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March 25, 1994 - Image 70

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-03-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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MS

NEXT
YEAR
IN

Mr. Rabin referred to a "rare
window of opportunity" for the
peace talks. "We have no time
to waste," he said. "It is possi-
ble that the window of oppor-
tunity is narrower than we
thought, at first."
This year's AIPAC confer-
ence featured the usual long list
of workshops, included sessions
on political campaigning, the
nuts and bolts of foreign policy
decision making and a work-
shop on black-Jewish relations,
featuring Rep. Major Owens, D-
N.Y., and Rep. John Lewis,
D-Ga., — members of the

See The
Trees Planted
This Year!

JEWISH
11A11011AL
FLUID

Celebrate Passover By Planting Trees In Israe

Donor name
Address
Please plant
In Honor/Memory of
Send certificate to
Address



Phone (
City/State
trees at $10 each totaling $

• IL

Zip

a

City/State

Zip

17100 West Ten Mile Road, Southfield, Michigan 48075
.
313.557.6644 • Fax 313.557.2412

Learn how to take
better care of yourself
and your family,
call Red Cross.

833-4440

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10

pi

A
8 , 1 Public Service of This Newspaper

The Advertising Council

"Notwithstanding
any United Nations
resolution, I
can assure you
Jerusalem will
remain united
under Israeli
sovereignty."

Prime Minister Rabin

EW6H
11Allal4L

1

AIPAC page 69

ir

We'll Help.
Will You?



Congressional Black Caucus
who have been at the forefront
of supporting both Israel and
the cause of better relations be-
tween the black and Jewish
communities.
There was also a marked in-
crease in the number of work-
shops focusing on the Mideast
peace process and on the possi-
bilities of an economic renais-
sance in the region.
The usual swarms of House
and Senate hopefuls was on
hand to mine the well-heeled
crowd for political and financial
support, and the gathering also
marked the debut performance
for Neal Sher, AIPAC's new ex-
ecutive director.
He told the group in his in-
augural speech that his move
from the Office of Special In-
vestigations — the Justice De-
partment's Nazi-hunting unit
— to AIPAC was a natural one.
"OSI seeks justice for the
past, even though we all know
that full justice will never be at-
tained," he said. "AIPAC gives
hope for the future. It gives
added meaning to the millions
of sacrifices made during the
Holocaust. My work at OSI has
taught me all too clearly the
mortal dangers of complacen-
cy."
Mr. Sher emphasized
AIPAC's support for the peace
process, and urged his audience
to become actively involved in
the 1994 election cycle. And he
called for an AIPAC agenda
that "must remain both dy-
namic and flexible."
The issue of missing Israeli

servicemen was highlighted at
the banquet, when the AIPAC
"Roll Call" — the yearly an-
nouncement of legislators, ad-
ministration officials and
foreign ambassadors in atten-
dance — began with a recogni-
tion of Tammy Arad, wife of
missing serviceman Ron Arad.
Attendance by House mem-
bers was up in this election
year, with some 87 on hand.
Thirty-seven senators also put
in an appearance, a decline
from last year. There was a
strong showing by administra-
tion figures, including White
House Chief of Staff Mack
MacLarty and Strobe Talbott,
the recently confirmed deputy
secretary of state who was the
object of some controversy be-
cause of his views on the
Mideast.
Also present were ambas-
sadors from a number of coun-
tries, including Tunisia and
Morocco.
The AIPAC policy extrava-
ganza also featured the debut
of yet another group dedicated
to mobilizing Christian support
for the Jewish state. Voices
United for Israel was created to
wage an aggressive information
effort designed to bring Christ-
ian groups into the pro-Israel
fold, organizers said. ❑

Four Universities
Close In Israel

Jerusalem (JTA) — Four of
the country's university
campuses were locked tight
as the heads of the institu-
tions said they could not af-
ford to keep them open.
The move as the strike of
university teachers ap-
proached nearly 80 days.
At stake in this latest
round of the struggle is the
question of who shall decide
which academics are to get
merit increments and who is
to determine the criteria.
The academics, tradi-
tionally self-governing
bodies in Israeli univer-
sities, want the power vested
in those they elect for the
job. The heads of the univer-
sities want the matter left to
them.
Also still undecided are
the terms to be awarded to
junior teaching staff below
the rank of lecturer.
Students have gone to
court, seeking tuition
refunds.
At the Hebrew Univer-
sity's Givat Ram campus,
the library remained

shrouded in gloom behind
locked doors. ❑

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