!MEDIA MONITOR 1 Attention ► ! Threads GIANT SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE 4 Days Only Thursday, July 21 Friday, July 22 Saturday, July 23 Sunday, July 24 Is Hussein Playing Games With Israel? 10-8:00 10-5:30 10-5:00 12-5:00 ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News A HUNTERS SQUARE Always 14 Mile & Orchard Lake Rd. • Farmington Hills, MI 48018 855-4464 20%-60% Below Retail All Sales Final/Prior Sales Excluded [11 The Workmen's Circle & Sholem Aleichem Institute Jewish Community Council Sarah K. Gold Philanthropic Fund, United Jewish Charities PRESENT THE 10th ANNUAL YIDDISH CONCERT 1N THE PARK fter decades of hoping that Jordan's King Hussein was the key to resolving the Middle East mess, "many Israelis suspect Hussein will never come to anyone's negotiating table,' reports the Washington Post. In an analytical piece, Glenn Frankel of the Post's Jerusalem bureau states that a sizable number of Israelis believe that Hussein's "real interest is in simply keeping the game going and his an- tagonists guessing because that is the best way to ensure his own survival?' The Palestinian uprising has brought the "troubled, bittersweet romance" be- tween Hussein and Israel to "what experts say may be a feoturing Fay Nicoll Yiddish & Russian Songs The Instrumental music for this occasion is mode possible by funds supplied by the recording com- panies of Americo through the Music Performances Trust Fund. The grant for this performance was ob- tained with the co-operation of Local 5, Detroit Federation of Musicians. Mack Pitt & His Orchestra 2:00 p.m. Sunday, August 7 Shepherd Park, Oak Park Church & Northfield Bring Chairs & Sunshade For Your Comfort • No Admission Fee I G To 0 Sttrarner C CAMP FRANKLIN The Franklin Summer Tennis Camp - With Swimming ALL AGES / ALL LEVELS I NON-MEMBERS WELCOME • Limited Space • All Day and 1/2 Day Camps • Swimming in our New Outdoor Pool • Ages 8-13 • We have additional programs for Youngsters (Ages 4-7) and Teens. • Camps Start Weekly Beginning June 20. 46 FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1988 • Call the Junior Tennis Dept. for information and sign-up 352-8000 EXT. 38 FRANKLIN Fitness & Racquet Club 29350 Northwestern Hwy./Southfield, MI King Hussein: Dancing on the horizon. new turning point," writes Frankel. Palestinians have been rebelling not only against Israel's rule of their land, but also against Israel's "long-held notion that these territories, or at least their recalcitrant population, could somehow be entrusted to the care of the king." Said Palestinian newspaper editor Hanna Siniora, "If there is one message this uprising has made clear, it is that we do not want to parlay an occupation by Israel into domination by Jordan." Frankel mentions a 1986 public opinion poll that showed that Hussein com- manded little or no support in the West Bank, "especially among younger Palestinians who grew up under Israeli oc- cupation and have no mem- ory of Jordanian rule and no sense of loyalty to a monarch they have never seen." Yet, says Frankel, to Israelis "desperate for some kind of workable political solution, the king dances on the eastern horizon like a desert mirage." "He is such a handsome and romantic person!" said Michael Sela, an Israeli jour- nalist who has long covered the West Bank. "We have to find someone we can trust, and we want very much to trust him." Israel Against Accord, Says Awad Elsewhere in the Washing- ton Post, Palestinian American Mubarak Awad states he was recently ex- pelled from Israel not because he advocated "resistance through nonviolent means" nor because he "allegedly played a key role in the seven- month-old Palestinian upris- ing." Rather, Awad claims on the Post's op-ed page, he was ousted because he believes in "peaceful co-existence" of side-by-side Israeli and Palestinian states. "Israel," he states, "finds me a threat because it is afraid to give peace a chance!' Awad asserts that the treat- ment he received from Israel indicates that "Israelis talk about peace, but the only peace they want is the one that they dictate, . . . one that will deny the Palestinians their right to self-determina- tion." Palestinians savor, writes Awad, the short-lived "taste of victory and the feeling of liberation" every time a Palestinian flag is raised over a street, neighborhood or town devoid of Israeli soldiers. The uprising has given the Palestinians " a victory not so much over the Israelis, but . . . over fear. That is why Israel's policy of killing, beating and imprisoning Palestinians has had no effect except to strengthen their determination to continue the uprising." Aloha Oy: Bagels Make Hit On Maui Bagels may be a traditional Jewish nosh, so a few eyebrows were raised — and a few appetites whetted — to learn in the New York Times that the first bagel bakery recently opened on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Open only since last fall, Maui Bagel has already be- come something of a tourist attraction. "I heard about your bagels in the Cincinnati airport," said a recent visitor who made Maui Bagel his