THE JEWISH NEWS SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY Racial Tensions At OU Ignite Jewish Concerns KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer A Jewish administrator is out; a black female is in, and the result is racial tension at Oakland University. _ Talk of an upsurge of racial troubles at OU follows months of disputes within opposing groups of black students, one which objected to the involvement of white students and staff members in planning this month's Black Awareness Month activities. Last month, students returned to OU after the holiday break to a disbanded Black Awareness Month Committee and a newly formed Black History Celebration Committee. The committee's goal was the same; yet the group was different: any white students present on the old committee were missing. Also absent from the committee was the group's staff member, Paul Franklin, coordinator of campus programs, who LT white and Jewish. His replacement was a black female. "Black America is in a terrible state," said Keith Arnold, president of the A t night, Barbara Deutch hears the thunder of planes fly- ing overhead. But they're not planes on their way to Baghdad; they're Israeli bombers heading for Leb- anon. Mrs. Deutch, who made aliyah from Detroit when she was 18, lives in a moshav six miles from the Lebanese border. Never has the sound of the war been so close as this week, when Israeli fighter planes began attacking Palestinian guer- rilla posts in southern Leb- anon. Ten camps were re- ported hit, a number of them strongholds of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which has expressed support for Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. The campaign, which began Tuesday, was mounted in response to Katyusha rockets fired from Lebanon into northern Israel. An Israeli Army spokesman said the PLO had fired dozens of missiles, all of which missed their targets and landed north of the Israel border. Mrs. Deutch said she has heard the Katyusha rockets and listens anxiously at night for the sound of sirens. "Are we nervous? Yes," said Mrs. Deutch. Her chil- dren must carry gas masks wherever they go, and only this week were they able to return to school. Though she lives close to the Lebanese border, Mrs. Deutch said she feels safe. Arabs from the security zone still come to work in Israel, she said. Tensions have in- creased lately, but terrorist threats and concern about the stability of Lebanon "are problems we've always had to live with." Mrs. Deutch, who first visited Israel in 1975, said Coverage of the war continues on page 15. she believes the outcome of the war lies in U.S. hands. "I hope it doesn't last longer than a few weeks at most," she said. "I don't like to see American lives lost." Southfield resident Faye Damraur's brother, Mel Bluestein, and her daughter, Sherie Damraur-Kalo, both live in northern Israel. Mrs. Damraur said she is confi- dent her family will be safe, though her husband, Louis, spends a lot of time watching the news these days. CLOSE-UP campus' Association of Black Students and a staun- ch opponent of white in- volvement in this month's activities. "There are cer- tain things black people need to do to straighten out. We were not looking for the approval of Jewish students on campus. We have two different cultures and have different needs." Mr. Arnold said only blacks should plan their own activities, adding, "We wouldn't try to plan Jewish holiday celebrations." He called Mr. Franklin "incompetent," saying he Continued on Page 12 War Takes On New Front As Israel Strikes PLO ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM and PHIL JACOBS FEBRUARY 8, 1991 / 24 SHEVAT 5751 "They're strong people," she said of her brother and daughter. A member of PNAI, Mrs. Damraur recent- ly attended a meeting of the Parents of North American Israelis. The parents were anxious, but all said their children in Israel were op- timistic about Israel's safe- tY. For Uri Bar-Ner, the Con- sul General of the Israeli Consulate in Chicago, the stepped-up PLO action is not a surprise. "What you are seeing is the work of Arafat and the PLO," Mr. Bar-Ner said on Wednesday. "We believe that Saddam Hussein has given him the instructions to go ahead and start with a se- cond front. They've launched their Katyusha rockets at the settlements in northern Israel, and most of them landed far away from any of our settlements." Where the recent cutback in Scud missile attacks are concerned, Mr. Bar-Ner said that the Israelis are not let- ting themselves get lulled into a false sense of security. "It's not even an issue," he said. "We are still very aware of the threat we face. I call my family all of the time just to make sure they are okay. Israel is still under a high state of alert." El Behind Closed Doors Inside Detroit's most private yeshiva, Darchei Torah. Page 26