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References from Bloomfield Hills Country Club, Cranbrook, Detroit Golf Club, etc. For more information call 398-6318 Pat Munce AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' Help us keep winning. 92 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1988 Tikkun Panelists Back U.S. Talks With PLO New York (JTA) — A con- ference of American Jewish progressives opened this week with a panel's strong support of the U.S move to begin talks with the Palestine Liberation Organization. The endorsement, shared by the Palestinian speakers on the panel, was markedly different from the lukewarm reception given by the major American Jewish organiza- tions to the U.S. decision. But according to conference organizer Michael Lerner, that is the point of the con- clave and his two-and-half- year-old magazine Tikkun, which is sponsored the meet- ing. "We want to say to the press and the world that the American Jewish leadership interviewed so often by the press does not speak for us," the magazine's editor said at the opening session of the conference. The second purpose, said Lerner, is to "challenge ourselves," and to ask tough questions of those on the left. His words also opened the way for disagreement among the panelists. They included Edward Said, a literature pro- fessor at Columbia Universi- ty and a member of the Pal- estine National Council; Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, a pro- fessor at Northwestern Uni- versity who also sits on the PNC; Michael Walzer, a pro- fessor of social science at the Institute for Advance Study at Princeton and a co-editor of Dissent; and Letty Cottin Pogrebin, founding editor of Ms. magazine. Said called on American Jewish intellectuals to become public "witnesses to the present" and testify about Israeli actions against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in- cluding shootings, the razing of houses and expulsions. "There has to be a recogni- tion and acknowledgement for the injustice done to our people by yours, in your name," said Said. But in disagreeing Walzer said, "It is not necessary for the sake of peace that we ac- cept your vision or you ours. We can live in peace without reciting each other's doc- trine." Likewise, Lerner countered traditional Palestinian assessments that Israeli security concerns are the product of paranoia. "It is not paranoia when Jews hear over and over again in the Arab press, not of a two-state solution, but of a two-stage solution — with the second stage after statehood to be the liberation of the rest of Palestine." A galvanizing presence at the session was that of Moshe Amirav, a general in the Israel Defense Force reserve and a former Likud Knesset member. Said, Acknowledging Amirav said Israelis need to be self-critical. He described his own defection from Likud to form a coalition of reserve officers and intellectuals who favor relinquishing the ad- ministered territories in the interest of security. Amirav said he is willing to say of the PLO, "Let's give them a chance." What cannot be ignored, he added, are the "generations of suspicion of a second genocide based on repeated Arab assertions of `driving the Jews into the sea?" Still, "there must be a new thinking in Israel, and among Jews in this country," Amirav said. "We don't need any more of your money, which I know surprises many Jews. We need peace." Two new organizations were to be launched at the conference: a Network of Jewish Progressive Students and the Committee for Judaism and Social Justice. Tikkun describes the com- mittee as an organization for "those who don't feel ade- quately represented by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, the American Israel Public Affairs Commit- tee, the American Jewish Committee or the Jewish establishment." Royal Mounties Seek Survivors New York (JTA) — The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is undertaking in- vestigations into the plight of Slovak Jews between 1938 and 1944. They are looking for information regarding the autonomous Slovakia totali- tarian system called Hlinka Slovak People's Party. Additional information is sought concerning the en- forcement of anti-Jewish legislation in Slovakia, and the arrests, deportations and executions of Jews from the cities of Bratislava, Bardejov, Banska Bystrica, Krupina and Krennicka. Meanwhile, the U.S. Justice