NEWS I Exclusive Designs In Quality Custom Chairs Now On Sale suggested retail $495-s915 Choose from over 250 fabrics and 50 chair styles Delivery in 45 days Lifetime warranty on frame and springs Ottomans also on sale $199-$399 Sale ends May 19, 1991 Eban Says Gulf War Has Assured Israel's Survival IRA RIFKIN Special to The Jewish News I BIRMINGHAM 950 S. Woodward (Woodward at Lincoln) Phone: 647-8882 MOVING SALE LIQUIDATING ENTIRE ul RNEV: NATCOCREYS ACCESSORIES EVERYTHING 50% OFF and MORE Sugar Tree Plaza, 6203 Orchard Lake West Bloomfield 626-1999 Film to Video Transfer Transfer Movies 8mm-16mm to VHS or Beta • 1-200 FEET $20.00 • 401-600 FEET $39.00 • 201400 FEET $26.00 • 601-800 FEET $52.00 11 ■ 11 801-1000 FEET $65.00 Film over 1,000 feet add 6* a foot. Tape $8.00 Additional CCM-MRS) CiAWA1CRA BUY—SELL—TRADE 48 FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1991 / THE TUNE -UP MAN Certified by the National Automotive Institute of Excellence Comes to your home or office with the garage-on-wheels COLONY INTERIORS VISA. Right in Your Own Driveway! 3017 N. Woodward (3 Blks. South of 13 Mile) Royal Oak Daily & Sat. 10-6, Fri. 10-8 288-5444 Valet service that doesn't cost one penny extra • Expert diagnostic tune•up • Elecronic analyzer all engine systems • Professionally trained mechanics • Perfect results assured Expanded Services Call Sanford Rosenberg for your car problems 398-3605 FM l'RENDS NOW OPEN CROSSWINDS MALL Orchard Lake Rd. at Lone Pine Rd. 851-4455 raq's defeat in the Per- sian Gulf war has dra- matically altered Israel's security needs by elim- inating the Jewish state's only real military threat, ac- cording to Abba Eban, the elder statesman of Israeli diplomacy. Mr. Eban, during a recent talk in Baltimore, labeled the Gulf war "one of the tur- ning points of world history" — and a blessing for Israel. "Now, for the first time, we look across the Jordan and we do not see any seri- ous military power to threaten our existence," said Mr. Eban, the former Labor government foreign minister and ambassador to the United States and United Nations. "Israel's permanence in the Middle East has been assured" by virtue of its military superiority over its Arab neighbors, he asserted. And with its survivability certain, the 75-year-old Mr. Eban added, now is the time for Jerusalem to take con- crete steps toward divesting itself of the occupied ter- ritories — and their hostile Arab populations — in return for peace treaties with the Arab world. Retaining the territories, Mr. Eban said, will only con- tinue to erode Israel's democratic ideals, divide Israeli public opinion and prompt international con- demnation. "Something that gets Jews killed and makes war more inevitable is no longer an asset. If we want peace, we must look at a new ter- ritorial alignment," said Mr. Eban, who criticized Israel's Likud government for allow- ing new settlements in the territories during U.S. Sec- retary of State James Baker's Middle East peace shuttle. . While also noting Arab in- transigence, Mr. Eban warned that Jerusalem's continued hardline runs the risk of seriously damaging the Israeli-American alli- ance, a prospect he views as exceedingly dangerous for Israel. "As one of the founders of the Israeli-American alli- ance, I say it is not too much to suspend new settlements Ira Rifkin is assistant editor of the Baltimore Jewish Times. Abba Eban: Critical of Likud. if that is what the United States wants," Mr. Eban said. Turning to Israel's new- found security situation, Mr. Eban — who spoke for an hour extemporaneously and received a standing ovation both before and after his ad- dress — said Iraq's army is no longer an external threat following its crushing defeat at the hands of the U.S.-led coalition. Jordan, he continued, lacks any real military might, and the Palestinian "Something that gets Jews killed and makes war more inevitable is no longer an asset." Abba Eban Liberation Organization, while a terrible nuisance, lacks the firepower to affect "any change whatsoever" in Israel's borders. That leaves Syria as Israel's most dangerous adversary, but Damascus, he explained, has only attacked Israel when it could count on the support of Egyptian and Iraqi troops and Moscow's diplomatic safety net. The decline of the Soviet Union, Egypt's peace treaty with Israel and Iraq's battlefield loss have eliminated all those factors, leaving Syria in a relatively weakened military state, according to Mr. Eban. Given that scenario, he emphasized, Israel should seek a diplomatic opening to resolve its problems with Syria. "In a spirit of vig- ilance, but with a certain serenity, Israel should look (