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MorganStanley Morgan Stanley is a service mark of Moran Stanley Dean Witter & Co. Investments and services are offered through Morgan Stanley DW Inc., member SIPC.©2002 Morgan Stanley safes unlimited • No need for a safety deposit box! Keep your valuables safely stored, right at home, with no monthly fee. . 10/11 2002 18 Wall Safes Floor Safes Jewelry Safes 248-738-1500 3375 Orchard Lake Rd., North of Pontiac Trail Keego Harbor RALLY from page 17 the Michigan Union, will feature terror- ism expert and attorney John Loftus of Florida, who has filed a lawsuit against Sami al-Arian on behalf of families of victims of 9-11. Al-Arian will speak at the divestment conference Saturday. He's a Palestinian professor on manda- tory leave from the University of South Florida and is under federal investiga- tion for alleged ties to terrorist groups. Other speakers are Dr. Jerome S. Kaufman of West Bloomfield, national secretary of the Zionist Organization of America; and Stuart Brickner, West Bloomfield Township trustee, among others. ZOA and Hasbara Fellowships of Aish HaTorah are co-sponsors. National rumblings are loudest in New York where the Coalition for Jewish Concerns (CJC)-Amcha is organizing buses of activists from the Northeast and Midwest to come to campus to attend a demonstration Oct. 13 outside of the Michigan League, where the conference is being held. "We are not outsiders," says Rabbi Avi Weiss, spiritual leader of the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale in the Bronx, N.Y., and founder of CJC- Amcha. "It is an attack on all of us. The issue is not just Michigan. There is an epi- demic across the country. We very, very, strongly feel that when there is such hate, a resolute, strong, spiritual and moral voice must be heard. When there are people in Michigan who are key individuals in Islamic Jihad who have killed so many innocent people, we need to be there." Rabbi Weiss will spend Saturday, Oct. 12, outside of the conference with other CJC-Amcha members wearing prayer shawls and expressing their opposition. On Sunday, the buses will arrive for an onsite demonstration and to participate in the MSZ rally on the Diag. Likening different approaches to an orchestra, he says, "We are the drums. But we don't want to drown out the violins and the others. It's all impor- tant. We're all in this together." ❑ For links to Web sites with informa- tion and analysis about this week- end's divestment conference and events planned in opposition to it, check vvww.detroirjevvishnews.com A conference update will be avail- able online next week. DEBATE from page 17 Summers said. "Serious and thoughtful people are advocating and taking actions that are anti-Semitic in their effect if not their intent." He singled out-the movement to force universities to divest their hold- ings in Israel — similar to an effort against South Africa's apartheid govern- ment in the 1980s — while raising no objections to investments in countries with far worse human-rights records. While Summers' speech drew criti- cism from many — the Harvard Crimson campus newspaper called it "disingenuous and divisive" — it also had many supporters. Lawrence Bacow, president of Tufts University, praised Summers. "University presidents ought to raise important questions, and I think he has," Bacow was quoted in the New York Times. Stephen Joel Trachtenberg, president of George Washington University, issued a statement of support. At the University of Michigan, a major Palestinian solidarity conference is planned for Oct. 12-14 that calls for divestment from Israel, equates Zionism with racism and refuses to condemn Palestinian terrorism. U-M President Mary Sue Coleman issued a statement two weeks ago rejecting the divestment call. Summers "speaking out has made it easier for other college presidents to speak out as well," said Jeffrey Ross, director of campus and higher education affairs at the Anti-Defamation League. "What's happened is that a major voice has appeared on the side of reason," Ross said. "The fact that it comes from the president of Harvard University" makes it "a voice that can't be ignored." Jeff Rubin, communications director for Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life, agreed that Summers' speech effectively "raised the issue of anti-Semitism on the campus to a national audience." But, he said, "regardless of whether divestment is anti-Semitic or not, it's part of a whole web of anti-Israel activities that are unsettling the campuses and that we are working to oppose." The professor who helped start the divestment petition at Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology _ said Summers' remarks have helped his efforts. The divestment effort "might have died on the vine," said Ken Nakayama, a Harvard psychology professor. "Thanks to President Summers, we are now gain- ing more attention." Nakayama modeled the divestment petition after one at Princeton University, one of about 40 cir- culating at universities nationwide. ❑