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Maple 855-3400 THROUGH SEPT. 15 STUDENT SALE Everyone Qualifies We're All Students of Life Great for dorms and studio apartments Sofa by Day „ Bed by Night FUTON , 306 S. Main Novi Town Center ke Royal Oak near Mervyn's Bedding and Home Furnishings 548-4422 349-5040 ISO • NEED A PROGRAMMER? ...OR AN INTERPRETER? CCR Analysts grasp your business requirements and interpret them for our programmer "propeller heads" and "hackers." Saves you learning a new language kit CCR Center for Computer Resources 3895 W 12 Mile Berkley 30 547-5540 Contact Jack Parish or David Bitel FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1991 ❑ Iraq's Future Role In Middle East Politics Starting from Natural two years, a move that will drastically reduce the poten- tial for a settlement with Syria based on exchanging territory for peace. There are also said to be plans for at least doubling the size of the 80,000-strong Jewish population in the West Bank by the end of the decade and, more urgently, for quadrupling the size of the population of Jerusalem, which constitutes the most controversial of all ter- ritorial issues. While American Jewish leaders and Israeli activists prepared a massive lobbying campaign in favor of the guarantees, however, there was diminishing confidence in Jerusalem that its tradi- tional support in Congress would remain solid in light of the ringing appeal from the White House. Whatever the outcome, Israeli officials believe it is unlikely that Israel will back out of the peace con- ference, a move that would cost not only the loan guar- antees but also possibly its relationship with Washing- ton. At the same time, there is an acknowledgement that the outcome of this titanic test of strength could have profound consequences: Vic- tory would strengthen Israel's hand in dealing with Mr. Baker and enhance its bargaining position at the negotiating table; defeat would weaken Israel and render it more susceptible to pressure. 21999 & COVER ra-J between Israel and its Arab neighbors, undermining the potential for a political resolution based on ter- ritorial concessions. As Israeli peace groups leaked Housing Ministry documents indicating plans for unprecedented set- tlement activity, Prime Min- ister Shamir was reported to have asked Israel's intel- ligence agencies to keep him informed of Mr. Sharon's ac- tivities. Bulldozers are now re- ported to be working up to 18 hours a day on sites throughout the West Bank, constructing roads and preparing the ground for the arrival of prefabricated houses to accommodate tens of thousands of new settlers. According to the mass- circulation Hebrew- language daily Yediot Aharanot, Mr. Sharon's grand design involves the establishment of more than 100,000 new homes in the territories by the end of the decade at a cost of some $14 million. The plans not only call for a massive expansion of existing settlements in the coming year, but also for the longer-term creation of a string of strategically placed new towns which are in- tended to irrevocably erase the old Green Line, Israel's border before the Six Day War. One urgent phase of the plans involves doubling the size of the 15,000-strong Jewish population on the Golan Heights over the next CHILDREN'S ORCHARD A Children's Resale Boutique CASH for your children's outgrown clothing, accessories and toys Call for an appointment Today 626-0690 • • We are winning. i 'AMERKAN CANCER SOCIETY' • 11P• • In a few years, if and when it has managed to rebuild its armed forces as well as its economy and international relations, Iraq will again become a central player in Middle East politics. Its posi- tions then cannot be predicted because by then Iraq may be ruled by a dif- ferent regime. The fact re- mains that, since the late 1920s, Iraq's attitude toward the idea of a Jewish state has always been as hostile as that of Syria, and much more hostile than those of Egypt and Jordan. -This attitude is not likely to change radical- ly even under a new regime. Yet thanks to the Gulf war, for a few years Iraq's ability to harm Israel and to sabotage the peace process has been curtailed. Amatzia Baram, a professor at Tel Aviv University, author of Culture, History, and Ideology in the Formation of Ba'thist Iraq, 1968-1989 and one of the world's leading authorities on Iraq, examines the effects of the Gulf war on Iraq and Israel in a newly released publication titled Israel and Iraq after the Gulf War, published by the American Jewish Committee. The booklet is one in a series of AJC papers on interna- tional perspectives. Professor Baram notes that when the Iraq-Iran War end- ed in August 1988, Iraq had the largest army in the Mid- dle East with 1.5 million soldiers, 700 combat aircraft, 580 helicopters, 6,000 tanks, 5,000 artillery pieces, hun- dreds of ground-to-ground missiles capable of reaching Israel and several score mobile missile launchers, and a significant chemical and