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January 18, 1991 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-01-18

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

MEDIA MONITOR I

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Formerly known as
"Downtown Motors"
• VERY COMPETITIVE PRICES
• Will Deliver ANY CAR
to your Home or Office

JA4 G1 1 ‘R

lif.

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Ill WINE Yll CMS
Will Malty Emu al Nelda Nam

Ask for
Terry Rafih

op I Daly flogafig, FED
I MOM!
ari a WIN Hell

PARTS & SERVICE:

SUBARU

• Shuffle service back to
home or Office
• 25% Exchange on U.S. funds
10% Extra Discount for Seniors

tryout

about it. you% drive one.

Special to The Jewish News

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• Poolside Bar and Grill






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32

FRIDAY, JANUARY 18,

1991

It Takes Two Magazines
To Profile One Queen

ARTHUR J. MAGIDA

963-9474

961.6429

WA'S
■Ig d?Vat -aaex 4. M.,b1A

this

Time magazine gave its
Man of the Year Award to
two George Bushes —the
resolute Bush who rallied
the world against Saddam
Hussein and the bumbling
Bush who has masterminded
inept domestic policy. But
apparently, it takes two
magazines to adequately
profile a queen.
Current issues of Spy and
Vanity Fair devote a total of
18 pages to Jordan's Queen
Noor al Hussein. Between
the two of them, we get the
Good Queen (Vanity Fair
and the Bad Queen (Spy), the
queen whose "dominant
force (is her) intelligence
rather than her beauty"
(Vanity Fair) and the queen
who is "unpopular, unhappy,"
vain, "condescending,"
"patronizing," and "fun-
damentally boring" (Spy).

Spy talks about the
American-born queen's
"grasp of policy (that) no one
calls acute" and the "special
relish" that she brings to
"the Israeli-bashing parts of
(her) job."
The magazine reports that
she "has read staff-written
speeches about the 'Israeli

war machine' and criticized
the U.S. for seeming to
`reward (Israel) for its
belligerence.' " Jordan's
royal couple "count among
their friends the charming
Kurt Waldheim. And Noor
has . . . appalled guests by
sneeringly mimicking the
accents of her Jewish
neighbors on the other side
of the Jordan River."
Spy also talks of marital
tensions in Jordan's palace
and of the king's wandering
eye for "young, attractive
women."
Vanity Fair will have none
of this Noor-bashing. There
is "open affection between
the royal couple:' writes Domi-
nick Dunne. The queen is
compassionate: She "had a
major role" in helping to
organize aid for the nearly
750,000 refugees who fled
from Kuwait into Jordan
after the Iraqi invasion. She
is loved by her subjects:
While driving her jeep, pas-
sengers in other cars "lean
out of their windows to wave
at her." She has a flair for
the common touch: "She
always smiled and waved
back."
But of her attitude toward
Israel and the accents of her
neighbors on the western
shore of the Jordan, not one
word.

Op-Eds Wrestle
With Peace Meeting

O

n the same day last
last week that a

Washington
Post-ABC poll revealed that

66 percent of Americans
back U.S. support for an
international peace con-
ference if Iraq agreed to pull
out of Kuwait, two op-ed

columns addressed the valid-
ity of such a conference.
A Washington Post column
by Stephen Rosenfeld, the
paper's deputy editorial
page editor, ruled out a con-
ference as the Gulf crisis
continues, but asserted that
one should eventually be

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