - S35 CANDLELIGHTING AT 7:05 P.M. VOL. XC, NO. 5 To The Top? Do statesmen go to the summit because it's there? Whether or not Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev should meet for a summit this fall is not questionable. As always, the summit will be there if men want it to be. And, as always, it has the potential to be fruitful. But whether anything of import and merit can be achieved in the current tense, acerbic atmosphere between the two superpowers is highly dubious. In the last two weeks, U.S.-USSR relations have severely deteriorated. It all began with the arrest in New York of Gennadi Zakharov, a Soviet UN employee accused of spying. The Russians retaliated by charging U.S. reporter Nicholas Daniloff with espionage. The U.S., insisting that Daniloff had been arrested on trumped-up charges, then expelled 25 of Mr. Zakharov's colleagues. And finally, President Reagan took the podium this week at the United Nations' General Assembly, where he scolded the Soviets on their human rights record and lectured them on "military adventurism." Until the Daniloff situation is resolved, it is unlikely that the heads of the U.S. and Soviet governments will have many nice words to say to each other — either face-to-face or at a long distance from each other. Each has boxed himself into a corner where he must save personal face and national pride. Until the situation mellows, it may be best for the two men to remain in their respective capitals. A summit held in the current atmosphere could quickly be reduced to empty posturing. OP-ED Does the U.S. Constitution -( Cover The Flying Camera? DON McEVOY F ormer Watergate special pro- secutor and current professor of law Archibald Cox posed a provocative question at a seminar in Boston recently. His office is situated on the top floor of the Har- vard Law School. The windows are large, providing a magnificent view of the surrounding terrain. His desk, on which he frequently scatters pap- ers, is quite near those expansive windows. It is now possible, he said, for the technically-advanced cameras in use by our intelligence agencies to photograph those documents on his desk from an aircraft flying over- head. There was no suggestion that this had been done, or ever would be done. It was a hypothetical situation, suggesting what is possible through scientific achievement. There was no question in his mind that the "original intent" of the framers of the Constitution was that his private papers should be permitted to remain private and not subject to governmental surveil- lance. But how could the framers of the Constitution in 1787 have ever considered that his privacy might someday be invaded by a camera in an airplane in flight? That may sound like a rather farfetched fantasy, but it gets to the heart of the current discussion over whether the Constitution is to be in- terpreted in the light of contempor- ary realities, or whether it is to be limited to only and precisely what the Founding Fathers specifically said. Don McEvoy is a national officer of the National Conference of Christians and Jews in New York. It is not a new controversy. Thomas Jefferson championed the concepts of "strict construction" and "original intent" as early as 1791 in opposing the establishment of a fed- eral bank. He wrote that such a na- tional corporation was not -among the powers specially enumerated by the Constitution." Alexander Hamil- ton, on the other hand, argued that the Constitution had "implied as well as explicit authority." Jefferson, by the way, searched the Constitution to find some justifi- Is it legal for the Congress to fund the Air Force? The Constitution only specifies an Army and a Navy. cation for the Louisiana Purchase, and finding none went right on with the deal in 1803. This was some- thing he wanted to do, and that seems to make all the difference, then and now. Is it legal for Congress to fund the Air Force? The Constitution only specifies an Army and a Navy. Can the Federal Communica- tions Commission assign radio fre- quencies and television channels? The Constitution certainly does not specify any such right. I'll stand with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes who said that the Constitution has ramifications that "could not have been foreseen com- pletely by the most gifted of its be- getters," and with Justice John Mar- shall who said this great document is "intended to endure for ages to come, and, consequently, to be adapted to the various - crises of human affairs." Level Of Tolerance Rhetoric, posturing, or a sincere effort? Three communities will have to decide whether conferences such as the one held at the University of Detroit last week are sincere attempts at understanding or mere windowdressing (See Page 1). Some 150 Christians, Muslims and Jews attended the workshops on "Respect and Reconciliation among the Abrahamic Religions." The cynicism within us questions the value of such a conference and the true feelings of the broader publics represented at those meetings. But that attitude of cynicism is precisely why such conferences must be held. There are age-old problems between Christians, Muslims and Jews, problems that will not disappear during a day-long meeting of men and women of good-will. If the attitudes expressed do not represent the attitudes of the broader public, then we all must work that much harder to foster appropriate responses to different views and ideas, to be tolerant of unshared beliefs or opinions. Intolerance of others has been the source of mankind's troubles throughout the millenia. The Interfaith Round Table's meetings at U-D may not have resolved the differences between the three religious groups — indeed, it may not have resolved any of the differences. Yet it could serve as a catalyst for each of us to think about our personal level of tolerance and openness to the ideas and positions of others. 4FRAELI-Sovt_l s\, , 4 445INI(IIALIc 414 0ELAVri P4vs