What if they held a Campaign and no one gave? Who would help Dianne Koutina escape the turmoil and despair of her native Moldova in the former Soviet Union? Who would rescue refugees from Yugoslavia and carry them to safety in Israel? Who would provide food, medicine and clothing to the elderly Jews of Romania? Who would send religious items and Jewish books to isolated Jewish communities throughout Africa, Asia and South America? Holocaust Museum: "Monument to assimilation?" Your contribution to the Allied Jewish Campaign helps bring comfort and hope to our people in distress throughout the world. The Campaign is now. The decision is yours. When a volunteer calls, please make your best possible pledge to the Allied Jewish Campaign. June 13-17 Bonus: Are you an annual contributor? Your increase over last year's gift will be matched dollar for dollar by the Campaign Challenge Fund! Are you a new contributor? The Campaign Challenge Fund will match your gift two for one! L mastezcarcil Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit 6735 Telegraph, PO Box 2030 Bloomfield Hills, MI 48303-2030 Fro ORIENTAL RUGS FRANKLIN PLAZA I of Southfield I CID We buy them, sell them, appraise them, clean them repair them and Love them! LU • PASSPORT • I FILM PROCESSING 31/2x 5 or 4x6 SPECIAL No Restrictions on Processing Time! $ 1 4 $ 795 95 $3.00 OFF 36 exposures LU I-- CD 2 Sets 1 set • "Must Be Done At The Same Time" 2 Photos per passport (with coupon) $2.00 OFF 24 exposures $1.00 OFF 12 exposures 10% off on posters or 2nd set of prints free. c-41 process only Not good with any other offer L LU (Great for Annivensaries & Bar hittrishs) L We transfer your old movies, prints & slides to video cassette. 58 FULL PHOTO SERVICES INCLUDING: BLACK & WHITE, ENLARGEMENT, POSTERS 29215 Northwestern Hwy. at 12 Mile Rd. in Franklin Shopping Plaza In-Home & Office Carpet Cleaning (313) 399-2323 OAK PARK OUTLET • 546 - RUGS BIRMINGHAM • 646 - RUGS ANN ARBOR • 973 - RUGS -I Breast self-examination — LEARN. Call us. iPAMERICAN SOCETY CANCER. More On The Holocaust Museum Both friend and foe of Wash- ington's new U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum expected it would inevitably be used for political purposes. One of the first such applications appears in a Time magazine essay by Charles Krauthammer. After reviewing "lessons" that can be learned at the museum — "the dangers of intolerance, the redemptive power of democ- racy" — Mr. Krauthammer nsists, in the words of phil- osopher Emil Fackenheim, that Hitler "not be allowed ... pos- thumous victories," chief of which would be the decimation of Israel. Considering the threats of Saddam Hussein and the Islamic fundamentalist group, Hamas, Mr. Krauthammer in- sists that "the test of one's solidarity with the people of the Holocaust is whether one is pre- pared to help defend that peo- ple against the destroyers of today, not the destroyers of yes- terday." He is especially outraged at "anti-Zionists — particularly those of the left — [who] dis- covered that while physically or morally arming those bent on the annihilation of Israel, they could pose as philo-Semites with a show of anti-Nazism and a nod to the Holocaust." This "is a cheap and perverse maneuver because the Nazis are dead and gone. It means nothing to oppose an enemy that is no more. It means every- thing to oppose a real set of en- emies that would complete the Nazi project [to exterminate Jews]." Meanwhile, Forward colum- nist Leonard Fein, a former crit- ic of the museum, writes that if a visitor to a Holocaust muse- urn "gains ... even an ounce of understanding or strength... with which to stand against big- otry, against racism, against cruelty, against indifference, let us think of that as a welcome bonus to this, our worthy effort to make the enduring wound a bit less painful." An editorial in the Inter- mountain Jewish News was perhaps the lone voice in the Jewish press against the mu- seum. Calling it "a monument to assimilation," the paper con- tended that the millions spent on the museum would have been better spent on day school This is an effort to make a wound less painful and to think about destroyers. education or sending every U.S. Jewish teen to Israel for a summer. But, then acknowledging that these ventures would probably not have been funded by the "small number of Jews" who fi- nanced the museum, the paper asked, 'Isn't it better, then, that we have a museum than that we have nothing? No... This is because the major financiers of this museum have learned from — and, in turn, become — bad role models. They... say that since they have the wherewith- al, their personal wishes su- persede any rational, comprehensive assessment of what the American Jewish com-