I FRONTLINES (GRAND OPENING SPECIALS' NOVI CYCLERY I WE'VE MOVED! (FORMERLY WEST BLOOMFIELD BIKE SHOP) 41706 W. Ten Mile • Novi A& P SHOPPING CENTER 347-1250 • RALEIGH • BMX OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY SALES & SERVICE RIDING CLOTHES NEW, USED & RENTALS & ACCESSORIES 1 % OFF ANY PURCHASE FREE GIFT WITH PURCHASE OF ANY BIKE (WITH THIS COUPON) (WITH THIS COUPON Watch for our grand opening ads You're invited to a ... workshop ...a no-cost session at our new Birmingham showroom Let designer Sharon Thomson give you a quick, free lesson on decorating with oriental rugs. You'll learn how a designer works with floor planning, pattern mixing, color coordination and decorating moods. Workshop enrollment is limited. Call Annetta now to register at 646-RUGS. workshop schedule: Monday, March 21 Monday, March 21 Monday, March 28 Monday, March 28 Mrs. Sharon Thomson - - - - 10:30 a.m. -12 noon 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. - 12 noon 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. The Original Since 1939 HAGOPIAN WORLD OF RUGS Piety Hill Plaza — 646-RUGS 1835 S. Woodward I block north of 14 Mile Road 14 FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1988 Young Leadership Conference Confronted by Tough Issues ELIZABETH KAPLAN Staff Writer W ashington — Early Sunday morning, the Arabs began settling into place. Tall and angry, the men wore keffiahs and walked in groups of four and five, separated several feet from the women behind them. They stopped outside the Washington Hilton. And then they began to yell, full force, "Palestine yes! Occupation no! Victory, victory PLO!" Two policemen stood near- by, their arms crossed over their chests. Asked if this sort of thing happens often, an of- ficer replied, "They do this all the time in this town. All the time?' Across the street a very dif- ferent contingent was gather- ing. More than 3,000 Jews — some 75 from Detroit — were coming to the. Hilton for the Sixth National Young Leader- ship Conference of the United Jewish Appeal. Divided on how to achieve peace in the Middle East, on the relationship between Israel and Diaspora Jewry, on issues like "Who is a Jew," this group nonetheless offered unanimity of thought on one issue: they support Israel un- failingly and wholeheartedly. It was exactly what Elie Wiesel, keynote speaker at the opening plenary, wants. In an impassioned, speech, the Nobel laureate called not for a single voice of un- qualified and unquestioning approval for all of Israel's policies, but for a single voice of love for the state. "I believe in the people of Israel," he said. "I believe in the State of Israel. And I believe that the bonds be- tween them are indestructi- ble?' In the past few months, Wiesel said, "it has become dangerous to say a good word about Israel." He added that "I do not remember a period in my adult life as a Jew when so much hatred has been shown and unleashed toward Israel." Thday, it is acceptable to de- nounce those who do not join in the chorus against Israel; tomorrow, it may very well be any Jews at all, he said. According to Wiesel, the real goal of those inciting violence in the territories is to split the Jewish people and to make them enemies of Israel. "And unless we are Benjamin Netanyahu vigilant in that respect, danger is at hand," he said. Wiesel was followed by Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, Benjamin Netanyahu, who cited Israel's many challenges, the greatest of which is its "challenge for survival," he said. Netanyahu called the re- cent violence in the ad- ministered territories "a new phase in an old war. And it relies on the ill will and stupidity of some people, it relies on the gullibility of all." The ambassador took issue with attempts to define the violence as "demonstrations" or "acts of civil disobedience," as if stone-throwing Arab youths are Mother Theresas woefully lamenting unjusti- fied hatred and petitioning for peace. The problem, Netanyahu said, has never been that the Palestinians lack a state, but rather that the Jews have one. Netanyahu also noted that while many are quick to lam- bast Israel for not getting peace negotations started, few are eager to point out the fact that, other than Egypt, the Arab nations do not have relations with Israel. That act of recognition is the precondition, he said. Netanyahu, who frequently gesticulated to emphasize his comments, was an extremely popular speaker with mem- bers of the Detroit contingent. After hearing the ambassa- dor, one young man said: "I feel like I can go back now and answer all those critics of Israel!' In fact, criticism of Israel was rarely voiced by De- troiters at the conference — and when it was, it was al- most always with the dis- claimer, "this has to be off the record." Yet those attending the con- ference did not come to raise their voices against Israel. They came, they said, to learn. Tali Arbel, who was attend- ing her first Young Leader- ship conference, said, "As American Jews, the first thing we have to do is educate ourselves about Israel." "We've got to get detailed, more accurate information," added James Boschan. "That will make it easier to discuss the situation more intelli- gently in the future." And Suzi Alterman said that one of the reasons she at- tended the conference was specifically to learn more about Israel. Two years ago, Alterman said, she was uninvolved in Jewish issues. Then she became interested in the UJA and the Jewish Welfare Federation. This week, she at- tended her second Young Leadership Conference and now serves on the board of the Young Adult Division. For Alterman, no connec- tion exists between U.S. Jewry's dollars and its right to help determine political policy in Israel. "When we give to the Allied Jewish Campaign, our money isn't going to politics," she said. "And I give because I care about the people of Israel — about the Jews who need to get out of Ethiopia and Polish Jews who need food." One political issue was fre- quently discussed both by participants and speakers at the event: The recent letter drafted by Sen. Carl Levin (D- Mich.), praising the peace in- itiative of Secretary of State George Shultz and expressing dismay at Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's rejection of the "land for peace" option. Detroiter Marc Krasnin ar- ticulated a view about the let- ter expressed by many others. There is nothing wrong or unusual with the 30 signators voicing their views, he said. The issue is that they are senators. "The timing of the letter was inappropriate?" asserted Dennis Bernard, campaign chairman for YAD. "The men who signed it were very aware that Prime Minister Shamir would be here in a week and they took the opportunity to make a statement about his policies as senators, as our representatives. And that put