A Chance To Be Heard On Jan. 13, Federation will be doing something it rarely has done in the past. It will open its doors in a forum style and listen to the concerns, woes and issues of anyone in the community who has something to say. No, it's not going to be done in the style of a town meeting with a floating mike. Instead, those wishing to speak must register ahead of time. We disagree with this requirement. Any- one in the community wishing to speak should be able to without this restriction. For their trouble, they'll get four minutes to say what's on their minds. In this situation, Federation is already expecting people won- dering what will happen to Borman Hall as well as parents concerned over funding of day schools. Attendance by agency professionals to this community meeting is optional. Some of the talk is expected to get rather heavy, cer- tainly emotional. Following the community fo- rum, the Federation will bring in its agency heads and brief them about what the people had to say as well as listen to their own con- cerns. We would like to suggest that Federation lay leadership from every board out there in- sist that their paid staff members be present on Jan. 13. There is no reason why an agency head should stay away from hearing what the people have to say even if it hurts to hear. Secondly, we think it is important that Fed- eration planners come through for the people they hear. It's going to be difficult to go back to the community unless Federation can show that it took some action, albeit in some cases small. From a community standpoint, community members should feel free to tell their person- al stories in the allotted span of four minutes per speaker. However, they should not expect miracles to happen from this meeting. Real- istic responses and time frames, they should expect. This is an opportunity for Federation — and federations have been accused across the coun- try of being for an elite few only — to show just how wrong that belief is by opening its doors and having community members, not money, do the talking. We certainly hope that this gives the community an inside-out view so that everyone understands that the best in- terests of a Jewish Family Service client as well as a Soviet emigre as well as a day school student as well as many other examples are worthy to be heard. T J EWISH NEWS Let Arafat Sweat The Rabin government's decision to delay the re- sumption of talks with the Palestine liberation Organization on implementing the peace accord was long overdue. Jerusalem had been too will- ing to compromise for the sake of propping up the PLO's autocratic and corrupt leader, Yassir Arafat. His demands were incessant and he did nothing to seriously address Israel's security con- cerns. By nearly all accounts, the PLO leader is a man adrift. Some reports — including many from Arab sources — have even insinuated that he has become an emotional basketcase incapable of reasoned leadership. An angry King Hussein has warned him to begin coordinating PLO actions with those of Jordan or soon face unspecified actions in re- gard to future relations between the two. Near- ly half the 18-member PLO executive committee has resigned in protest over his fail- ure to share authority. This week, Dr. Haidar Abdel-Shafi, the Gaza physician who led the Palestinian delegation at the 1991 Madrid peace conference, headed a delegation to Tu- nis that also urged the PLO chief to share pow- er. In delaying new talks, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said of Chairman Arafat: "There's no reason to reach agreements, be- cause every agreement just becomes a new be- ginning for haggling." At the very least, events suggest that Chair- man Arafat cannot be trusted to provide the sound leadership that will be crucial when — and if — the Palestinian autonomous region gets off the ground. That being the case, is it worth making deals with him? For Chairman Arafat and the PLO's Tunis leadership, this is undoubtedly their last chance. Should they fail to deliver autonomy to their people, they will be swept aside by Palestinians in the territories. Palestinian rejectionists in the territories tend to be the most visible and the danger they pose should not be discounted. But not all Palestinians in the territories are unwilling to compromise with Israel. Perhaps it's time for Israel to let go of Chairman Arafat and search out other Palestinians with whom it can deal. At the least, it's time to let the PLO leader sweat some over that possibility. Letters `Michigan Daily' And Its Letters There is one thing that Mr. Wainess needs to understand as he takes the position of edi- tor-in-chief of the Michigan Dai- ly next year: I wish it were "logical" for every student on campus to "jump to the conclu- sion" that I did. For if they did, such wrong and anti-Semitic material would never be pub- lished in the Daily. The fact is, the Michigan Daily does indeed have a selec- tion process, demented as it may be, in printing their letters to the editor. I as well as nu- merous of my friends, have sub- mitted articles that were never seen on the pages of the Daily. So, Mr. Wainess, as a Jew as well as the new editor-in-chief of the Michigan Daily, must use better judgment than his pre- decessors and not aid and abet the anti-Semitism which Bradley Smith hopes you will. Michael G. HarPaz Huntington Woods Editor's note: The Michigan Daily published Bradley Smith's Holocaust revisionist letter in the fall. Israelis Protest The Peace Plan People in Israel know, but most American Jews don't, that Torah-based groups like Mizrachi, B'nai Akiva and CC F- LU LU F- 4 Chabad all condemn the so- called "Peace Plan." They have taken to the streets in Israel, holding mass demonstrations — which are strangely under- reported even by the Jewish press in America — not against peace, but against the fantasy that appeasement will make the future safer. Hardly a day goes by with- out a major protest strike or parades. Those studious and gentle folk consider "the set- tlers" — the Jews of Judea, Samaria, Gaza and the Golan — to be Israel's truest de- fenders, and they've been go- ing to jail and risking police beatings because of it. We wonder if the same or- ganizations in America pos- sess anything like the kind or level of commitment to the people and land of Israel. If so, why do we all hear so lit- tle from them? Mike Dallen Detroit Steve Buchzeiger Royal Oak Peace, the ZOA And Reporting The JTA news report (Dec. 31) headlined "ZOA President is a Hard-liner" is skewed and out of focus. The statements made by Morton Klein before and af- ter his election as president of the Zionist Organization of America do not warrant JTA's characterization of him as a "hard-liner"; nor can his public stance be construed as being against the Israel-PLO accord or as reflecting lack of support for the government of Israel. Mr. Klein's (and ZOA's) po- sition is that holding Yassir Arafat and the PLO account- able for violating the terms of the accord would strength- en Israel's negotiating stance. In his recent pronounce- ments, Arafat insisted that his unyielding display of "brinkmanship" in Taba, Cairo and Oslo was designed to shore up his eroding sup- port within his "Palestinian constituency," not only in the territories, but in Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. Yet, the pro-Israel "con- stituency" within the Ameri- can Jewish community has been deafeningly silent, pre- sumably still immobilized by the euphoria generated by the Rabin-Arafat handshake. LETTERS page 12