I N EWS YT. PRESENTS A SAMPLING OF SCHEDULED EVENTS THURSDAY 8:00 YM NOVEMBER 8, 1990 DETROIT'S HIGHEST RATES Building Bridges of Understanding - The Chaldean and Jewish Heritage. A joint program with the Chaldean community. (Steinberg Memorial Concert) THURSDAY 7:30 PM NOVEMBER 15, 1990 Dr. Benjamin Spock, author of "Baby and Child Care" speaking at our 12th Annual Alicia Joy Techner Memorial Parenting Conference. SUNDAY Minimum Deposit of $500 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE Of DEPOSIT 7:00 rM 8.000% 8.243% NOVEMBER 25, 1990 "Jewish Composers of the Baroque and Classical Period" - Opening concert in the SCHMIER CHAPEL CHAMBER SERIES with newly arrived artists from the Soviet Union. SUNDAY 12:30 rM DECEMBER 9, 1990 *AFFILIATES FAMILY CHANUKAH PARTY, featuring "Mr. Simon Says". FRIDAY 8:00 PM DECEMBER 14, 1990 FAMILY CHANUKAH SABBATH pre- ceded by a *Sabbath Dinner. SUNDAY 2:00 PM DECEMBER 16, 1990 "Brundibar" a musical program for child- ren presented by the Keffy Orbach Concert Fund. Above events are open to the community and tickets are available at no charge, (excep- tions noted with an asterisk). Please call the Temple office, 661-5700, for information, tickets and reservations. Effective Annual Yield Compounded Quarterly. This is a fixed rate account that is insured to $100,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC). Substantial In- terest Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts. Rates subject to change without notice. AAN cleaners1 356-6013 FIRST SECURITY SAVINGS BANK FsB Discount Prices = Reduced Value L FREE, 20% off, $1 off, 3 for 2, etc. Many deals are offered but the fact remains that dis- counted prices are made possible only by dis- counted services. Only by offering less can a dry cleaner charge less. At MY Cleaners we never discount our service. MAIN OFFICE 2600 Telegraph Rd. Bloomfield Hills (Just South of Square lake) One of the many reasons why knowledgeable customers say "MY Cleaners is my cleaners:' ....... • . Located on Northwestern Highway at 12 Mile Rd. 1 Ov•t OPPORTUNITY z 76 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1990 ,4177. ......1 PHONE 33811700 35111700 HOURS: MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30 FRI. 9:30-6:00 Violent Incidents Leave Israel Uneasy Jerusalem (JTA) — An- other spate of Arab violence has given Israelis the un- comfortable feeling that they are not safe in their own backyards. It has also reinforced the view that Defense Minister Moshe Arens' decision to reopen the administered ter- ritories may have been pre- mature. Arabs attacked or tried to attack Jews in three widely separated incidents last week and were killed or cap- tured for their efforts. The incidents, which left two Arabs dead and caused injury to two Arabs and two Israelis, occurred barely two days after Arens lifted the ban that had kept Palestin- ians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip out of Israel proper for the previous four days. The ban had been put into effect following the brutal slaying of three Israelis in Jerusalem last week and subsequent stabbing in- cidents and reprisals in various parts of the country that have left more than a dozen injured. But the defense au- thorities feared that keeping the Palestinians bottled up indefinitely and deprived of their daily jobs in Israel would create an even more explosive situation. Though the plan was lifted, more stringent mea- sures have been taken to screen out criminal elements and po . tential troublemakers. That, however, has done little to reassure Israeli parents, who are deeply con- cerned about the safety of their children going to and from school or playing in the streets. Mutual suspicion between the Jewish and Arab com- munities is stronger than ever. Israelis who employ Arabs now constantly look over their shoulders, worried about being attacked with a hammer or knife. They know the Islamic fundamentalist movement has called for the killing of Jews, making it almost a re- ligious act to avenge the fatal shooting of 18 Arabs by Israeli police in the Oct. 8 riots on Jerusalem's Temple Mount. Israelis, moreover, could hardly have been encourag- ed by Defense Minister Arens' sober warning Thes- day that the wave of violence "has not yet passed." Members of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee quoted him as saying, "We must be ready for a period that will not be easy, in which efforts will be made to harm civilians, both from outside Israel and also from inside Israeli ter- ritory." Most Israelis seem to real- ize that security measures, however tough, will not root out random terror as long as there is no political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But here opinion is sharply divided. The right wing has begun arguing more strenuously for the "transfer" option, meaning the removal of the Palestinian population from the administered territories, presumably to a neighboring country, such as Jordan or Lebanon. The left insists there is no choice but for Israel to The defense authorities feared that keeping the Palestinians bottled up indefinitely and deprived of their daily jobs in Israel would create an even more explosive situation. withdraw from the ter- ritories. There is another alter- native: the "trigger option." Cabinet ministers went out of their way this week to encourage Israelis to shoot to kill if they think their lives are in danger. Police Minister Ronni Milo was in- sistent on that point. One of the three Jews murdered in Jerusalem's Baka neighborhood Oct. 21 was police trainee Shalom Charlie Shloush, who, when attacked by a blade-wielding young Arab, followed police procedure by firing a warn- ing shot into the air, then aimed at his assailants legs — and lost his life. Israelis have quickly learned that going by the book could be suicidal. So when an 18-year-old Pa- lestinian stabbed the Israeli driver of an oil tank truck in