THE JEWISH NEWS SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY MARCH 15, 1991 / 29 ADAR 5751 HMC Will Lose $115,000 In Engler's Budget Trimming KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer M ichigan Gov. John Engler's proposed 1991 - 92 state budget would slash the state's $115,000 contribution from the Holocaust Memorial Center's annual budget of $900,000. The HMC cuts, unveiled last week to the legislature, are part of Mr. Engler's plan to cut back state-funded cultural arts programs. As part of his plan, Mr. Engler hopes to merge the Michigan Council for the Arts, the Commission on Art in Public Places and the Film Office into one Arts, Film and Cultural Affairs unit within the state's Com- merce Department. The purpose of this office would be only to advocate statewide programs. No grants would be made. Also, the Michigan Equity Package — which has pro- vided large grants for several cultural arts and ed- ucational organizations, in- cluding the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Detroit Continued on Page 20 Exhibits at the HMC. Israelis Cautious About Baker Trip AMY J. MEHLER Staff Writer S Despite progress, Jewish women still face male bias in communal organizations. ue and Jeremy Kagan wish Americans would really take a hard look at the map of the Middle East. Maybe then some wouldn't be so quick in ask- ing Israel to give back land to the Palestinians. The Kagans, who are former Detroiters now living in the Jerusalem neighbor- hood of Har Nof, are worried about the political ramifica- tions of Secretary James A. Baker's visit to Israel on Monday. "We knew this would happen," said Mr. Kagan, who studies and teaches in a Jerusalem Kollel. "Now that the war is over, Israel is once again in the spotlight, and we're a country of about the size of a toothpick. "There are 200 million of them and four million of us," he said. "We're all living in the same space. We just don't have all this land to give up. How would Detroiters feel if it were the entire United States gang- ing up against the city of Detroit?" Mr. Kagan said he felt this way while the country was under attack from Iraq and more recently this week, as Palestinians stabbed to death four Jewish women and ran over two Israeli soldiers with a vehicle. "Palestinians can't be free to murder and terrorize Israeli citizens," he said. "America would like to see a James Baker: Optimistic in Israel. nice, pat solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict. But there aren't any easy solu- tions. There aren't any for either side." The Kagans, who moved to Israel 12 years ago, don't see a resolution to this conflict in their future, or in the future of their children, Zahava, 2, and Chaim Yitz- chak, 5. And they're not all that optimistic that Mr. Baker, in his new role as mediator, can accomplish anything better. "But don't get us wrong," the Kagans said. "President Bush has done a great deal for the State of Israel. We recognize along with every- one else that God has blessed us with this salvation. But all it takes is someone like Saddam Hussein to wave the flag, and millions of Pales- tinian Arabs dance for Israel's destruction." Continued on Page 22