Make your CHOICE to see TOVAH Award-winning Broadway, TV and film actress in a one-woman show Tovah Feldshuh Monday, March 14 Congregation Shaarey Zedek CHOICES The 1994 Allied Jewish Campaign Women's Division Community-wide Event 11 a.m. Registration • • • 11:30 a.m. Program Luncheon $18 Babysitting available upon request for ages 2 1/2 and up A $118 minimum pledge to the Allied Jewish Campaign is requested. Yes, I've made the CHOICE to join you... Name Address Phone (H) (B) Please seat me with children. Please arrange babysitting for Make your check for $18 payable to Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, Attn: MOM, P.O. Box 2030, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48303-2030 • (810) 642-4260, ext. 181. DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S. CV,41 T ,c ) 0,, 13 353-2200 DENTURE CENTER HARVARD ROW MALL 21774 WEST 11 MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 EXTRACTIONS DENTURES & PARTIALS RELINES & REPAIRS QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES 30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE „i [ CLOSET COMPANY . 626-5520 SC ery Foremost in Design, Installation anidN Service FREE Municipal Bonds Listing Receive Weekly Report Member S1PC 4GEdwards &T ,Spf,Vg97 BOW Mal AN 313 3364200 1-$00.3.500200 Spring Merchandise Arriving Daily MARGUERITE On The Boardwalk 932-5252 Debate On Mitalism Delayed In New York (JTA) — A major battle in the United States between Reform and Or- thodox groups over religious pluralism in Israel has been postponed but not averted. The Reform movement's Union of American Hebrew Congregations had hoped the National Jewish Com- munity Relations Advisory Council would take a bold stand on the issue at its an- nual plenum next week in New Orleans. But a resolution offered by the UAHC calling on Israel "to end the religious monop- oly granted to one segment of Jewry” will not be debated on the plenum floor. A NJCRAC committee responsible for plenum resolutions, meeting twa weeks before the annual gathering of delegates from Jewish communities across the country, ruled that the pluralism resolution must first go through the um- brella organization's com- mittee-heavy "process." This averted a threat by the Union of Orthodox Jew- ish Congregations of America to walk out of NJCRAC if the topic were raised. Such a move would have left the major umbrella group charged with setting Jewish communal policy without an Orthodox voice. The rationale behind the Orthodox Union's walkout threat, which was first re- ported by the New York- based weekly Forward, was explained by Betty Ehrenberg, executive direc- tor of the group's Institute for Public Affairs. "We see this as a religious issue and as an internal Israeli issue, and on the basis of those two facts, we don't feel NJCRAC is the proper venue for addressing these issues," she said. "One day the Israelis will decide on a constitution and will decide on their own re- ligious structures, but this is not something American Jews should determine by remote control," she added. But Rabbi Eric Yoffie, di- rector of the Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, insists that re- ligious pluralism in Israel is "a political issue and a civil rights issue." "We can't apply one stan- dard to this country and app- ly a different one when look to the Jewish state," he said, noting the strong support of NJCRAC — including the Orthodox Union —for American legislation sup- porting the rights of re- ligious minorities. Despite the procedural defeat the Reform movement suffered with its resolution, which Rabbi Yoffie admits was submitted late in the elaborate NJCRAC process, the UAHC hopes to bring the resolution before the umbrella group's 1995 plenum. And meanwhile, the Reform movement intends to seek the support of local Jewish community relations councils for its position. Eric Yoffie: Consistent standards. NJCRAC is made up of over 100 of these local councils, as well as 13 national Jewish organizations. Already, the Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Portland, Ore., has adopted the call "to extend full freedom of religion to all Jews in Israel." For its part, the Orthodox Union has alerted its mem- bers, and the Orthodox rab- binate, that the issue is now on the local agenda. "I would be very surprised if many communities decid- ed to pass this," said Ms. Ehrenberg of the O.U. "I think there will be many JCRCs who will decide this will be too divisive." She said that for JCRCs to adopt this measure would "dramatically reduce their effect," since there will be a whole segment of the Jewish community that they will not be representing. The controversy comes at a time when the Orthodox Union has walked a very K