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May 16, 1986 - Image 42

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-05-16

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

42

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, May 16, 1986

• ■•■•■■•■■■■

*DIAMONDS — PEARLS*

A

-

ALL RATES INCLUDE 3 FULL
MEALS EACH DAY
Family Activity Program
Nightly Entertainment
Matchless Personal Service
18 Hole Golf Course
5 Tennis Courts
Land And Water Sports
Convention Facilities

July
CHI

LDREN'S
BONUS SPECIAL

Detroit's
Mr. Nippersinkt
I. Goldstein
313-557.2568

June 29 July 3
July 6-11 July 13-18
2 Under. .
FREE

A A new inexpensive way
fine
purchase
• to
• diamonds and pearls. —
4, Buy the direct way at

tremendous savings.
o Personal service with 40
years of experience.

Find out more by
calling

3 to 8 .. . $10
9 to 17 . . $15

MARTIN LATTIN

354-6356

Update your Sterling Silver
and Jewelry appraisals
at very reasonable prices.

••••• • ••••

DELTA D

ORLANDO

(home of EPCOT Center/Walt Disney World)

LOW
SUMMER
from frV V PRICES
Including round-trip air fare, hotel and
an Alamo Chevy Chevette, or similar car, for
3 days with free mileage:* Also free one-day
admission to Sea World.

Quality Inn Plaza
Radisson Inn Maingate or
Sheraton Lakeside
Hilton at the Walt Disney
World Village

4 days, 3 nights from $379

LOW
SUMMER
from frVV PRICES
Including round-trip air fare, hotel and
an Alamo Chevy Chevette, or similar car, for
3 days, with free mileage':

, .

4 days, 3 nights from $289
4 days, 3 nights from $319 tre*

4 days, 3 nights from $349

THE BAHAMAS

from

LOW
SUMMER

Includes round-trip air fare, round-trip
airport transfers and your hotel accommo-
dations. Also admission to a native show
(except Sat. or Sun), bonus features.

Pilot House or
Sheraton British Colonial
(Nassau)
Nassau Beach Hotel
Holiday Inn/Lucaya Beach
(Freeport)
Paradise Island Resort and
Casino-Paradise Towers
Paradise Island Resort &
Casino—Britannia Towers
or The Cable Beach Hotel,
a Wyndham Resort

4 days, 3 nights from $299

4 days, 3 nights from $369
4 days, 3 nights from 379

4 days, 3 nights from $379

4 days, 3 nights from $409

GetsYouThereR

All tour rates are from Detroit and are subject to change without notice. Similar hotels may be substituted. Rates are per person, double

occupancy; U.S. Departure Tax is included. Seats and accommodations are subject to availability. Make reservations at least 7 days
in advance. Add taxes and gratuities. Prices shown are available during certain limited travel periods ; they can vary and may be higher
depending upon the actual date, day of travel and hotel selected. Certain charges and fees cannot be assessed immediately, but can only
be collected on checkout or departure. *Gas, taxes, rental deposit and optional Collision Damage Waiver not included.

1986 Delta Air Lines, Inc.

Good Country

Continued from preceding page

dovish. Gush Emunim has
emerged, but so has Peace
Now. Israel has built settle-
ments in the West Bank, and
torn them down in Sinai. The
almost constant battle with
the Arab world has left peo-
ple exhausted and frustrated,
and it is not surprising that
a great many have retreated
into inflexible positions that
make further thought un-
necessary. But an even larger
number of Israelis remain
torn by the dilemma of the
West Bank's future and, in
broader terms, about the ap-
propriate response to the con-
tinued hostility of the Arabs.
The Sadat initiative demon-
strated that this middle
group can be galvanized by
dramatic evidence of Arab
moderation; the initial en-
thusiasm that greeted the
war in Lebanon showed that
it can be mobilized to support
hard-line policies aimed at
combating Arab" hostility.
And the widespread disap-
pointment with the results of
both—the peace with Egypt

and the war in Lebanon—
have only added to the confu-
sion. The truth is that most
Israelis are two people,
capable of believing both that
"the whole world is against
us" and that "we're just like
everyone else," i.e., that we
are both "Jews" and "Is-
raelis."
This dichotomy is not new,
of course; back in the sixties,
Prime Minister Levi Eshkol
used to refer to it as the
"Shimshon der nebedicher"
complex—poor little Samson.
But in those days, when the
government and the party
thought for enveryone, the
problem wasn't nearly so
acute. Today, with no foun-
ding fathers left, people are
forced to think for them-
selves.



From Heroes And Hustlers,
Hard Hats And Holy Men by
Ze'ev Chafets. Copyright 40
1986 by Ze'ev Chafets.
Reprinted by arrangement
with William Morrow and
Company, Inc.

No Attacks Planned,
Peres Reassures Syria

4 days, 3 nights from $259
4 days, 3 nights from $309

FT. LAUDERDALE

Sheraton Yankee Trader
. Ft.Lauderdale Marriott
Hotel & Marina
Marriott's Harbor Beach
Resort



LIFE IN ISRAEL

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel has
gone out of its way to assure
Syria it has no intention of at-
tacking that country. Prime
Minister Shimon Peres solemnly
affirmed this to his colleagues at
last Sunday's Cabinet meeting
and in extracts made public of
a radio interview to be broad-
east on the occasion of Israel's
Independence Day.
It was also learned that Peres
sent a message to Damascus
through high level American
diplomatic sources confirming
privately to President Hafez
Assad what he has been saying
in public here.
Peres blames Palestine Liber-
ation Organization chief Yasir
Arafat for spreading false
rumors in recent weeks that an
Israeli attack on Syria was im-
minent. He also made clear that
Israel does not expect to be
attacked by Syria, though it re-
mains constantly alert on its
northern borders.
At the same time, Israel has
continued to draw world atten-
tion to evidence of Syria's
involvement in international ter-
rorism.. Syria is believed to have
been behind the thwarted at-
tempt last month to place a
bomb aboard an El Al airliner at
London's Heathrow Airport.
Britain expelled three Syrian
diplomats from the country
after Syria refused to waive
their immunity to questioning
by Scotland Yard about the
bomb attempt.
The U.S. as well as Israel has
claimed a Syrian link to the
bombing of a West Berlin
discotheque' last month where

an American soldier was killed.
That led to the U.S. punitive air
strike on Libya April 14.
President Reagan, who brand-
ed Libyan leader Muarnmar el-
Kaddafi the No. 1 supporter of
international terrorism, has
since turned his rhetoric on
Syria, warning that it too could
be the target of American retal-
iatory strikes if solid evidence
emerged that it was behind ter-
rorist acts.
In a speech in Tel Aviv, Peres
described Assad as "more sub-
tle" than Kaddafi and more
adroit in concealing his ties to
terrorist groups. Now that he
has been exposed, Assad must
decide how to act, Peres said. He
must decide if he wants to be
lumped together with Kaddafi
as a leader of international ter-
rorism. Nevertheless, he said, "I
would recommend calming down
the many disturbing reports.
There should be a de-escalation
of rhetoric on both sides."

Israel Seeks
Suspected Nazi
War Criminals

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Yitzhak
Arad, chairman of the Yad
Vashem Holocaust Memorial in
Jerusalem, flew to New York
last Monday with a list of some
2,000 suspected Nazi war
criminals whose dosiers are held
in United Nations archives. The
record were compiled by the now
defunct United Nations war
Crimes Commission.

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