NEWS I The closest thing to home /AND MORE! More because, each spacious apartment is designed to meet the needs of seniors; emergency call buttons, grab bars in the bath, raised electrical outlets and fully equipped kitchens. More because, with one of our dining plans, you can enjoy fine food in a spacious dining room you'd swear was a restaurant. Courteous waiters and waitresses, tasteful decor ... More because, if you choose our housekeeping service, your apartment will be beautifully maintained. Plus we'll supply and wash your towels and linens. And more, and more; Beautiful land- scaped setting, attended gatehouse, free transportation, activities, worship services ... the list goes on. But that's not surprising as our goal is to satisfy all our seniors' needs under one roof. Franklin Club Apartments. For yourself or someone you love. Truly the closest thing to home, and more! Rates from $640. Independent Living Apartment Offer Full Service Apartment Offer ONE MONTH FREE MEAL SERVICE TWO MONTHS FREE MEAL SERVICE Includes complimentary dinner in our beautiful dining room for first month of occupancy. Includes complimentary dinner in our beautiful dining room for first two months of occupancy. (313) 353-2810 ONE COUPON PER TENANT. NEW TENANTS ONLY. An Adult Community ONE COUPON PER TENANT. NEW TENANTS ONLY. Offer Valid June 1, 1990 thru Aug. 31, 1990 1 Offer Valid June 1, 1990 thru Aug. 31, 1990 t e L • vis FRANKLIN CLUB APARTMENTS 28304 FRANKLIN ROAD SOUTHFIELD, MI 48034 Designs by Charles Gassam • Kitchens Counter Tops Islands • Bathroom Vanities • Bedrooms • Dining Rooms • Wall Units • Tables • Store Fixtures T ir¢d of all the •----11ii$10•:-81,00-01#14: . of filing M ••• COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL - Custom - Laminated Furniture C.C.C. Cabinetry 62 FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1990 941-3050 L) In e Can HEALTH INSURANCE 1MBURSEMENT SERVICES 258-4385 Study: PLO State Will Be Destructive Washington (JTA) - Israel cannot allow the estab- lishment of a Palestinian state on the West Bank be- cause it would lead to the destruction of the Jewish state, a study by a Jerusalem- based think-tank warns. There is a consensus in Israel that for strategic and military reasons, it is "unthinkable" to agree to a Palestinian state, said Robert Loewenberg, presi- dent of the Institute for Ad- vanced Strategic and Polit- ical Studies. While the study assumes that such a state would be controlled by the PLO, Loewenberg said that a Pa- lestinian state would mean that Israel would be held "hostage to the good will even of a benign state." Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which sponsored the study, said that a similar consensus exists among American Jews. He said no mainstream Jewish leader or organization was "an ad- vocate of a PLO state on the West Bank." The researchers spoke at a recent press conference at the National Press Club at which the 164-page study, called "Can Israel Survive a Palestinian State?" was released. The main targets of the report, which contains nu- merous photographs and colored maps and charts, are not Israelis, but U.S. governmental leaders and the American public. Hier said the report seeks to correct the "false percep- tion" that two states west of the Jordan River are an op- tion rather than a formula for Israel to "commit polit- ical suicide." "We want first to establish what is 'no' and then we will be able to talk about what is `yes,' " Loewenberg said. Michael Widlanski, project coordinator, said a Palestin- ian state would be a danger to Israel "even if it were rul- ed by the Boy Scouts of America." He explained that it would become the advance state for such Arab rulers as Iraq's Saddam Hussein and Syria's Hafez Assad, while "leaving Israel with an in- defensible territorial depth. That would be an invitation for war." Israel's main military edge today is the geography pro- vided by the West Bank,