BEHIND THE HEADLINES ImmlImIlm "" DR. DAVID LESZKOWITZ Family Practice • Internal Medicine is now accepting new patients 24371 West 10 Mile Road Just West of Telegraph Southfield, Michigan 356-5273 Specializing in: • Diabetes • Allergies • Back Pain • X-ray • Asthma • Gastrointestinal Disorders • Arthritis • Anxiety • Flu Shots • Initial History and Physicial/School FREE OFFICE VISIT AND PHYSICAL Most Insurances Accepted House Calls Available 24 Hours A Day * WINTER * BOOT SALE MOST STYLES 20% OFF Distinctive Contemporary Necklaces, Brooches and Earrings combining antique bits and pieces. Bring in your old jewelry and let CHAS create a unique family treasure. Friday and Saturday, November 2 and 3 from 10 to 6 p.m. GET 'EM WHILE IT'S HOT! WOMEN'S clucrs CHILDREN'S On The Boardwalk Orchard Lake Rd. • 855-5580 ELECTRIC LIFT CHAIR From $840 00 Vinyl or Fabric (Medicare or Insurance Immediate Delivery) HRS: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 • Thurs. 10-7 72 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1990 *Ask about our GUARANTEED Boot Fit Policy! Greg SHOE S Sitting Pretty Evergreen Plaza 19747 W 12 Mile, Southfield • COUGAR • DANE)0( • LACROSSE • SPORTO • PANDA • WEATHERGUARD 552-8850 ORCHARD MALL EVERGREEN PLAZA 851 5566 559 3580 - W. Bloomfield - Southfield Serving the Community for 34 Years President George Bush, West German Ambassador Juergen Ruhfus and Secretary of State James Baker at the recent signing of the German reunification pact. As Germany Unites, Some Are Worrying HELEN DAVIS Foreign Correspondent A s the united German state was reborn in Berlin at midnight on Oct. 3, a poignant ceremony was underway in Israel, where members of the West German Embassy traveled en masse for their homes in Tel Aviv to a stark, lonely hilltop in Jerusalem. There, the German envoys and their staffs marked the moment of German reunification by visiting the Yad Vashem Holocaust Mu- seum, a searing exhibition which documents the rise of Hitler and the subsequent destruction of six million Jews in the death camps of Nazi-occupied Europe. The journey to Jerusalem was a pilgrimage of contri- tion; a reminder that, despite the passage of 45 years since the fall of the Third Reich, Germany and Israel remain locked together in a chilling historical embrace. It is an embrace which both sides acknowledge may be a per- manent feature of their rela- tionship. Israel was born in the im- mediate aftermath of the Holocaust. Many of the Jews who inhabited the new state were themselves survivors of the Holocaust: displaced, dispossessed, traumatized and bereft, washed up on the shores of a strange new land which they were told was to be their new home. Almost all, one way or an- other, had been profoundly touched by the Holocaust. Some had lost their entire families in the flames of German madness. The new state was forged in the crucible of those flames. Consciously or not, Israel's leaders were, and are, haunted by images of their past: the powerlessness of the subjected; the humilia- tion of the hated; the fear of the hunted. Any pathology of the modern Jewish state quickly reveals the unhealed wounds which continue to scar the Israeli psyche and which continue to feed what the world perceives as in- transigence and obsessive concern with security. Former Israeli Prime Min- ister Menachem Begin steadfastly refused to even meet Germans. His Polish- born successor, Yitzhak Shamir, who lost his entire family in the Holocaust, still expresses "concern and res- ervations" about German unification. The present speaker of the Israeli parliament, Dov