CLOSE-UP I Make Your Mother's Day Shopping A Breeze Weary Virtually Maintenance Free! Continued from preceding page This 5-piece sling group in- cludes 4 stack chairs and 48" round or 41" x 57" oval table. 6 colors in stock for immediate delivery. willing to negotiate, feel ONLY $489 99 Reg. $797.00 Additional pieces available at similar savings Palm each Patio Furniture NOVI WATERFORD 43236 Novi Town Center Grand River & Novi Rd. just south of I.96 7350 Highland Rd (M-59) 7 Miles West of Telegraph near Pontiac Airport 347.4610 666-2880 Hours: Mon., Thurs. & Fri. 10-9; Tues., Wed. & Sat. 10-6; Sunday 11-4 SWIMWEAR! THE BEST IS AT Intimatc Appard 30% OFF APPLEGATE SQUARE NORTHWESTERN & INKSTER 353-5522 B"11 Specialties TRAYS • BASKETS • NOVELTIES NOSH BY THE LB. Wish Mom A DELICIOUS MOTHER'S DAY! KOSHER-PAREVE THE HAWORTH CENTER Farmington Hills 34 FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1991 737-8830 — 932-4161 = \ Local & Nationwide Delivery 4 now much more strongly than before that the Arabs should not be trusted." Jerusalemite Joyce Klein experienced Arab-Jewish tension when a play she coordinated, Another Face, was presented several years ago in Boston. Written by Palestinians and Israelis, the play in- cludes monologues in which a Palestinian considers bur- ning his Israeli passport, and an Israeli who is shocked when her mother takes her to see the Arabs, who "want to kill us with knives." The girl gazes at an Arab mother and her children, then cries, "Those aren't Arabs. That's a fami- < ly!" Fresh memories of the Gulf crisis have renewed old wounds of Sabra and Shatila, the Lebanese refugee camps where thousands of Palestinians were killed, and of Gush Et- zion, where during the War of Independence Arab ar- mies dropped grenades among crowds of unarmed Israeli citizens, Ms. Klein says. This makes a revival of Another Face unlikely. Still, Joyce Klein holds out hope for the future. "All we need is something, anything resembling peace," she says. "People would be willing to have very short memories." 0 NEWS Gen. Barak's New IDF: Leaner,Meaner,Sharper Tel Aviv (JTA) — A leaner, meaner, more economical, better disciplined Israel Defense Force is the ambi- tion of its new chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak. Less than a month after taking over from retiring Lt. Gen. Dan Shomron, Gen. Barak has announced changes that military ex- perts say will mean tighter control over all branches by the chief of staff and rigid economies that will send thousands of career officers into civilian life over the next three years. Gen. Barak thinks that a smaller, more compact army makes a better fighting force. He has already announced the elimination of some senior posts at General Headquarters and abroad for economic reasons. They include positions normally occupied by gen- erals, such as assistant in charge of operational evaluation and assistant to the chief of military intel- ligence. Much-coveted liaison and attache assignments in Washington, London and Paris will be abolished. Some of Gen. Barak's changes have already raised hackles. He has announced greater authority for the Ground Forces Command, which reduces the autonomy and authority of the major generals who hold the three regional commands: nor- thern, central and southern. Gen. Barak, who is a ground soldier, is also out to reduce some of the autonomy enjoyed by the air force, military observers say. Protests have also been raised against Gen. Barak's rumored plans to eliminate several IDF publications, in- cluding Ma'arahot, a journal devoted to military theory, and the popular army week- ly Bamahaneh. In addition, orders for beepers and walkie-talkies for thousands of officers have been cancelled to save money. Soviet Jews Attend WJC Jerusalem (JTA) — Soviet Jewry officially took its rightful place among the Jewish communities of the world as the ninth plenary assembly of the World Jew- ish Congress convened. Avi Beker, director of the Israel Section of the WJC, said that since the organiza- tion was founded in 1936, an empty chair has always been set aside at WJC assemblies for delegates from the Soviet Union. The WJC assembly will focus on Soviet Jewry. Awards will be presented to former Soviet Jewish ac- tivists and to Jews abroad who made crucial contribu- tions to their struggle. The historical role of Israel's clandestine unit for Soviet Jewry will be exposed for the first time. =(