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September 27, 1991 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-09-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

.4411111.0.1 111W:

UP FRONT

Bush And Baker

Continued from preceding page

process than with setting the
tone for future relationships
in the Middle East.
In the administration's
view, improving relations
with the Arab partners in
the Desert Storm coalition
might seem far more attrac-
tive than working with an
irascible and isolated Israeli
leadership.
Mr. Baker, on the other
hand, is deeply committed to
the Middle East peace pro-
cess he patched together. In
pursuing the October peace
conference, he must con-
tinue to bolster his role as an
honest broker — and he
must continue to try to ma-
neuver the administration
into maintaining some
semblance of impartiality,
despite the president's
overwhelming anger about
the settlements issue.

In Mr. Baker's view, the
upcoming Middle East peace
conference may be the last
best hope for stability in the
region. Other matters — in-
cluding the administration's
anger over Israel's set-
tlements policies — can wait

TRADITION.

Isn't there one more worth carrying on?

Campaign Management
Recruits Volunteers

Friday night. The end of the week. The beginning
of Shabbat. A time to relax, reflect and renew. And as much a part of
this tradition as the candles and the challah was knowing the weekly
Jewish News had also arrived.
It brought news about the community, the nation
and the world. Today, that tradition hasn't changed. In fact, it's gotten
better. Each week award-winning journalists combine the warmth _of
community with world issues using candor and compassion to
strengthen Jewish identity and...tradition.
Keep the tradition alive. Give a Jewish News
subscription to a friend, a relative, as a special gift. If you don't
subscribe, (and you find yourself always reading someone else's copy)
maybe it's time to start your own tradition. The Jewish News. It's a
tradition worth keeping.

THE JEWISH NEWS

No Other Publication Has More Faith

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1

Save 40% over the newsstand price. Receive 52 award winning weekly issues plus
five separate Style magazine supplements for only $31.00 (out-of-state $41.00).
❑ Why should I be the only one to enjoy? I'd like to
❑ Yes! I want to be a faithful reader of the Jewish
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News, I'd like to order my own subscription.
Send my thoughtful gift to:

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Please send all payments along with this coupon to:
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Or call (313) 354-6060 and charge your order to Mastercard or Visa.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1991

New contributions and new
volunteers will be sought by
the newly appointed 1992
Allied Jewish Campaign
Management Committee at
their first meeting, 9:15 a.m.
Sept. 29, in Room 239 of the
Maple-Drake Jewish Com-
munity Center.
The Campaign team will
discuss efforts to meet the
needs of Jews locally and
abroad. They will hear an up-
date on services in Detroit
from Alan Goodnian, ex-
ecutive director of Jewish
Family Service, and the needs
overseas and in Israel. from
Joel Tauber, national vice
chairman of United Jewish
Appeal.
In the coming year,
members of the leadership
team will direct committees

Tauber

Goodman

for special events and projects,
and division chairmen will
carry new and expanded
responsibilities.
For information about
volunteering with the Allied
Jewish Campaign, call
Leonard Milstone, 965-3939,
Ext. 136.

-

Young. Adult Division
Hosts Reception

Gift card to read

12

until the peace process is on
solid ground.
Mr. Baker's controversial
remarks about settlements
may have represented an
effort to clear the air — to
make sure that none of the
parties to the proposed peace
conference can accuse him of
perfidy in a relationship in-
creasingly characterized by
distrust and hostility.
Ironically, Mr. Baker —
who worried Israel's friends
because of his single-minded
devotion to the concept of an
international peace con-
ference — may be Israel's
best friend in an administra-
tion that is rapidly
reevaluating a whole range
of international policies in
the wake of the collapse of
the Soviet empire and the
success of Operation Desert
Storm.
For Jewish activists, this
complex minuet between the
White House and the State
Department may be the key
to understanding where U.S.
Middle East policy is
heading in this new and in-
finitely more dangerous
period. 101

Zip

The Young Adult Division
of the Jewish Federation of
Metropolitan Detroit will
host an hors d'oeuvres recep-
tion for young adults in-
terested in meeting new peo-
ple and learning more about
the community 7:30 p.m. Oct.
10 at Cranbrook House.

There is a fee for the event,
which is being organized by
Richard Blumenstein and
Mitchel Mondry, and valet
parking is included.

For reservations and
details, call Rick Krosnick,
965-3939.

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