R I UP FRONT ANDEE'S Send it for Less at ... SLEEPWEAR • DAYWEAR • PLAYWEAR I Spring Fashions Arriving Daily I FRANKLIN SAVINGS CENTRE BLDG. 26400 W. 12 Mile Road — 1 Southfield, Michigan 48034 (313) 354-6070 32328 GRAND RIVER FARMINGTON Ben-Eliezer Continued from Page 5 474-9730 Ben-Eliezer: At odds with Labor. give an elected leadership the possibility to handle their lives!' While he rules out the PLO as a negotiating partner, Ben- Eliezer said he also believes that King Hussein of Jordan will not come to the negotiating table on the Palestinian's behalf. When the United States proposed a Our Current Collection Of Famous Kadima Continued from Page 5 London Fog® J.G. Hook® Zip-Out Rainwear Sterling Heights • Sterling Place 37680 Van Dyke at 16 1/2 Mile • 939 0700 Mon.-Sat. 10-9; Sun. 12-5 - Oak Park • Lincoln Center Greenfield at 101/2 Mile • 968 2080 Mon.-Sat. 10-9; Sun. 12-5 - West Bloomfield • Orchard Mall Orchard Lake at Maple (15 Mile) • 855.9955 Mon.-Fri. 10-9; Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5 •i ft connv AAA D`I-1 t 10QC2 peace plan similar to the one Hussein has been calling for, the monarch backed off. "Isn't it funny that Shultz was in the Mideast and Hussein was in London?" Ben-Eliezer remarked. "I think Hussein feels that he's losing control." The answer, then, is an elected Palestinian leader- ship. "If you want to make a deal, do it with the strong people," he advised. Ben-Eliezer's belief that Israel should implement autonomy unilaterally if the parties cannot come to some agreement puts him at odds with his own Labor Party. "History shows, once Israel is determined to pursue the autonomy by all means, then the PLO will give orders to their people, 'Go ahead, run for election.' " Israel need not wait for the riots to die down before begin- ning negotiations, he said. "Agreements and talks almost always happened when the shooting was still going on!" "Mental illness is a disease!' said Aronoff. "It comes and it goes. New medications are marvelous, but families are still seeing their loved ones put on a shelf . . . They can't always cope with the problems, and other family business, and families are being worn out. "The need is for a good place where people are going to treat them with love, like they are someone's dear per- son — and they are .. . "Our dream is to have a supervised apartment building for 12 to 18 persons, with an organic greenhouse, on-the-job training, educa- tional possibilities. We talked to HUD (the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development), and we had so- meone who is prepared to donate the land to us. But the problem is that the (gover- ment) budget is so dried up right now!' As the opening shot in its self-financing campaign, Kadima plans to send copies of its newsletter to 2,500 Detroiters next month. NEWS 1 Murder Charges Filed Against Kurt Waldheim Vienna (JTA) — A group of 300 Austrians, including several public figures, filed formal charges against Presi- dent Kurt Waldheim with the district attorney of Vienna, accusing the former United Nations secretary general of murder or complicity in mur- der when he was an officer in the German army in the Bal- kans during World War II. The charges are based on documents from the Yugosla- vian military archives re- lating to mass deportations from the Kozara region in 1942 and documents involv- ing Waldheim in the deporta- tion of Greek Jews from Rhodes and other Greek islands. They are further based on the report submitted to Chancellor Franz Vranitsky by an international commis- sion of historians that investigated Waldheim's war- time activities, and on subse- quent statements by a West German member of the panel, Manfred Messerschmidt. The charges, filed last week, quote extensively from the report of the historians' commission about the in- volvement of Waldheim's unit in the deportation of pri- soners and refugees from Yugoslavia and in the "spe-