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Ground Floor Location—West of Dix 382-7664 16 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1988 SOUTHFIELD OFFICE 22883 GREENFIELD GROUND FLOOR—SW CORNER OF 9 MILE BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD PROVIDERS AUDIOLOGISTS ON STAFF CLINICAL RECOMMENDATION AUTO WORKERS HMO-PPO MOST INSURANCES I NEWS I 559-9130 Call For Appointment HARPER WOODS OFFICE 17800 E. Eight Mile Eastland Center Professional Bdg. 371-9200 U.S. Jewish Leaders Divided Over Blame TOM TUGEND Special to The Jewish News L os Angeles — The pro- fessional pulse takers of the American Jewish community are comparing notes in a four-day meeting and a preliminary reading shows a split diagnosis on who is to blame for Israel's deteriorating image. During the opening session last Sunday of the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council (NJCRAC), advocates were fairly evenly divided between those who put the responsibility on Israel's tactics in handling Arab stone throwers in Gaza and the West Bank and others who blamed the dis- torted picture presented by the American press and television. On hand for the lively exchanges were 450 lay and professional leaders representing NJCRAC's 113 local and 11 national agen- cies dealing with community relations throughout the United States. Less concern- ed with the image than the substance of Israel's policy was Dr. Yossi Beilin, director general for political affairs in Israel's Foreign Ministry and an influential adviser to Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. The confrontations in the territories, Beilin said, have forced both the United States and Israel to put the Pales- tinian problem back on top of the agenda. The two coun- tries, both facing national elections this year, would have been happy to just main- tain the status quo, but this option is no longer possible for Jerusalem or Washington. Beilin attributed the new Arab militancy in the ter- ritories to the change in generations. "The older generation (of Arabs) could compare the oc- cupation under Israel to that under Egypt or Jordan, which was worse," said Beilin, but the rock-throwing teenagers lack that perspective. These youngsters "compare Gaza and the West Bank to Tel Aviv and Haifa, and to them that's like New York or Los Angeles." Beilin was to have been joined at the session by Con- gressman Lee Hamilton, chairman of the House Sub- committee on Europe and the Middle East. At the last mo- ment, Hamilton was asked by Secretary of State George Shultz to join him for con- sultations, apparently in preparation for Shultz' trip to the Middle East. Burton Levinson, national chairman of the Anti-Defa- mation League, set the tone for a concern close to his listeners when he complained that he was "sick and tired of American Jews who take their case (against Israeli policy) to the general press. Too many Americans believe that this debate (among American Jews) is a sign of disunity," he warned. On the brighter side, Levin- son reported that an ADL poll taken in late January show- ed that support for Israel among Americans in general was as high as ever. In some lively statements from the floor, a woman from Palm Beach, Fla. urged that all Israeli leaders be packed off for two days for in inten- sive course in public relations. In response, Beilin seemed unruffled. He said, yes, Israeli leaders are aware of their image problems abroad, but, he added "this is not a PR question, we must solve real political problems. "The friends of Israel," he concluded, "are first friends of peace. It is difficult to have so- meone as a friend who will send my son to the next wars' Envoy's Remark Causes Stir Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel's Foreign Ministry demanded an explanation Tuesday of remarks by the Norwegian ambassador to Israel, Tbrleiv Anda, that unfavorably com- pared the acts of Israeli soldiers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to the Nazi oc- cupiers of his country during World War II. Ibrleiv, quoted by Israel Radio, said that Norway was under occupation for five years, "but we cannot remember, or I cannot remember, seeing German oc- cupation troops taking people and beating them in the street, breaking their arms or less, or taking children from their homes in the dead of night." The Norwegian envoy later said that he had spoken in reply to a specific question and did not intend to liken the actions of Israeli soldiers in the administered ter- ritories to those of the Nazis.