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JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME This offer is for new subscriptions only. Cur- rent subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks delivery. ADDRESS CITY (Circle One) (Circle One) L STATE ZIP 1 year: $26 2 years: $46 Out of State: $29 Enclosed $ ADULT EX. LG. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHILD SMALL Lea Tsemel Continued from Page 5 than the official death toll. Currently, 5,000 Palesti- nians are detained, under in- terrogation or awaiting trial as a result of the riots, she said. Another 1,000 are held under administrative deten- tion without being charged or the benefit of due process. Five new detention centers have been erected by the Israelis. Tsemel described them as concentration camps. "Even in Nazi Germany in the 1940s the concentration camps were not intended to carry out the final solution, she said explaining her choice of words. Tsemel said that the Ansar 3 camp in the Negev Desert is nothing more than a tent city which can "spread out and out as far as it can." Food and hygiene are primitive. "We can hardly find our clients," she said. She charged that the Israeli judicial system is totally bias- ed against the Palestinians. The uprising has forced a debate in Israeli society, she said. New, albeit small, pro- test groups are forming. Thir- teen Israelis have gone to prison rather than serve in the territories, she said. Another 500 have declared that they will not serve there. "People have stopped treating the army as if it was sacred," she said. Groups of Israelis have begun making weekly visits to the territories, "trying to meet people and talk to them." Tsemel told her audience that, with the riots, Palesti- nians have reached maturity: collaboraters who have re- nounced their ties with Israel have been welcomed back in- to the Palestinian society (with the exception of one Palestinian who was lynched by his neighbors) and any Israeli weapons which have fallen into Palestinian hands have been broken and return- ed to the Israelis. Israel will not retreat will- ingly from the territories, she predicted, and called upon Americans to pressure Israel into withdrawal. One audience member ask- ed Memel if she would draw a comparison between the Israel of today and Nazi Ger- many. "We have not reached the peaks of Nazi Germany, but I'm not sure we cannot do it," she answered. "Perhaps in each and every one of us there is a small Nazi." The concept of transfer — the forced removal of Palesti- nians from Israel and the ter- ritories — is a topic of discus- sion in Israel, she said. "There are plans to initiate a war to justify transfer. I'm sure of it." In such a situation, she believes, "Palestinians would fight to the last." She admitted that her defense of Palestinians is a losing battle, but that it is her role to fight for the underdog. What motivates her each morning to rise and return to work is anger, she said, "the new anger that I feel every day, anger at different daily atrocities." I LOCAL NEWS I Maas Building Halted Pending State Inquiry 1•11111111, STAFF REPORT T he Fresh Air Society voluntarily halted con- struction on a new din- ing pavilion at its Camp Maas this week pending an investigation by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. This move follows Camp Maas naturalist Bill Frankel's report to the DNR that construction of the pavilion on Phipps Lake may violate the state's wetlands preservation law. FAS president Dr. Richard Krugel said Wednesday that preliminary findings by the DNR showed that there were no environmental problems caused by the construction DNR investigators could not be reached for confirma- tion at press time. Frankel was fired April 18 after contacting the DNR. Ac- cording to Will Reding, super- visor of the Tamarack Camps Outdoor Education Program, four other members of the FAS naturalist staff — in- cluding Reding — have an- nounced their resignation in the wake of Frankel's dismissal. Reding said that he and his coworkers fear envrionmental damage to plants and the lake by the cutting down of some 20 trees and the dump- ing of sand and gravel at the construction site between Sobel Beach and the old trip center. He said the issue was not "Judaism versus environmen- talism," as was argued by FAS directors, but concern