THE JEWISH NEWS THIS ISSUE 60(t SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY I CLOSE-UP I APRIL 7, 1989 / 2 NISAN 5749 Solidarity Walk's Theme Is Expanded The route will follow Drake Road north to Walnut Lake Road, turn east and go through subdivisions east of The annual walk for Israel has a Temple Israel, traveling on new name and purpose this year and Beauchamp, Piccadilly and an expanded route through West Bayswater Pond roads. Walkers will Bloomfield. then go back to Temple Israel for The walk will be held May 7 in refreshments before returning to the conjunction with the Israel In- Center for the Independence Day dependence Day celebration at the activities. Maple/Drake Jewish Community Colman said the route was Center. It has been renamed the Walk for Jewish Solidarity in honor of lengthened at the request of West Israel's 41st anniversary of statehood Bloomfield authorities to make the and in support of Jews leaving the walk safer by spreading out the crowd. Liss said, "We don't expect Soviet Union. James Colman, chairman with everyone to complete the 3.5 miles. Lauren Liss of the walk, said this We want people to walk as far as is year's emphasis is on the unification comfortable, to be part of the celebra- of the Jewish community of Detroit. tion." The organizing committee will "We just want people to come out and be part of the celebration. That's the have "toe trucks" available to return walkers to the Center if necessary. It important thing." Said Liss, "There have been many is also asking organizations to par- issues that have divided us this year ticipate, walking with their own — Israel, Soviet Jewry, Who Is a Jew. banners. This can help bring us together. It is Following the walk, Independence going to be a fun day that will let the Day activities at the Center will in- whole community celebrate." clude a Great Kumsitz (family picnic Registration for the walk will with entertainment), an Israel begin at 10:45 a.m. May 7. at the Knowledge Quiz Bowl, Israeli films Center. The walk starts at 11:30 a.m. and children's activities. STAFF REPORT Power Secretaries Three of Detroit's leading Jewish figures say that without their secretaries, there would be no lime in their light. Lawrence Defends Free Press Policy ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor Detroit Free Press Publisher David Lawrence Jr. faced a politely hostile audience Sunday while defen- ding his paper's coverage, policies and overall tone on the Middle East con- flict and Israel. A long-standing speaking com- mitment to Hadassah Associates, the men's unit that supports the women's Zionist group, came just two weeks after a Free Press opinion article by Professor Thomas H. Naylor of Duke University blamed Israel for sour relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Free Press ran a page of let- ters that dissected Naylor's article and a Sunday column by Editor Joe Stroud that said Naylor's column was wrong and never should have been published. But the paper followed Stroud's column with two days of let- ters to the editor supporting the Naylor article or the freedom of speech it represented. Lawrence unequivocally said publishing the Naylor column was an error. "I want to assure you that we do make mistakes, but it is not because someone tried deliberately to skew the facts. "Naylor was our latest mistake. But few institutions would have had the courage we had to admit for- thrightly that we should not have run that piece at all." He said the Free Press had a proud record of Middle East coverage, "but people only remember what they don't like." During questioning from the au- dience, Lawrence said his paper had published many articles showing the positive side of Israel. "I've written some of those things myself."But the questioner responded, "I've never read them." Lawrence mentioned the Free Continued on Page 20