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Labor Official
Continued from Page 5
Peres and Hussein could be
historical. But if the two go to
an international peace con-
ference, they must be ready if
something does go wrong."
Krasny insisted that Israel
will be ironclad about the
following principles at any in-
ternational peace conference:
no negotiations with the PLO
or any other terrorist
organization, all participants
in an International Con-
ference must have diplomatic
relations with the others, and
no one can dictate the result
of the Conference.
Alden Leib, an associate
chairman of the JCCouncil
Committee on International
Concerns, commented after-
ward that "this type of
cooperation (of the unity
government) hasn't ever ex-
isted in any country, and it's
working. We would assume
that if Peres was such a good
prime minister for two years
that he wouldn't give up, but
he did and now Shamir is the
prime minister and he's doing
a fine job . ."
Leib interprets Krasny as
111
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believing that even though
Peres initiated the
preliminary talks with Hus-
sein, there is still a possibili-
ty that a peace conference
will go ahead with Shamir at
the helm.
Krasny is visiting the U.S.
on behalf of the Golda Meir
Association, which promotes
democracy in Israel.
NEWS
Booklet Fights
Anti-Semitism
,i<00100$00'
Boris Krasny: Internal success
leads to peace.
271 W. Maple
Birmingham
New York — To help Jews
deal effectively with anti-
Semitic incidents in their
communities, the American
Jewish Committee has just
published a booklet of
guidelines for responding to
the most common problems.
For example, the booklet
suggests that if one receives
anti-Semitic or other hate-
materials through the mail
he should immediately report
the incident to the U.S. Postal
Service and provide them
with a copy of the offensive
material and the mailing
envelope in which it was sent.
If federal laws have been
violated, the postal service
may refer the case to federal
prosecutors.
The pamphlet also deals
with what can be done when
a Jewish institution has been
vandalized, a Ku Klux Klan
meeting has been announced,
anti-Semitic or racist
literature is being distributed
in public places, or if someone
has received personal threats
or harassing phone calls
motivated by anti-Semitism.
Herut Assails
Dekel Plan
Tel Aviv (JTA) — Prominent
Herut figures have recoiled in
disgust from a proposal by
Deputy Defense Minister
Michael Dekel of Herut for
the mass transfer of Palesti-
nians to the Arab countries as
a solution to Israel's
demographic problems.
One of the most outspoken
critics is Benyamin Zeev
Begin, son of former Premier
Menachem Begin, who told a
Herut symposium in Tel Aviv
Sept. 13 that Dekel's ideas
"blurred the distinctions bet-
ween Herut and that ghastly
phenomenon represented by
Meir Kahane," leader of the
extremist Kach Party.
Dekel said he was "shocked,
disappointed and deeply in-
sulted" by Begin's com-
parison of his views to
Kahane's. He had offered a
"non-operative political plan
for the future" to resettle
500,000 Palestinian refugees
from Israel's 1948 War of In-
dependence in Arab coun-
tries. He would give Arabs in
the administered territories a
choice between "full citizen-
ship and allegiance to the
State of Israel" or emigration
"not by coercion by interna-
tional agreement."
B'nai B'rith
To Fight Hunger
B'nai B'rith is calling on its
members to combat hunger
and homelessness.
Designed and sponsored by
the Jewish organization's
Community Volunteer Ser-
vice Commission (CVS), the
program is scheduled to start
Oct. 8, the first day of Succot.