YOUR LOCAL NEWS DEALER Ctidi.man, Cadillac of Eizmingfiam 1350 N. Woodward, Just South of Big Beaver (16 Mile) "Haven't you always wanted a friend in the car business?" ALLANTE Please Call DAVID BIBER 644-1930 1987. ELDORADO BIARRITZ ALL THE BEST OPTIONS Pearl White in Stock Ready To - Own STICKER $29,033 NOW $23,995 A DISCOUNT OF $5,038 Mon. and Thurs. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Tues., Wed., Fri. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. SHOP WITH US DURING OUR RENOVATION AND WIN!* 10 10 20 170 5" TVs Designer Telephones $50 Gift Certificates $10 Gift Certificates *Prizes will be awarded to the first 210 shoppers present- ing $250 or more in Hunters Square/Tally Hall sales re- ceipts dated March 1-15. Additional details available at each of our more than 60 fine shops and restaurants. 14 Friday, March 6, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS We Are One The following profile by the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion is part of a series on the people who benefit from the Allied Jewish Campaign. Debbi Hersh, age 11. Ask her to name her favo- rite things and she'll prob- ably say horseback riding, making new friends, her stuffed animal Willy, and Camp Tamarack . . . but not necessarily in that order. Debbi Hersh is a six-year veteran of the Fresh Air Society's Camp Tamarack in Brighton and Camp Maas in Ortonville, and she feels that those six summers have added something very special to her life. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hersh of West Bloomfield, Debbi is a bubbly sixth-grader who likes to talk about the coun- selors and campers from several years ago who are still her friends. Her best memories of camp include learning how to sail and horseback ride, and taking part in some unusual oneg Shabbat programs. "You get to meet a lot of new people and do things you couldn't do at home," Debbi says. "It's just fun." Debbi's parents share her enthusiasm, noting how her self-condidence and matur- ity have blossomed during her summers at camp. De- bbi's immediate goal is to take part in the horseback riding specialty at Camp Maas this summer. After that, it's back to school and to her studies for her bat mitzvah. Some day, Debbi hopes to become a camp counselor, which should be good training for her ulti- Debbi Hersh mate goal of becoming a pediatrician and helping children. The agency. Currently celebrating its 85th year of service, the Fresh Air Society/Tamarack Camps offer programs for more than 1,400 youngsters ages 6 to 18. In addition to Camps Tamarack and Maas, there are Camp Kennedy in .Michigan's Upper Penin- sula and Agree Outpost in Ontario. Specialty pro- grams, family camping and an Israel teen mission are included. More than half of FAS campers receive some form of financial assistance. The Allied Jewish Campaign of the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion provides funding to the agency. Beverly Wolkind Weizman Urges PLO Talks to Win Peace Jerusalem (JTA) — Ezer Weizman, the only member of the government to publicly call on Israel to negotiate with the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization, declared that only talks with the PLO or an ex- pressed readiness for such talks can expedite peace negotiations with Jordan. Weizman, a minister with- out portfolio who recently merged his Yahad Party into the Labor party, addressed some 400 dovish members of the Labor Party's Central Committee in Tel Aviv. He expressed frustration with King Hussein of Jokdan for insisting on keeping his re- lationship with Israel a deep secret. Weizman's speech was viewed by politial observers as part of his ongoing efforts to assume leadership of the mod- erates in the Labor camp. He added that Israel must not shy away from the Pales- tine Liberation Organization as a negotiating partner, pro- vided the PLO fulfills two con- ditions: acceptance of the United Nations Security Council's resolutions 242 and 338, which would put it on re- cord as recognizing Israel; and the renunciation of terrorism as means to its political ends. Negotiations with the PLO, Weizman has stressed, should be under an Egyptian um- brella. It is "the only way to renew the peace process in the Mideast," he claims.