100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

July 20, 1990 - Image 44

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-07-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



NEWS

BASEBALL EXTRAVAGANZA
July 20-23, 1990

Poll Shows Rabin Tops
List To Succeed Shamir

At Domino's Farms, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Take US 23 to Exit 41 (Plymouth Rd.) east to Earhart Rd. north to the Farms.

Friday, July 20, 1990
Noon to 2:00 p.m.

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Former
Defense Minister Yitzhak
Rabin appears to be the most
popular politician in Israel.
According to the latest
poll, a majority of Israelis
would elect him prime min-
ister over Yitzhak Shamir or
Ariel Sharon of Likud, or his
colleague Shimon Peres,
whom he is challenging for
leadership of the Labor Par-
ty.
But the results do not
mean Labor would beat
Likud if elections were held
now. Thepoll was based on
the premise of direct election
of the prime minister, one of
the electoral reforms being
urged by increasing
numbers of Israelis.
According to the poll,
Rabin would have an easy
win over Shamir, the in-
cumbent prime minister,
and an even easier one over
Sharon, the minister of con-
struction and housing
known for his hard-line poli-
cies.

eis Jim Price an
rcOn.:*
hitting, catching,ttito*
.
...Leaguers. Visitor's Pass reCiuire
B enefit for Sparky Anderson's charily, C AT
eam for Children's and Henry Ford 46spit
Farms museums. For information, please c a

Sunday, July 22 9 0
Noon
Rawlings Sports Caravan. Free.
1:00 p.m.10,,,, 1

In a direct confrontation
with Shamir, Rabin would
win 50 percent of the votes to
33 percent for the Likud
leader. Among the re-
spondents, 17 percent had no
opinion.
The poll, by the Jerusalem-
based Hanoch Smith
Research Institute, was con-
ducted June 24 to July 3

Miller, retired Pro as9r:Trom the University of Cincinnati.
Admission $5.00::: 14h available.

Also: children's activities including, balloons, face painting, magic show and lots more.
Visitor's Passes include the Tiger Museum, Classic Cars, Domino's Center for
Architecture and Design, plus the Petting Farm and food discounts. Price is $6.00 for
adults, $4.00 for children and seniors, and $15.00 for families.

Nathan Threatens He'll
Bare Secret PLO Talks

For information call (313) 930-3818 or 930-3814.

Come Buy a Car From My Daddy

HE'S NOW AT JACK CAULEY CHEVROLET GEO

LARRY KAPLAN

See
New Cars - Trucks Used Cars - Leasing

855-9700

7020 Orchard
Lake Road

Jack

THE CAREFREE WAY TO .
CLIMB STAIRS

When you're disabled, or just not able to move
around as freely as you once could, stairs can be
a real problem. But there is a simple answer. STAIR-
GLIDE® powered stairway lift. Easily installed to fit
curved or straight stairs. They give you back the
ability to move around your own home. Folds back
— gets in nobody's way.
CALL OR STOP BY FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION.

LARRY ARONOFF

PpinAv Any

9(1

taan

E



0,

o.
as

z





STAR-GLIDE'

855-9700

Between 14 & 15 Mile
West Bloomfield, MI

• Unique Gifts For All

4.)

u.

ACTON RENTAL & SALES 891-6500 540-5550

All

Cauley

"We Give A Little More"
CE:=7 CHEVAL7LET Geo

tTAIRWAY L1 FIS

among a representative
sample of 1,200 Israelis.
A Rabin-Sharon contest
would give the Laborite a 54
percent to 28 percent edge,
with 18 percent offering no
opinion.
Rabin is campaigning to
unseat Peres as Labor Party
chairman. The poll results
seemed to bear out his
argument that he would be a
far more formidable can-
didate than Peres for the of-
fice ofprime minister.
It showed that Shamir
would beat Peres by a 44
percent to 29 percent
margin, with no opinion
from 27 percent.
A Sharon-Peres contest
would be much closer, but
Sharon would win by 37 per-
cent to 34 percent. Twenty-
nine percent had no opinion
on that race.
The first question. of the
poll mentioned no names,
but asked simply whom the
respondent would. vote for in
a direct election for prime
minister.
The results were 23 per-
-cent for Rabin, 18 percent
Shamir, 10 percent for Peres
and 6 percent for Sharon.
Of the remainder, 11, per-
cent chose politicians from
the right, and 6 percent
named those on the left.
Only 4 percent selected a re-
ligious candidate, and 22
percent mentioned none.

o


THAT
PERSONALIZED
TOUCH

Customized Imprinting
Always 20% OFF!

Napkins, Guest Towels, Place Cards
Cake Boxes and Matches.

Bev and Sue 661-0177



;7• -

• Invitations For All Occasions ••o

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Peace ac-
tivist Abie Nathan says he
will name at least 200
prominent Israelis who have
met with Yassir Arafat or
other officials of the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization if he is put on trial
again for violation of Israel's
anti-terror law.
Nathan was reacting to
Attorney General Yosef
Harish's order that police
draw up a fresh indictment
against him for flouting the
ordinance, which bars
Israelis from meeting with
PLO representatives.
Nathan made no secret of
his meeting with Arafat at
PLO headquarters in Tunis
in May, shortly after com-
pleting a six- month prison
term for the same offense on
previous occasions.
•He was slapped with a
summons when he arrived
back at Ben- Gurion Airport
on May 16. Nathan appeared

the following day before a
Petach Tikva magistrate,
who released him on $5,000
bail.
Nathan, who owns and
operates the "Voice of
Peace" radio station, which
broadcasts from a ship just
outside Israeli territorial
waters, has made clear he
intends to challenge the an-
ti-terror law.
"I hope Harish is prepar-
ing room (in jail) for about
another 200 people — gen-
erals, professors and
Knesset members — in-
cluding some of those on the
right wing who have not
shown enough spunk to ad-
mit that they, too, have
spoken to the PLO," said
Nathan.
"This time," he added, "I
do not plan to act like the
good boy as I did last time,
going quietly to prii: . - .on in an
attempt to have the or-
dinance changed."

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan