Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 5, 1983 Page: 1 of 28
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' V CV-
May Mother’s Day Be One
Which Each Family Will
■ Treasure And Enjoy In
• f Health And Happiness.
DEDICATED TO
TRUTH, LIBERTY
AND IUSTICE
THE SOUTHWEST'S LEADING ENGLISH-JEWISH WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Texas Jewish Post
VOLUME XXXVII NO. 18 THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1983 28 PAGES 5(te PER COPY
In Our Thirty-Seventh Year
Of Continuous Service
■ Syria Walking on Eggshells! SHllltZt With (I TCI WQI
Possible By Weekend
In the current phase of renegotiating the negotiations between Lebanon
and Israel, a shuttle-encompassing job now under the direct leadership of
Secretary of State George P. Shultz, Syria seems to have been left in the
background — to come into the picture once the Israelis are “managed.”
g The extreme folly of not giving Syria prime consideration from the start
fees when one considers that Syria has always included Lebanon part of
"greater Syria.”
Coupled with this is the walking on eggshells situation of Syria’s inter-
nal problems. Dr. Alasdair Drysdale, of the University of New Hampshire
stated, “For all its internal and external problems, its wars at home and
abroad, the SAyrian regime has shown remarkable resilience. It will be in-
•resting to see if this fence-mending will reduce the regime’s internal
Joblems at all. The problems it currently faces are formidable. It survived
the (1979-80) Aleppo and (1982) Hamah uprisings, but what about the next
one? There are no indications that (President) Asad is willing or able to
broaden his base of support, dismantle or severely restrain the state’s
repressive apparatus, or make serious attempts to eradicate corruption
and sectarianism.”
. - - — , See /ess jaw in Page 26
fie Rovinsky Report
Study Reveals Feelings,
Attitudes, Desires of Dallas
teenagers; Asks New Effort
(Ed.: Note: Shirley Rovirsky completed her thes.s last year tor her Degree of Master ot Social Work which was based on
nearly two years of research on "Jewish Values. Attitudes and Behavior ot Jewish Teenagers in the Dallas Area " Her work
was done under the supervision ot Dr. Paul Glaser, Dean of the School of Social Work. University ot Texas at Arlington. It is
the first extensive study of its kind done on the Jewish Teenage population of Greater Dallas. Rovinsky is extremely qualified
Besides her strong educational background as a trained researcher, she has been an active participant in most phases ot
Jewish life in Dallas tor more than two decades. She has been president of Jewish Family Service. Akiba Academy Parents
Association, B’nai B’rith Women's Council of Dallas, and Bluebonnet Chapeter ot B'nai B'rith Women She has
iMpived outstanding leadership recognition from the Jewish Welfare Board and the Dallas Jewish Community Center
U.rently she serves on the Board of Directors of Jewish Family Service, Akiba Academy, Israel Bond Cabinet B'nai B'rith
Board, Hillel Advisory Board-University of Texas at Austin and the National Association ot Jewish Family and
Children s Agencies. Past associations include directorships in Jewish Federation of Greater Dallas Anti-Defamation
League of B’nai B'rith, Dallas Jewish Community Center. She is a member on special committees tor the Community Council
of Dallas and the Dallas Mental Health Association. She is Dallas project director for the National Health Screening
Council tor Volunteer Organizations, Inc. She and her husband, Erven, are parents of Mike, 20 and Robyn, 18. The following
chapters are a portion of her original 75-Page Thesis.)
Secretary of State George
P. Shultz was hopeful
Wednesday he would pro-
mote an agreement between
Israel and Lebanon for the
withdrawal of Israeli troops
by this weekend. Shultz
admitted: “There were maj-
or problems” still to be
resolved “but we have made
lots of headway over the last
two or three days ... we are
coming to a point where
closure is possible.” He
added he had “a good idea of
what Israel would agree to.”
A Shultz spokesman also
told reporters he thought an
agreement could be conclud-
ed “by the end of this week.
In Beirut Lebanon’s For-
eign Minister Elie Salem had
his own version of optimism
which doubted a quick
agreement especially this
week. Salem said: “There
W
David Kimchoe
are
still many points of
conflict. It’s not going to be
easy in two or three days to
solve all those problems ...
but miracles do happen.”
David Kimchoe, Israel’s
chief negotiator, speaking
from Jerusalem did not deny
obvious progress. “We are
entering the latt 100 yards
of the race, which are the
most difficult,” he said.
Kimchoe said Israel wants
special security guarantees
in southern Lebanon for
the next two or three years.
Speaking before an inter-
national conference on the
news media in wartime, he
said Israel’s demands in-
clude Lebanese agreement
on eight joint supervision
control teams to patrol
southern Lebanon against
the return of PLO terrorists
and other PLO fighters.
Each Lebanese-Israeli team
would have about 10 soldiers
under Lebanese command.
The statements from all
diplomatic quarters were
among the most optimistic
since Israel entered Leb-
anon June 6, 1982.
Envoy Denies Report, Assures
Turkish Jews Not Threatened
BY SHIRLEY ROVINSKY
Demographic Information
£n 1971 a demographic
btddy of the Jewish com-
munity of Dallas was com-
pleted under the sponsor-
ship of the Jewish Federa-
tion of Greater Dallas. The
study involved four hundred
and sixty households. While
(R 1971 study did not reveal
h cific information on the
tfenage population, this
author would like to make
comparisions with regard to
some of the demographic
wmem
information.
The teenagers surveyed
are living in a high income
environment and have well
educated parents. Thirty
percent of the parents have
graduated college. Forty-
one percent of the fathers
and seventeen percent of the
mothers have completed
graduate school. Sixty-nine
(43.9 percent) of the families
have incomes exceeding
$50,000. In 1971, this figure
was almost fifteen per-
cent. Currently, the major-
See Research-Page 10
WASHINGTON [WNS] —
The Turkish Ambassador to
Washington has denied that
he has ever implied that
Jews in Turkey would be
threatened if the 1914-15
massacre of Armenians in
Turkey is included in the
Holocaust Memorial Muse-
um being planned for Wash-
ington.
Ambassador Sukru Elek-
dag said he was issuing a
statement denying a report
in a Washington Post article
on the museum, in which a
“White House source” impli-
ed that the inclusion of the
massacre in the museum
“might have an impact on
Jews in Turkey.”
The proposition that Tur-
kish citizens of the Jewish
faith are, in any sense,
potentially threatened by
the Turkish government or
the non-Jewish majority of
the Turkish population is
utterly groundless,” Elek-
dag said. “That I have ever
said anything that would
warrant an alternate conclu-
sion is equally untrue.”
Rabbi Seymour Siegel,
executive director of the
U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Council, said the committee
planning the museum has
been instructed by the
mass-
Council to have the
acre of Armenians included.
He noted that one of the
most active members of the
Council is an American, Set
Momjian, of Huntington
Valley, Pennsylvania.
Siegel stressed that he
has had “cordial relations”
with both the Armenian
community in Washington
and Turkish diplomats here.
He said no Turkish diplomat
has ever made “threats” or
used “harsh words.” He
stressed that he does not
believe that the massacre,
which occurred under the
Ottoman Empire, reflects on
the present-day Turkish
government.
T
Report Shows West Bonk Illness Result of Anxiety'... 2
TJPost Profile: Bernice S. Tonnenboum............2
Hussion Refusnik Charged, Another Retained.......2
/ Dallas Doings.............................. 3
Rick Merlin Receives Kraft Award................3
■ Monitor: Month of Remembrance................4
I between You and Me..........................
IS >osfor'ul: Israel Exonerated....................4
JWV Officers to he Installed....................6
Center Dirctor Rosen Publishes Nafl Center Manual.. 6
Your Fresh Approach to Delicious Recipes..........7
; Dallas Single Scene...........................g
Travel................................... g
Findley Views Zionism and Anti-Semitism..........9
Begin: Assures Followers Israel Will Keep Golan.....9
I 'eform Jews Drive for Nuclear Freeze...........11
PAGl
Dallas Interfaith Meeting May 13...............j ]
T. Israel Sisterhood Installation................j j
Spiegel Withdrew From Adm. for Personal Business.. 12
Jewish Quiz Box....................... 14
Dallas Synagogue Services....................14
Dining and Entertainment..................15/19
Bob Hope's Discovery: Tony Bennett............15
Our Film Folk..............................jg
Yordim: Israelis Who Leave Promised Land........19
UT Students Celebrate Israel's 35th in Austin......20
Fort Worth's Around The Town.................21
You and Your Taxes.........................22
House Calls: Obesity........................22
98 Senators Issue Appeal in ‘Unprecedented Move'.. 24
Berman Urges Administration to Reassess ME Policy. 24
Fort Worth/Mid-Cities Synagogue Services........25
Hate Returns to Newsstands
Nazi Literature In Buenos Aires
SAO PAULO [WNS] -
Nazi literature and propa-
ganda, banned in Argentina
three years ago, has return-
ed to the newsstands of
Buenos Aires, according to a
report in O Estada Sao
Paulo by its Buenos Aires
correspondent, Hugo Mar-
tinez.
The propaganda emanates
from the Aryan Nationalist
Party (Partido Nationalista
Integral). It features photo-
graphs of Hitler and praise
for the “martyrs of Nation-
alism” including war crimin-
als Kaltenbrunner, Alfred
Rosenberg, Hans Frank,
Julius Streicher, editor of
the virulently anti-Semitic
“Der Sturmer,” and six
other top Nazis condemned
at the Nuremberg trials,
Martinez reported. Wide
publicity is given a book
called “The History of the
European SS” authored by
Leon Degrelle.
Martinez recalled that the
Federal Police banned the
sale and circulation of Nazi
propaganda in Argentina
three years ago in response
to complaints from demo-
cratic groups and Jewish
organizations. But the same
works, produced in Argen-
tina, are reappearing. Only
the name of the publishing
house has changed — from
Militancia to Avanzada.
According to Martinez,
“There are many indications
that certain sections of the
Federal Police and Army
admire the Nazi cause and
means of internal security.
Although Federal Police has
perfected the technique of
banning publications, it fails
to do so in this case,”
Martinez reported.
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Wisch, J. A. & Wisch, Rene. Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 5, 1983, newspaper, May 5, 1983; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth754025/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .