I NEWS I DRESS UP IN ISTINO SALE PRICED $3990 WITH THIS AD ONLY Reg. $65.00 57 pairs ALL LEATHER PRESS SLIP-ON Black & Brown Sizes 8 11,12 HURRY — THIS OFFER EXPIRES - 3-31-88 EXCAUBUR SHOES • M E N Orchard Mall • West Bloomfield Orchard Lk. Rd. N. of Maple • 851-5122 LEATHER... SOFAS as low as $798 LOVESEATS as low as $698 CHAIRS as low as $598 OTTOMANS as low as $298 A COMPLETE SHOWROOM OF THE FINEST LEATHER FURNITURE AND IMPORTED LACQUER TABLES SHERWOOD STUDIOS WAREHOUSE 24734 CRESTVIEW CT. FARMINGTON HILLS PHONE: DAYS OF SALE 476-3760 PRIOR TO SALE 354-9060 HOURS: 10 AM - 6 PM IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - NOMINAL CHARGE Reform Convention Reaffirms Diaspora Jerusalem (JTA) — The 99th convention of the Cen- tral Conference of American Rabbis ended in Jerusalem with a spirited defense of the principle that one can be a true Zionist without living in Israel. The CCAR is the rabbinical organization of Reform Judaism in the United States. Its convention created a stir, and an angry reaction from some government circles, when the rabbis delivered a letter to Premier Yitzhak Shamir deploring "the policy of deliberate beatings ordered by Defense Minister (Yitzhak) Rabin as beyond the bounds of Jewish moral values!' The protest was against the Israel Defense Force policy of pursuing and beating Palesti- nian demonstrators in the ad- ministered territories. In re- cent weeks, the policy has been greatly modified to for- bid using beatings to punish demonstrators after a riot takes place. Rabbi Eugene Lipman, president of the CCAR, stated in his address that it is not necessary to live in Israel to be an authentic Zionist. Rab- bi Simeon Maslin of Philadelphia differentiated between "galut" and "diaspora." "Galut is not a place, galut is the abandonment, willing- ly or unwillingly of the Jewish mission" and therefore, authentic Jewish life in America is not necessarily galut, he said. Among the resolutions adopted at the closing session was one calling for "the pur- suit of peace in the Middle East." It states, "We urge all peoples involved in the cur- rent struggle to join in the ac- tive search for a fair, endur- ing, all-embracing peace!' During the convention, representatives of the Labor Party and the right-wing 'Thchiyah Party met with Dr. Mub arak Awad, • a Palestinian-born American who heads a movement for civil disobedience in the ad- ministered territories. Awad was ordered deported last year, but the orders were never implemented because of protests from the U.S. government. He is a naturalized American citizen. Likud representatives refused to attend the meeting in which Awad participated. Social Contact In Religion-State Issues Jerusalem — It is a fallacy to think that religion can re- main a private matter; therefore "politics and religion will always compete," even in a country like the U.S., where there is a legal separation of the two, said a Hebrew University of Jerusalem professor at an in- ternational conference held at the university. Religion and politics both compete for "public space," said Prof. Shlomo Avineri. The Israeli model, in which there is no strict separation of religion and state, is not a unique one, Avineri main- tained, since in many democracies, such as Britain, there is an established religion with certain political prerogatives. Israel has devised a politically-wise "social con- tract," said Avineri, which takes the form of a series of compromises enabling the non-religious majority and religious minority to live together. By and large, said Prof. Avineri, the secular community in Israel accepts religious constraints such as the stopping of public transportation on the Sab- bath' and holidays and religious control of marriage and divorce. Swiss Admit Anti-Semitism Geneva (JTA) — A secret survey which found that '30 percent of the population of Zurich holds anti-Semitic pre- judices in varying degrees has shocked the 8,000-member Jewish community of Zurich. The survey was made by a private organization that helps minorities in Switzerland. It was for inter- nal use only. But the magazine Zuriwoche obtain- ed the results. According to the findings, nine percent of Zurich residents questioned admit- ted they were anti-Semites; 11 percent said they had anti-Semitic tendencies and another 11 percent acknowl- edged they sometimes had anti-Semitic feelings.