EDITORIAL Scales of Justice Attorney General Edwin Meese's attempt during Passover to bundle off alleged mass murderer Karl Linnas to Panama was, fortunately, thwarted. It is outrageous that U.S. authorities looked the other way four decades ago as thousands of Nazi war criminals poured into the United States after World War II. It is outrageous that many more were funneled to a comfortable exile in Latin America. It is worse, however, that top echelons of the Reagan Administration have yet to learn the lesson of that period or the Bitburg fiasco of two years ago, and that the Linnas episode comes as the United States finally makes a concerted effort to deport the war criminals in our midst. Meese's action was an effort to deport Linnas without sending him back to the Soviet Union where, anti-Communists in this country say, Linnas faces "tainted" evidence and a death sentence. The Administration's own Office of Special Investigations in the U.S. Justice Department stands behind the Soviet documentation. Meese's Panamanian effort also comes on the heels of a vigorous defense of Linnas and John Demjanjuk, the alleged' Treblinka death camp guard now on trial in Israel who is also condemned by key Soviet evidence. That defense came from Patrick Buchanan, former White House communications director.Old fashioned U.S. "Commie-bashing" by the President's men should not outweigh U.S.-corroborated evidence against Nazis accused of murdering thousands of Jews during World War II. Tie these episodes to the stiff punishment for Israeli spy Jonathan Jay Pollard, and the lighter sentence for the far more damaging Walker family spy case, and one comes to some disquieting conclusions. At worst, on the eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day this Sunday, we see a vicious. double standard being applied where Jews are concerned. At best, top-ranking public servants in this country who have sworn to uphold justice are too hazy on the meaning of the word. How thought-provoking. After 30 years of terrorism, intimidation and murder, the PLO is still at square one, proposing to fulfill its own needs, and perhaps its people's needs, only through "armed struggle." What good will it do to repeat the long litany of PLO terrorist outrages when we only have to look across Israel's northern border with Lebanon to see the wisdom of government from, by, and for the PLO. The PLO, in no small measure, contributed to the 100,000 civilian deaths in the Lebanese civil war of 1975-1982. It shares guilt with Syria in fomenting the strife between Christian and Moslem Lebanese, and took advantage of the situation to carve out its own fiefdom of terrorist bases and "refugee camps"— entire neighborhoods of Beirut, Tyre, Sidon and other Lebanese cities. The PLO's law-by-the-gun is one cancer the Israeli army eradicated for the Lebanese when it invaded Lebanon in 1982. Now, five years later, the threat is renewed. A terrorist squad this week cut through the border security fence and killed two Israeli soldiers before they were gunned down. Five Katyusha rockets were fired at Israel over the weekend, although four exploded on Lebanese soil. The PLO is again trying to turn back the clock, to pre-1982, to pre-1967, to pre-1948, possibly to pre-1900. Actually, the PLO would be satisfied with 1987 Israel if the Israelis would leave it to them and just go somewhere else. And as an inducement they are offering a continuation of their "holy war," their "armed struggle." No suggestions are offered for compromise, no talk of a peace conference is heard. Instead, the PLO leadership reunites around the muzzle of a gun, the only law they know. Live By The Sword The leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization gathered this week for the first time in four years. PLO chieftain Yassir Arafat staged an internal public relations coup by convincing his long-time foes, hardliners George Habash of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Nayef Hawatmeh of the Marxist Front for the Liberation of Palestine, to join him on the podium. We will maintain our armed struggle against Israel not because we seek war," is the Arafatian logic, "but because we want peace, a just and comprehensive peace on the basis of the Palestinian right to self-determination and to an independent state with Jerusalem as its capital." LETTERS .0ther Aspects Of 'The Covenant' I read with interest the ar- ticle which dealt with ritual circumcision ("The Cove- nant," April 10). You might be interested to know that there is as lively a debate presently going on regarding the medical aspects of cir- cumcision as with the halachic considerations pre- sented in your article. In the 1970s the American Academy of Pediatrics took the position that there was no medical • justification for routine circumcision. No pro- ven benefit of the procedure had been identified and there was concern for the in- 6 Friday, April 24, 1987 frequent complications of bleeding, infection and trauma. Recently, Dr. Thomas Wis- well, a pediatrician at Brooke Army Medical Center pub- lished two articles dealing with the incidence of urinary tract infections 'in circum- cised versus uncircumcised male infants. In the very large number of infants studied retrospectively (220,000 at U.S. Army bases worldwide), a much lower in- cidence of-urinary tract infec- tions was noted in circum- cised males. Moreover, in older children from one to 14 years of age, Dr. Wiswell has determined (in soon to be published data) THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS at least a 2.5 times greater incidence of urinary tract in- fections in uncircumcised compared to circumcised males. These findings of Dr. Wis- well have stimulated a dialogue which clearly has the potential of altering the present position of the medi- cal community with respect to routine circumcisions. For years I have been fas 2 cinated by the fact that brit milah is delayed until the eighth day of life. Newborns normally have a bleeding tendency which naturally corrects itself at the end of the first week. Today this bleeding tendency is cor- rected by the administration of vitamin K to all newborns soon after birth. Being aware of the wisdom of timing brit milah on the eighth day, I was disap- pointed at the apparent realization that this tradi- tion, which is so vital to Judaism, could not be jus- tified medically. I thus find it quite comforting to see the evidence mounting that brit milah is indeed warranted medically. Dr. Gerald H. Katzman Chairman, Dept. of Pediatrics Sinai Hospital of Detroit Your recent article on brit • milah (circumcision) was in- formative and thoughtful. However, you erred in stating that "only Reform Jews ac- cept patrilineal descent." The Federation of Recon- structionist Congregations and Havurot passed a resolu- tion in . 1968 recognizing the children of a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother as Jews, "if the parents have committed themselves to rear their children as Jews," in- cluding circumcision for boys, a Jewish education, and a bar or bat mitzvah. The Recon- structionist Rabbinical Asso- ciation endorsed this idea in 1979. An important part of the 1968 Reconstructionist reso- lution includes informing Continued on Page 13