Something Extra On The Fence The president of Detroit Jewry's top fund-raising and service arm says the security fence and wall that Israel is building along its West Bank border should be called an anti-terrorism barrier to better reflect its purpose. "The security fence currently under construction along much of the frontier separating Israel from the West Bank is not a barrier to peace," said Lawrence Jackier, presi- dent of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. "It is a barrier against terrorism. Why not call it that? Israel's 'anti-terrorism barrier' is a term people might better under- stand. "No other nation in the world before this time has faced as relent- less and intense a wave of terror as Israel has," he said after returning from Federation's Michigan Miracle Mission 4 to Israel. "No other nation in the world would tolerate what Israel has endured." Since September 2000, more than 970 Israelis and others have been murdered by Palestinian terrorists who infiltrated Israel to kill civilians on crowded streets and buses and in cafes, schools and homes, he said. Terrorists obey no boundaries, limits or rules. To those who find the idea of a "fence" or "wall" offen- sive, Israel has every right and indeed the duty to defend its citizens against terrorist attack, Jackier said. — Robert A. Sklar, editor On The Bench With Gov. Jennifer Granholm, right, at his side, Mark A. Goldsmith of Huntington Woods was installed May 10 as a Oakland County Circuit Court judge. He assumed the general jurisdiction docket formerly held by the late Judge Patrick Brennan. Assisting at his investiture were judge Benjamin J. Friedman, retired, and judge Michelle Friedman Appel and attorneys _lefty Appel and Susan and Mark Lichterman. judge Goldsmith, 51, is a University of Michigan graduate who earned his law degree at Harvard. He spe- cialized in commercial litigation with Detroit-based Honigman, Miller Schwartz Cohn LL1? Beth Emeth Joins Symphony Ann Arbor Kol Haley (Voice of the Heart), the Temple Beth Emeth adult choir under the leadership of Cantor Annie Rose joined forces with the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra for a gala Mother's Day concert. An audience of more than 400 filled the Ann Arbor temple May 9. Under the direction of Maestro Arie Lipsky, the concert included the pre- Kol Haley adult choir of Temple Beth Emeth miere performance of Sephardic Suite, a newly rhythmic, modal, appealing sound of arranged and orchestrated cycle of five Judeo-Spanish culture, including a choral Sephardic folk songs. Arranged tango, a lilting love song, a lullaby, and a by Cantor Rose, the songs reflect the r cna Don't Know© t 2004 Can you identify the cities of kashrut (kosher food certification) agencies which have as symbols: (a) a capitol building, (b) a ketchup bottle's logo, (c) a cowboy hat, (d) a horse and buggy? — Goldfein • (ap!sar qs!Luy 2uIpp-A.22nq Dtp alQ1.1N) "Ed cn1SEDUE1 JO PEEA D41 (p) lup-eueD cElJaqw c/C.ir2FD (D) t(zuraH JOJ o2oi pui loqui/Cs ayeis -e!trenticsuuad age sr DITOIS/63.1 31p) Erqdjapellqd Jo pEEA xopotp1O atu, (q) cuol2uNsum .lareaiD • o ipunoD feDluNqull aqi (B) :nmstry . 5/21 2004 12 — Ronnie Simon, special writer Quotables I Nu: driving, percussive finale. Cantor Rose, in her 10th year at the temple, joined with the sympho- • ny's string section in an encore presentation of a four-movement Yiddish suite for strings and voice. In late June, the choir will embark on its first European tour, visiting Jewish communities in Romania, Bulgaria and Greece. Included on the tour are collaborations with orchestras and choirs from Sofia, Bucharest and Thessaloniki. "Today, when curious people are trying to be tactful and say, 'Oh, were you born Jewish?' my response is, `Yes, just not to a Jewish womb.' I say this because I believe that my soul has always been Jewish. I was meant to be a Jew but have had to find my way back `home' by way of a variety of religious paths, from Charismatic Christianity to Eastern spirituality." — Alysa Stanton, a second-year rabbinical student at the Hebrew Union College JewishInstitute of Religion, in an interview about the signs that led to her conver- sion and her quest for the rabbinate as an Ohio native who is black; quoted in the spring issue of Reform Judaism magazine. Pipes At ZOA Daniel Pipes, director of the Middle East Forum in Philadelphia, speaks on "The Palestinian-Israel War: Where Did It Come From, How To End It?" to a crowd of 450 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek West Bloomfield, B'nai Israel Center on May 2. Zionist Organization of America, Michigan Region, was the sponsor To Pipes' left is ZOA Michigan VP Dr Lester Zeff Do You Remembe& May 1974 State Department officials, concerned that Congress will insist that the government take the issue of Arab terrorism to the U.N. Security Council following the recent massacre of 22 children at Mialot in • Israel, succeeded in blocking the demand on President Nixon and Secretary of State Kissinger. The concern was that the condemnation would lead to defeat of Kissinger's efforts to arrange disen- gagement of Syrian and Israeli forces. — Sy Manello, editorial assistant