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She said she has also met with orga- nizers of the Jewish Student Union. Though they are not spon- sored by the university, members of the Jewish Faculty and Staff Association say a formal group is neces- sary to get their points across to the university's adminis- tration. Though members have different views, they agree that without a unified voice their concerns will go unheard. Similar groups exist at MSU, including the Gay and Lesbian Faculty and Staff Association, the Women's Faculty and Staff Association and the Black Faculty and Administrators Association. Students have organized groups along the same lines. Professor Waltzer called the university's approach to minority groups "formalized --\ pluralism — dealing with fac- - ulty, staff, and students of diverse backgrounds by putting them into organiza- tions and dealing with them in groups ... "If you don't have a spokesperson, a formalized group, you're not in the game," said Professor Waltzer. "You can't play." Prominent Turk Survives Attack New York (JTA) — A leading figure in the Turkish Jewish community survived an attack on his life last week in Istanbul, accor- ding to reports from Turkey. Five heavily armed un- identified gunmen opened fire Jan. 28 on the armored car of businessman Jak Kamhi, whose guards returned fire. The gunmen escaped, leaving behind an anti-tank rocket, assault rifles, pistols and hand grenades. Mr. Kamhi, 68, who is chairman of the Quincentennial Foundation of Istanbul, was unhurt. The attack took place four days after a prominent Ankara journalist was killed by a car bomb. But sources said the two incidents were not necessarily linked. In the earlier attack, three pro-Iranian Moslem groups and a Kurdish rebel party took responsibility for the Jan. 24 killing of Ugur Mumcu, who was an in- vestigative reporter for the leading daily Cumhuriyet, where he had often criticized militant Islamic forces. Protesters of his killing marched through Istanbul the day after the journalist's death, passing the Iranian Consulate, where they called out, "Here are the murderers." Word of the attack on Kamhi upset colleagues here in the Jewish and specifical- ly Sephardic communities. Mr. Karnhi is a member of the executive committee of the World Sephardi Federa- tion. "He is one of the finest people that ever put two feet on this planet," said Ed Alcosser, chairman of the board of the American Sephardi Federation. "He worked the last two years on promoting tolerance between Muslims and Jews," said Mr. Alcosser. "That is what the Quincentennial Foundation of Istanbul is all about." Abraham Foxman, na- tional director of the Anti- Defamation League, wrote Mr. Kamhi a letter express- ing outrage at the attack. "Terrorists are using Turkey as a shooting gallery to undermine democracy," Mr. Foxman said. "It is time that the international com- munity refocus its efforts — moral and political — on those who engage in terror- ism rather than those who resist it." The attack on Mr. Kamhi was the third time in less than a year that Jews or Jewish institutions were the target of terrorists in Turkey. Last March 7, terrorists booby-trapped a car driven by the security chief at the Israeli Embassy in Ankara, killing him and badly woun- ding three Turkish bystanders. The blast oc- curred two days after Israel and Turkey established full diplomatic relations.