The Michigan Daily-Thursday, Jesse Jackson leaves South Africa; gov 't protests anti-apartheid remarks JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Black American civil rights leader Jesse Jackson ended his crusade here against South Africa's racial policies yesterday, having brought feuding black leaders to a tentative reconciliation and angered the gover- nment with his comments. Jackson, considered the most influen- tial black activist ever allowed into South Africa, departed for the U.S. yesterday. He said he plans to ask President Carter to push as hard for racial peace in South Africa as he did for peace in the Middle East. THE GOVERNMENT already has protested to the U.S. State Department over Jackson's anti-apartheid statements, diplomatic sources said. The Johannesburg Star said gover- nment officials considered expelling Jackson after his remark in a radio in- terview that South Africa was "a terroristic dictatorship.". Jackson arranged a meeting earlier this week among three black leaders who have been feuding for years, nudging them a step closer to peace. Jackson brought together chief Gat- sha Buthelezi, head of the 250,000- member Zulu Inkatha cultural movement; Bishop Desmond Tutu, general secretary of the South African Council of Churches; and Dr. Nhato Motlana, chairman of the Soweto Committee of Ten. The committee is the unofficial representative of the more than one million blacks who live in Soweto, the black satellite city of Johannesburg. TUTU AND Motlana have spurned Buthelezi, who has the largest following among South Africa's blacks, because he chose to work within the apartheid, or racial separation, framework. Tutu and Motlana refuse to take part in any government activities. After their meeting earlier in the week, Buthelezi said: "The spirit was amicable and we made progress in the right direction." Tutu described the meeting as a "turning point." In several speeches Jackson said he hoped the trio of black leaders would unify and push for a national black con- vention on equal rights for blacks. THE ONE-TIME adviser to the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., also said he would try to enlist the support of boxing star Muhammad Ali in blocking the world heavyweight title fight bet- ween American John Tate and South African Gerrie Coetzee. Jackson objec- ts to the fight because it is to be held in a rugby stadium that ordinarily is segregated, although blacks will be allowed to attend the Oct. 20 World Boxing Association bout in Pretoria. The Johannesburg Star said yester- day that Jackson's bitter attacks on apartheid and his call for an end to4J.S. investment in South Africa could end Jackson the new "open door" policy that has allowed many controversial Americans to visit. Diplomatic sources here did not view the South African reaction to Jackson's comments as a serious threat to U.S.- South African relations. 100 DELEGATES ATTEND FIRST CONVENTION: Gay Jews find cold reception in Israel TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - - Homosexual Jews from around the world held their first convention in Israel and got a cold reception. Under fierce pressure from Orthodox rabbis who hold fast to the biblical con- demnation of homosexuality, hotels and collective farms turned away the gays, forcing them to meet and tour in secret. THE JEWISH National Fund, par- tron of Israel's forests, tried to refund a 19,000 donation to plant trees in the name of the International Conference of Gay and Lesbian Jews. "This is supposed to be a Jewish state, not just a heterosexual Jewish state," said Arnie Newman, 26, of Erie, Pa., acting as spokesman for the group. Most of the 100 delegates from 13 countries left Israel this week after a three-day conference and a week's tour. Many of them were Americans. The Americans said they represented 2,500 members of gay synagogues and social clubs in 16 cities across the coun- try. NEWMAN SAID the organization Senator says offticial should quit (Continuedfrom Pagr3) Christopher said Fauri plans to outline at that meeting his proposals for strengthening the state's hand in regulating horse racing and reviving the industry's sagging economic for- tunes. FRENCH PAINTINGS WASHINGTON (AP)-The painting "Dante and Virgil in Hell" by Eugene Delacroix has been lent to the National Gallery of Art by the Musee du Louvre of Paris for showing in a gallery of paintings of the French Romantic period. Also on loan from the Louvre are Delacroix's "Portrait of Chopin" and Gustave Courbet's "Portrait of Berlioz," as well as Delacroix's "Paganini," lent by the Phillips Collec- tion in Washington. was founded in 1976 "in response to the United Nations anti-Zionism resolution. We wanted a greater identity with Israel and with Judaism." But Jewish law, enforced here by the powerful religious minority, is spelled out in Leviticus 19:22: "You shall not lie with a man as with a woman. It is an abomination." "We are in violation of a particular commandment, but what Jew isn't?" countered Newman. "Mortal man has no right to decide which of the 613 commandments to keep and no one can keep them all." NEWMAN MAINTAINED that many homosexual Jews "are very traditional, going to synagogue regularly and keeping kosher homes. And we run the whole gamut - doctors, lawyers, teachers, everything. I met my first gay Jewish garbageman here." A prominent Jerusalem rabbi, Simon Dolgin, called homosexuality "a tran- sgression against the law of God. At best, or at worst, it's a private matter. ENDS TONIGHTI "MANHATTAN" 6:20 8:10, 10:00 5th Avenue at Liberty St 701-9700 Formerly Fifth ou mTheater STARTS TOMORROWI He had to make a living like everyone else ... he settled for what he could get. But no one should make a convention to flaunt it in public." Newman said the conference originally was booked at a collective farm he would not name. "The rab- binate told them they would take away the dining room's kashrut certificate attesting that food is kosher and any food produced by the kibbutz would not be certified as kosher," he said. That weapon is a powerful one, used by the rabbinate before in disputes with hotels that need the certificate to at- tract religious customers. "We don't want to jeopardize anybody's kashrut certificate," Newman explained. The Ann Arbor Film Coe eraive Presents at Aud A-$ .50 THURSDAY, AUGUST 2 THE ROLLING STONES RETROSPECT 7& 10:20-AUD A ANGELL HALL RARE STONES FILMS JUST RECENTLY MADE AVAILABLE WILL SHOW IN PLACE OF GIMME SHELTER, WHICH WILL BE SHOWN AT CINEMA GUILD, FRI., AUG. 24. THE STONES IN THE PARK (Great Britain, 1969, 50 minutes) A sensational concert in London's Hyde Park, July 5th, 1969. The Stones are MICK JAGGER, KEITH RICHARD, BILL WYMAN, CHARLIE WATTS, and MICK TAYLOR, who replaced Brian Jones (he drowned two days before the concert, which emerges as a tribute to him). The film includes concert preparation and interviews with the Stones preceding their performance before almost half-million people. Songs performed include "Jumpin' Jack Flash," "Hanky Tonk Woman," "Lemon Squeezer." and "Sympathy for the Devil." CHARLIE IS MY DARLING (PETER WHITEHEAD, 1965, 50 minutes The incredible power and magnetism of the Rolling Stones, at their peak, is captured during this group's tour of Ireland, Sept. 3rd and 4th, 1965. This cinema verite account includes interviews, backstage antics and the Stones performing with BRIAN JONES, a chief creative force in the world's most famous Rock'n'Roll group. Songs performed include "Get Off My Cloud," "Heart of Stone," "Play With Fire," and "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," An exciting opportunity to observe one of the best Stones' concert on film. THURSDAY, AUGUST 2 NED KELLY (Tony Richardson, 1970) 8:40 only--AUD A Richardson combined his penchants for angry men and interesting locations for this film, which focuses on the Jesse James-like exploits of Kelly (well played by MICK JAGGER), his family and his gang of Irish formers battling an English landlord on the Australian frontier. WE SUPPORT PROJECTIONIST'S LOCAL 395 GAZZARA ST FRIDAY 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Adults $1 .50 tit 6:30 FIM RU! . 4- '.