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January 17, 1986 - Image 28

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-01-17

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

_28 Friday, January 17, 1986

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

NEWS

F _ ROGS DON'T. HAVE
YOU DOI
11- CHOICE

FOR PERFECT COLOR
PRINTS IN 1 HOUR, CHOOSE

CRAINE i CORCORAN'S FULL SERVICE ONE HOUR LAB

seeddield plan • serthfield rd.
between 12 & 13 • across free Farllif Jack

CUSTOM ENLARGEMENTS • PHOTOGRAPHY • SLIDE PROCESSING • PRINTS FROM SLIDES

Children of Holocaust-survivors Association
In Michigan

PRESENTS

THE. DETROIT PREMIER

of

WAR and LOVE

Honoring

DR. SID BOLKOSKY

Thursday, February 6, 1986
7:30 p.m.

Northland Theatre

15600 J.L. Hudson Drive
• Southfield, Michigan

and&

All proceeds will be donated to the
Holocaust Mernorial Center
of
'
Metropolitan Detroit

All contributions are tax-deductible, as provided by law.

Please make checks payable to:

CHAI.M. •

.15710 Addison
Southfield. Michigan 48075

Based on
Jack Eisner's Book "The Survivor"

Enclosed is my cneck for $

I/we would like

Patron 5250 - two admissiOns, reserved seating'. autographed
copy of "The Sunnvor, speCiai, mention in the program; and
champagne reception In the theatre at 6.30 pm



Sponsor 5100 9ngle admission, reserved seating'; special
mention In the pr ogram, and champagne reception in the theatre •

'
at 630 p.m.



Donor . $50 9n le admission,- reserved seating', and special
mention In the program.



Single admission 51000



1 am unable to ittAI but would like to donate

name

Rotes!'•

Cny

Phone number

Goers received before January 27 Will be marled by January 51. 1486_
For later requests or further Information call; 55. 7-6089 or 661-0838:

tickets for the Film Benefit.



Reserved seats 111 be he until the movie begins .

Taba Arbitration

Continued from Page 1

They also stressed that Is-
rael's agreement to arbitration
would have to bS matched - by a.
serious, uninterupted process of
building normal, neighborly re-
lations between Israel and
Egypt. Most important would be
the rethrn of the Egyptian Am-
bassador to Tel Aviv, from
where he was recalled in 1982
during the Lebanon war; and
genuine progress toward impro-
ving trade, tourism and cultural
relations between the two na-
tions.
Cabinet Secretary Yossi Be-
ilin explained after the meeting
that Israeli and Egyptian dip-
lomats will meet now to draft
the terms of reference from the
arbitrators and simultaneously
work out details of normaliza-
tion. He said he hoped this proc-
ess • would take no more than a
few weeks.
The Israeli diplomats are Gen.
(Res.) Avraham . Tamir, Director
General of the Prime Minister's
Office, and David Kimche, Di-
rector General of the Foreign
Ministry. Both were involved in
the earlier talks with Egypt
which produced the formula
adopted by the Inner Cabinet.
A leading Egyptian politician,
former Prime Minister Mus-
tapha Khalil, told the Israel
Army Radio in an interview
Monday that Cairo viewed the
latest Cabinet decision as I pos-
itive move that will be followed
by an improvement in relations
with Israel. Khalil, who is close
to Mubarak, said the Taba dis-
pute was the main bone of con-
tention between the two coun-
tries and was largely responsi-
ble for the coolness between
them in recent years.
Peres told reporters that the
prospect of a summit meeting
between himself and Mubarak
was closer Monday morning that
it was Sunday night, when the
Inner Cabinet convened for the
crucial meeting.
But the Egyptian Charge
d'Affaires in Tel Aviv, Moham-
med Bassiouni suggested that a
summit was not yet in sight. He
said, after meeting with. Peres
and getting the text of the Inner
Cabinet's decision, that next
step would be for the two sides
to negotiate the terms of their
compromise.
One of the key conditions de-
manded by Likud and incorpo-
rated into the Cabinet decision
was, in Levy's words, the re-
moval of the presence of ter-
rorism in Egypt and Egypt's
ironclad commitment not to as-
sist or encourage terrorists,
Likud had demanded originally
that Egypt eject Palestine Lib-
eration Organization represen-
tatives from Cairo. -
But specific reference to the
PLO apparently was deleted.
Peres had argued earlier that
Egypt could hardly be asked to
oust the PLO when the PLO
maintained offices in many
western European capitals.
Levy also listed Israel's long-
standing demand that the Cairo
media desist from its scathing
and often crude attacks on Is-'
rael. An Israel Radio reporter's

telephone calls to Cairo Monday
elicited a less than favorable re-
sponse on that point. The re-
porter was told by Egyptian offi-
cials' that the Israeli media was
far from free of strong attacks in
Egypt but Egypt never asked Is-
rael to muzzle its 'press.
- But such matters are expected
to resolve themselves if, as
Peres contends, a settlement
over. Taba will lead to a settle-
ment of all other bilateral issues
in a speedy and friendly man-
ner. The latter was the primary
aim of Peres and his labor party
colleagues who were inclined to

"You can't ask them

(Israel) to negotiate
with someone who's
sitting on the
opposite side of the
table saying . . . that
Israel doesn't have
any right to exist.

be flexible in arbitration. They
consider Taba, 'a tiny sliver of
beach on the Red' Sea without
strategic or economic value, not
worth an ongoing and widening
breach with Egypt.
Likud Leader Yitzhak
Shamir, who is Foreign Minister
and Depirty Premier held out for
conciliation with arbitration
only as a last resort. Shamir
argued that arbitration, because
it is a quasilegal process, would
only exacerbate tensions with
Egypt whereas conciliation, less
' formal, would not have such an
effect. :
The 1979 Israeli-Egyptian
peace treaty provided for both
processes to settle disputes that
cannot be resolved by bilateral
diplomacy. Arbitration is bind-
ing and both sides must agree to
accept the decision of the arbit-
rator as final. Conciliation, es-
sentially' a compromise between
rival claims, can be effective
'bnly if both parties voluntarily
live up to the compromise
agreements.
These are essentially legal
matters. The differences be-
tween labor and Likud were
more of a philosophical nature.
Labor was prepared , to yield on
some matters in exchange for
better relations with Egypt.
Likud believes in standing
tough, making no concessions.
The Inner Cabinet session was
reported to have been one of the
stormiest between the coalition
partners, marked by loud, hos-
tile exchanges between Labor
and Likud ministers. At several
junctures, the meeting was ad-
journed temporarily to allow
tempers to cool.
Last week, Peres told his old
rivals -- veterans of the Irgun
Zvai Leurni (ETZEL) that it was
preferable to have: peace with a
queation mark about Taba, to
having peace with a question
Mark.
Any chance of pace is prefer-

.

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