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Nestercuz said, "The Jewish community is a very strong lobby in the United States" and called for refram- ing the issue of "constitu- tional rights" so that it is not seen as "a Jewish issue .. . That's how it has to be sold to Congress. That legitimizes the debate." He called it part of a "calculated strategy" developed out of "our board meeting process." The UCCA is an umbrella organization of Ukrainian social and political groups, in- cluding a veterans group of former members of the 14th Waffen SS division under Nazi command during World War II. It is dominated by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), which worked with Germany before and during the war. UCCA General Counsel Askold Lozynskyj, who has defended several persons charged by the OSI, said criminalization would allow jury trials to be requested and "chances of acquittal are greater at a jury trial than a bench trial." Patience Huntwork, a Phoenix attorney, charged that the "OSI uses outright Soviet propaganda." She described herself and was in- troduced as the person who "led a successful effort to end the American Bar Associa- tion's official ties to a Soviet organization: the Association of Soviet Lawyers." American Bar spokesman Craig Baab called her asser- tions "silly and 100 percent wrong." He said she raised such a proposal in the group's annual meetings of 1986 and 1987, but they were "over- whelmingly defeated. She talks as a great human rights activist, yet is critical of U.S. government efforts to root out Nazi war criminals." Hugh Mclnnish, an engineer from Huntsville, Alabama, spoke Sunday in defense of Arthur Rudolph, the German rocket scientist. Rudolph was a supervisor of slave labor at the Peenemunde V-2 rocket pro- duction facility where 20,000 died from starvation, disease and brutality. Mclnnish in- sisted that Rudolph was inno- cent, even though Rudolph admitted his role and left the United States voluntarily. Nestercuz told Sunday's meeting at the Ukrainian Cultural Center that OSI tac- tics were "reminiscent of the Gestapo." He claimed that when OSI speaks to Jewish groups, "clearly the intention in a number of those in- stances is to incite to riot." 0 Coalition Continued from Page 1 Hoping to create a dialogue among blacks and Jews living in Detroit and its suburbs, several Jewish groups recent- ly began hosting forums. The American Jewish Congress last week held a meeting featuring Zemmol, its Midwest division executive director Sylvia Neil and Detroit Urban League Presi- dent N. Charles Anderson. The Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit this month hopes to launch its first discussion group with young black and Jewish attorneys. And the local American Jewish Com- mittee for the past seven months has been holding monthly grassroots meetings with lawyers, educators and business people. David Gad-Harf, executive director of the Jewish Com- munity Council, said the two groups need to rebuild their alliance. He said the Council wants to begin by bringing together young people outside of the work place who have no recollection of the civil rights movement. "Jews must denounce racism and blacks must de- nounce anti-Semitism," Neil said. Added Anderson, former Midwest director of the NAACP, "We must live together like sisters or perish together like fools. "We have seen some pro- gress," Anderson said. "We are now in a period with a lot of animosities and we are not talking to each other like we should." Standing in the way of pro- gress, leaders from both groups agree, have been remarks by black leaders like the Rev. Jesse Jackson, former Chicago mayoral aide Steve Cokely and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. Jackson, a former presiden- tial candidate, has been criticized for his reference to New York as "Hymietown" and his proposed pro- Palestinian plank for the