SAVE FROM 20% TO 50%* MARV SAYS CUSTOM WALL MIRROR SPECIALISTS TUB & SHOWER ENCLOSURES MIRRORED BIFOLD OR SLIDING DOORS INSULATED GLASS REPLACED MOBIL AUTO GLASS SERVICE ( • TABLE TOPS • STORM DOORS & WINDOWS • PATIO DOOR WALLS REPLACED • STORMS & SCREENS REPAIRED si VISIT OUR SHOWROOM LIFE IN ISRAEL GLASS 8. AUTO TRIM CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS TIRES 8. ACCESSORIES • SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph 353-2500 Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park 'Suggested List Price We Wish Everyone A Happy and Healthy Passover An Israeli Yemenite family celebrates Passover at a seder on an agricultural settlement in the Negev Desert. Israel's Man-In-The-Street Offers Advice To Mr. Shamir DAVID HOLZEL Special to The Jewish News AND STAFF 29215 Northwestern at 12 Franklin Shopping Center Southfield 357-2030 239 Pierce St. (next to Alvin's) Birmingham fir 647-2888 •Bloom so Bloom • • Registered Electrologists • Come and let us remove your unwanted hair problem and improve your appearanc e . Near 12 Mile Rd. bet. Evergreen & Southfield 559-1969 Appt. Only. Ask For Shirlee or Debb y FREE CONS CTA M+401:40,0ddirOttlae:f00(: (ire downtown Birmingh;am). Dr. Mitchell Milan, General & Cosmetic Dentistry • Dr. Charles Berk, Podiatrist/Foot Specialist • Dr. Mark Vettraino, Chiropractic Physician • • Dr. Jeff Allyn, Chiropractic Physician 644-2136 647-2500 647-2500 647-2500 Offices- located at: 630 N. Woodward By Appointment Time Date Suites 301.302 For your convenience schedule your consultation with the Birmingham 36 doctors for the some day. FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989 1111 onday morning comes to Israel on Sunday. The six-day work week leaves little leisure time, but many in Jerusalem seemed to be ig- noring the call of the office, the home or the classroom this Sunday. As the sunny skies drove the temperature into the 70s, outdoor tables of cafes that line Ben Yehudah street were nearly filled. It was the kind of morning to discuss issues more plea- sant than solving the Israeli- Palestinian conflict, but some Jerusalemites were willing to voice their opinions on this subject anyway. Two recent reports — one issued by the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, the other issued by Israel's Military In- telligence — suggest that the key to Israel's future securi- ty does not lie with the policies of Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. The Jaffee Center report calls for negotiations between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization and a 10-15 year interim period of autonomy for the Palesti- nians and confidence- building measures. The out- come of this peace process would be some form of sovereignty for the Palesti- nians in the territories. The Military Intelligence review advised that the PLO now accepts Israel's right to exist and seeks a negotiated solution to the Palestinian problem. The review stated that there is no alternative to the PLO as a negotiating partner and that Israeli in- flexibility might erode its relations with the United States. "It's all nonsense," Uri responds. "First the Palesti- nians must stop the terror, then we will speak to them. But not to the PLO, and definitely not to (PLO chief Yassir) Arafat." Both Uri and his friend, Avi, complain that Arab violence has made Jews afraid to go to the Old City and the Western Wall. The Arabs, by contrast, have been emboldened. "The situation is no good. The government must do something," Uri says. A Palestinian state is out of the question, he continues. "Palestinians are 70 percent of Jordan's population. Why do they need a state here?" he says. What would Israelis and Palestinians discuss over the negotiating table? "Autonomy," Uri says. "To give them a chance to run their own lives. But we would control security." So far Avi has been in total agreement with his friend. Now the two voice disagreement. "If we had given (former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon) a month, the intifida would be over," Uri says. "Not a month," Avi says. "A week." Aharon, who wears a knit- ted kippah of the modern Or- thodox, says Israel should be prepared to give up territory, provided it receives security guarantees in return. He, too, calls for an end to terror as a condition for negotiations. Noting that the words and actions of the differnt Palesti- nian groups are often in con- flict with one another, Aharon calls for the Palesti- nians to speak with one voice. "If the PLO is the one voice of the Palestinians, we will speak to them," he says. He says he is wary of the Palestinians' motives. "They say they want Judea, Samaria and Gaza. Tomorrow they want Israel. With these people it's difficult to make peace. "The biblical promised land of Israel is the Jews' only homeland, Aharon says. "We have no place else to go except the sea." Because the Jews are a nation that learns from the suffering of its ancestors, negotiations must proceed "slowly and surely. We can't take a chance," he says. "It's our life." Ofra and Sarit say they