100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 10, 1984 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-08-10

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

we
ex •lore
space.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

20 Friday, August$10, 1984

Inner Space makes space. More space...Better space...by
designing and installing custom closet/storage systems that
work. And we design each one...one at a time. So you end
up with a closet/storage system that fits you. Your lifestyle.
Your personality...And your budget. Let Kathleen Park at
Inner Space show you how it's done. Just call.

(313) 559-6363

1339 W. Square Lake Road Bloomfield Hills, MI. 48013

1411iiiiiiiir

witiaNmetelkiNikfassaamsaaaresilaiataaasemtaisialett ea
ameelliiiiiinemagotliaienesatesseahreareasestotasadslas

•Ifialf/Vaaile await anGael seRriastliivereillahai. sesaada awe
iIIININ 1111111111111111111 NM INN 51 III SIMI I MOM W11111111611111411
:Si
..00=..
_. ---•%r:..•
- -• ■ ..-__,
---v----
.- ...:—
II
■ I
D

Avionwarareirmiui atm mu viiMpona gailliwiltivin mat

C



C



I

O

II

DRAPERIES — BLINDS -- WALLPAPER — SHADES'

---
- -- - - - ---- ----- /////
— ■■■ \WIIIIIIIIIIIiiiiiialMiiiiiiiilii
\\ -- \\ \\NSAAAM

----
... -.

111

r

,

-

mp

i

Ell I lt 1 -, :.

. •

rusts

.w,.....

PAPER

<jig

,T177777,71TRMVTt,T..

i

.

,. If

it lq

1..

I

1 : ' - --. 9 e ,.,. - "

IliM.11T

-----

eviiptatratirlrise. ......fr
i - W
,,
atrir r.-
seve.74rietrgst.- srites
9= -Viglovera7 eri;

• SHOP AT HOME SERVICE • ------"----„,

• DRAPERIES • LEVOLORS . WALLPAPER

'

Custom Made
Genuine Riviera
Blinds, Unlimited
Colors.

Aaron's widest choice of
decorator prints, satins,
large's," casements

25% OFF

FULL 40% OFF

labor & materials

SHOP AT HOME
SERVICE PROFESSIONALLY
MEASURED AND INSTALLED



Hand prints, Murals,
Vinyls, Strings,
Grasscioth

DISCOUNTED

20%

is freight & Had% Charges

Bed Spreads, Pillows, Colas, Imo
Mn
Skaks, hero Sa ri Shales ,___,

DOES
. IT

ONE
STOP ALL

Wielevirg aml Willa 111111'" , UNII-
obi Saes, tlf1S01 Sada, *Ix
Sales al laxative Sales at Veva
Wads.

VERTICALS

COMPARE AND SAVE!

Fabrics, Cane, Macrame, PVC, Free Covered Headrail, etc.

.40% and 50% OFF!

OLD ORCHARD
Shopping Center

Orchard Lk. Rd.
at 15 Mile Rd.

W. Bloomfield

6264 400

Mon. thru Sat. 10-5
Thurs. til 8

-•• i

%-

,

. .

• ,,,..
, ,

, • f' / , , No '

S.W. DETROIT

I./ . i

'WV

'
WINDOW SHADE CO.

15150 W. 7 Mi. Rd.
3 Blks. E. of Greenfield

342-8822

Mon. thru F.
8:30 to 5
Sat. 9 to 3
OFFER EXPIRES 7/28/84

NEWS

Laboring to be No.

Continued from Page 1

government following a week-long
series of consultations and meetings
with Likud and. Labor leaders, as
well as with leaders of the other
Knesset parties, with the exception
of the Kach Party headed by Rabbi
Meir Kahane. Last Friday, 60 Knes-
set members asked Herzog to choose
Peres to form a government while 54
asked the President to give Shamir
the first chance. Five MKs called for
a national unity government but
without indicating who should head
it.
The surprise last Friday was
Yigael Hurwitz, a former member of
Likud, who was elected to the prev-
ious Knesset on Moshe Dayan's
Telem ticket. Hurwitz, who ran in
last month's elections on the one-
member ticket, Courage to Cure the
Economy, joined the Alignment,
Shinui, Citizens Rights Movement
and Yahad in asking Herzog to name
Peres to form the government. Other
parties joining in this move were the
Progressive List for Peace and the
Communists.
The Likud, Tehiya, Shas,
Agudat Israel and Morasha asked
Herzog to give Shamir the first
chance to form a government. The
National Religious Party and Tami
asked merely that a national unity
government be formed.
By law, Peres has 21 days to pur-
sue his efforts to form a government.
After that time he must report back
to the president. If he has not been
successful in forming a government
he can ask for another 21 days. In the
past, presidents have generally
agreed to the additional time.
If Peres, after 42 days, still can-
not put together a majority of 61
Knesset members in the 120-member
parliament, Herzog will presumably
turn to Shaniir — although he could
conceivably ask another MK to form
the government. That candidate is
also given two 21-day periods.
Herzog, however, stressed to
Peres in his public statement
nominating the Labor leader that
"the country needs a quick decision."
Three times the President reiterated
his firm belief that Israel desperately
desires a unity government.
He said his consultations with
the parties had shown him that "all
agree we have deteriorated into what
is perhaps our gravest-ever economic
crisis . . . the situation is dangerous
.. the crunch could come quicker
than people think or imagine .. .
then arguments over whether or not
to put up settlements will be
hypothetical "
Herzog spoke, too, of the "danger
to our democracy" and the need for a
"strong, democratic government" to
take action to protect democracy in
Israel.
, The twin dangers, and "count-
less appeals" to him had prompted
him, Herzog said, to launch his,,in-
itiative last week for a unity gov-
. ernment:• an initiative which has:

resulted in Likud-Labor summit
talks in Jerusalem.
But, implicitly rejecting Likud's
pressure on him to delay the nomina-
tion while these talks proceed, Her-
zog said he felt the talks would get
nowhere unless there was a nomina-
tion of a prime ministerial designate.
Obliquely touching on another
Likud agrument — that there was a
tie between MKs supporting a
Peres-led government. and those
favoring Shamir — Herzog said that
even if this were the case he would
choose Peres as leader of the largest
faction. This was the established
convention in Israel. It had been de-
parted from just once: last Sep-
tember, when Shamir, though not
leader of the largest faction, could
show he had a coalition of 61 MKs
behind him.

Coalition talks in Israel
are continuing on two
levels: national unity and
factional governments.

Herzog pointedly spoke of the
historical lesson of Tisha b'Av which
was observed this week. The Jewish
state was destroyed 1900-odd years
ago, according to rabbinical teach-
ings, because of polarization within
its society and "needless hatred" be-
tween the various parties. Herzog
called on the parties today to over-
come their divisions and strive for
unity.
Peres, in his reply, also touched
on the Tisha b'Av moral, expressing
the hope that he could lead modern
Israel through this memorial period
of the ancient destruction towards
unity. He-pledges to try and form a
unity government bid also — delib-
erately — implied that other pos-
sibilities existed for a Labor-led gov-
ernment that would reflect the elec-
tion results.
Signaling to the religious par-
ties, which are pivotal still in the
narrow-based options, Peres said a
Labor-led government would "re-
spect the Orthodox °citizens" and
preserve the "status quo" in religious
affairs. But at the same time, he said
— in a signal to Shinui and the Civil
Rights Movement — Labor would
oppose religious coercion.
The Labor leader agreed that the
national needs required the speedy
formation of a government. The im-
mediate issues to be tackled, Peres
said, were the economy, Lebanon,
strengthening the IDF, continuing
and expanding the peace process. Be-
fore leaving the presidential resi-
dence, he called Shamir to propose
immediate talks, and also called
Yahad's Ezer Weizman. .
. Weizman, who effectively holds
the balance between the two big blocs
Continued on Page 22 ,,

,

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan