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January 09, 1987 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-01-09

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

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vigilantes," Fogel said, "but we
may have to boycott certain
stores if their owners tolerate
loitering, or we may have to
drink coffee at restaurants as a
group, or picket, to make our
point."
Farmington Hills Police
Chief William Dwyer said the
weekend problems on Orchard
Lake Road began last spring
and summer. Two police task
forces made 45 citations Nov.
14-15 and seven on Nov. 21.
The figure includes persons
held or ticketed for disturbing

the peace, reckless driving,
trespassing, minors possessing
alcohol and other infractions.
Thirty-one of the 45 persons
cited, Dwyer said, were not
Farmington Hills residents.
Dwyer said police have been
monitoring the situation since
November, and said things
have been quiet in recent
weeks until last weekend's in-
cident. He said representatives
of his department will attend
Tuesday's meeting "and we
welcome any input from con-
cerned citizens."

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O'Connor Ends Tour
At Yad Vashem, Gaza

Tel Aviv (JTA) — John Car-
dinal O'Connor ended his tour
of Israel by chiding American
for stereotyping Arabs.
"I feel we have a stereotype
in the U.S. for the Arab and
Palestinian. If you use either
term, Arab or Palestinian,
many people see terrorist," he
told reporters at Ben-Gurion
Airport Monday evening, just
before leaving for Rome.
"We are talking about an an-
cient, noble people with which
we have much in common," he
said. "There are very many
Arab and Palestinian leaders
looking for a peaceful solution"
of the Middle East conflict, the
Roman Catholic Archbishop of
New York declared.
He added that he "was en-
couraged to find so much talk
of peace in Israel. You don't
hear in the Arab world now
things you heard just a few
years ago: "We're going to push
N.
the Israelis into the sea.' "
O'Connor said he would in-
form Pope John Paul II in
Rome that "I think there's good
) will on all sides and that's what
you need. I see a lot of good will
herd in the Arab world and in
Israel toward the Holy See."
The final event of O'Connor's
tour was a visit Monday to the
Gaza Strip where he inspected
the Shatti refugee camp hous-
ing some 40,000 Palestinians.
He was obviously overcome by
its squalor. "You can't de'scribe
it — no way," the New York
Archbishop said.
Earlier, O'Connor visited
the Western Wall in the Old
City of Jerusalem where he
kissed the stones, and the Yad
Vashem Holocaust Memorial
in West Jerusalem. Near tears,
he found it difficult to express
in words the horror he felt at
viewing the Holocaust
exhibits.
The invitation to visit Israel,
extended to O'Connor by
Foreign Minster Peres, stem-
med in large measure from
concern over the Archbishop's
relationship with the Jewish
State. Peres said he invited the
Roman Catholic leader to learn
the Israeli side of the Middle
East conflict.
Last July, during a visit to
Lebanon, O'Connor said the
Vatican would establish dip-
lomatic relations. with Israel

only after three preconditions
were satisfied: Israel should
"assist substantially" in find-
ing "a Palestinian homeland;"
it should help achieve peace in
Lebanon; and should also aid
the security of some eight mill-
ion Christians living in the
Arab world.
On that occasion, the Cardi-
nal made no mention of Syria,
the Shiite and Sunni Moslems,
Iran or Libya, all of which have
contributed to the destabliza-
tion of Lebanon and the mas-
sacre of Lebanese Christians.
Before leaving Israel,
O'Connor seemed to indicate
that he thought Vatican-Israel
relations could develop in the
future. He told reporters, after
meeting with Peres on Mon-
day, that "I have found, con-
trary to disappointment I
found in New York, I found
here that the Foreign Minister
is open to an extraordinary
number of possibilities."
He did not elaborate on the
"possibilities" but said, "My
understanding is that until the
Holy See is satisfied that those
concerns (regarding the status
of Jerusalem and its holy
places) can be appropriately
resolved, it will maintain its
current position."

Gur Chairing
Troubled Firm

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Former
Health Minister Mordechai
Gur has been officially ap-
pointed chairman of Solel
Boneh, the Histadrut-owned
construction company in se-
vere financial straits. He re-
placed Moshe Sanbar who res-
igned last week.
Gur, a Labor MK and former
Israel Defense Force chief of
staff, was named to the post
Monday and joined the execu-
tive committee of Hevrat
Haovdim, the Histadrut hold-
ing company, He said he had
examined Solel Boneh's finan-
cial situation and concluded
there was a national and
economic justification for the
enterprise to continue to oper-
ate. l),
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