BAC KG ROU N D ANNUAL MEETING OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF METROPOLITAN DETROIT Syria Continued from Page 38 Nominees to the Board of Governors Pursuant to the bylaws of the JEWISH FEDERATION OF METROPOLITAN DETROIT, the following list of nominees, selected from the membership of the Federation, eligible for election to the Board of Governors of the Federation, has been presented to the Executive Vice- President not less than 30 days prior to the Annual Meeting, to take place on Tuesday, October 1 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek at 6:30 p.m. FOR RE-ELECTION 3-Year Term Ending in 1995 Joel Gershenson Dulcie Rosenfeld Penny Blumenstein Benjamin F. Rosenthal Stanley D. Frankel Edward C. Levy, Jr. Eugene Driker Douglas M. Etkin Marvin H. Goldman FOR ELECTION 3-Year Term Ending in 1995 Sharon Hart Barbara Grant Mark R. Hauser Carolyn Greenberg James Grosfeld Joel E. Jacob Brian E. Kepes Sheila Potiker Rabbi Efry Spectre Other persons may be nominated by petition or petitions signed by not fewer than 25 members of the Federation and filed with the Executive Vice-President of the Federation not less than ten days prior to the date of the Annual Meeting. Only one person may be nominated in each petition and no nomination shall be valid unless the nominees have consented to be a candidate. 1992 NOMINATING COMMITTEE Joel D. Tauber Chairman Susan Citrin Jerome Y. Halperin Michael S. Feldman Jack A. Robinson THE BYLAWS OF THE JEWISH FEDERATION OF METROPOLITAN DETROIT ARE PROPOSED TO BE AMENDED BY THE ADDITION OF THE FOLLOWING: 1. The words "Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit" shall be globally substituted for the words "Jewish Welfare Federation" or "Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit." 2. The words "United Jewish Foundation" shall be globally substituted for the words "United Jewish Charities." 3. Article III, Section 2 (a) shall be deleted and the following substituted in its place and stead: "(a) Forty-two at-large members, 14 of whom shall be elected at each annual meeting of members to serve for three years. However, an at-large member of the Board who has served two consecutive terms of three years each, not including any partial term, shall not be eligible for re- election until one year has elapsed from the expiration of the last term of service. Any at-large member of the Board of Governors who is completing his or her last year of his or her last term of office and who is elected as an officer to the Board of Governors shall be allowed to extend his or her term of office for one additional term of three years." 4. Article III, Section 2 (c) shall be deleted and the following substituted in its place: "(c) The retiring President of the Federation and the retiring Chairman of the Executive Committee, following the completion of his or her term of office for the remainder of his or her lifetime, so long as he or she chooses to so serve." 5. Article III, Section 2 shall be amended by the addition of Section 2(h) to read as follows: "(h) Members of Federation who have attained the office of National Chairman of the United Jew- ish Appeal or President of the Council of Jewish Federations for the remainder of his or her lifetime so long as he or she chooses to so serve." 6. Article IV, Section 1 (a) (5) shall be deleted and the following substituted in its place: "(5) The retiring President of the Federation and the retiring Chairman of the Executive Committee, following the completion of his or her term of office for the remainder of his or her lifetime, so long as he or she chooses to so serve." 7. Article IV, Section 1 (a) (8) shall be added to read as follows: "(8) Members of Federation who have attained the office of National Chairman of the United Jewish Appeal or President of the Council of Jewish Federations for the remainder of his or her lifetime so long as he or she chooses to so serve." BYLAWS COMMITTEE Doreen Hermelin Conrad L. Giles, M.D. Mark R. Hauser JEWISH FEDERATION OF METROPOLITAN DETROIT Robert P. Aronson, Executive Vice-President 6735 Telegraph Road • Bloomfield Hills MI 48301 • (313) 642-4260 !iJ 9.41/4 IWO"' Nod ..**..sh Camp•gn Scud-B missiles with which Iraq bombarded Israel dur- ing the Gulf War. First news of the tests, which occurred in late July, came during the Israeli leader's visit to the United States last week from a "senior official," widely believed to be Mr. Rabin himself. Deputy Defense Minister Mordechai Gur confirmed the missile tests and said it must be assumed that "in light of its anti-Israeli past, Syria intends using them." Interviewed on Israeli Army Radio, Mr. Gur declined to be drawn out on the timing of a possible clash, but he observed dryly that "the combination of the capability and a certain po- litical or military situation could undoubtedly cause them to use the missiles." In previous conflicts, Syria was defeated "fairly quickly and fairly easily," said Mr. Gur, and Israel still retains the military edge. He did not, however, believe that such knowledge would necessarily act as a deter- rent: "When it comes to war you cannot rely on logic." According to leading Israeli military analyst Ze'ev Schiff, the Syrian mis- siles are capable of carrying larger warheads more accu- rately than the Iraqi Scuds. He added: "And, it should be remembered that Syria has been working for some time on the development of chemical warheads for these missiles." Dr. Danny Leshem, a ballistics specialist at the Tel Aviv University Center for Strategic Studies, esti- mates that Syria's missiles are twice as accurate as the Iraqi Scuds and their range "offers launch site possibilities throughout Syria, to the north and to the east." He was surprised by the timing of the tests and be- lieves they were intended primarily to send a political message as the peace talks move into a critical new stage: "The Syrians want to keep all their options open." Israeli sources believe the timing of the tests not only prefigures President Assad's options if he does not get his way at the negotiating table, but also underscores Syria's close military alliance with Iran. Even more important than the advanced Scuds them- selves, the North Koreans also have delivered the technology and equipment for manufacturing the weapons, which was part of the deal signed by Syria and Iran. Syria has stockpiles of Frog, Scud-B and SS-21 mis- siles — a lingering memory of its old relationship with the old Moscow — but accor- ding to the source it is now on the verge of making a quantum leap by completing a production line for large quantities of the more soph- isticated Scud-C missiles, both for its own use and for that of its Iranian ally. Retired Gen. Aharon Levran, an expert on the re- gion's military balance, is concerned not only with Syria's acquisition of non- conventional weapons, but also with its growing con- ventional arsenal. He said Syria had acquired hundreds of sophisticated T-72 tanks and self-propelled guns, while it is currently negotiating the purchase of advanced warplanes and an- ti-aircraft missile systems. Prof. Itamar Rabinovich, who knows as much about Syria as any Israeli, is under no illusions about the enor- Syria is unwilling to acknowledge that a more compromising Israeli administration has taken over in Jerusalem. mity of the business of nego- tiating a deal with Damascus. Having replaced Shamir loyalist Yossi Ben-Aharon as head of Israel's negotiating team with Syria, Professor Rabinovich tempers his op- timism about an Israeli- Syrian accord with "the deepest conviction that it will be a very difficult path." While Mr. Rabin has re- jected a total Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights, he has left open the door for a partial, symbolic withdrawal: "There is room for maneuver that will make progress possible at the negotiations," he told the Labor daily Davar. Professor Rabinovich, rec- tor of Tel Aviv University and professor of contem- porary Middle East history, said the Syrians had made efforts — "at times violent efforts" — to stop the Pales- tinians from reaching a set- tlement during the 1980s. "Even now, they have not ceased these efforts," he said. "In other words, if there is a settlement they do not want to remain out- side." ❑