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November 22, 1991 - Image 120

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-11-22

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

TAKE
TWO.. ■

Locations Where You Need
To Be In The 90's

At last...superior medical office space in
West Bloomfield and Novi. All major
hospitals, from Henry Ford and Sinai to
Providence and Beaumont, are centering
their expansion in this dynamic growth
corridor. Shouldn't you?

WALNUT L+,KE



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New Israeli Ambassador
Close Friend To Bush

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Interiors designed to project an inviting,
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Designed, Built And
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A Window Of Opportunity

Both locations are enjoying booming
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Average household incomes, over $57,000
in Novi and $92,000 in West Bloomfield,
rank among the nation's highest. These well-
educated families seek the very best care
from the specialists of their choice.

When it comes to real estate—timing is
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J

Washington (JTA) —
William Harrop, nominated
to be the next U.S. ambas-
sador to Israel, is a close
friend of President Bush
and, therefore, will likely
have a high level of
credibility in his new post,
officials in the pro-Israel
community say.
Mr. Harrop, a 62-year-old
career foreign service officer,
is a tennis partner of the
president. He is expected to
be confirmed to replace
William Brown before Con-
gress adjourns for the year.
At a routine confirmation
hearing, Mr. Harrop faced
easy questioning from the
two senators on the Foreign
Relations Committee who
showed up: Terry Sanford,
D-N.C., and James Jeffords,
R-Vt.
Mr. Harrop is perceived as
"the president's own man,"
in that he was personally
picked by Mr. Bush rather
than through any significant
screening process, said one
official.
An Israeli Embassy official
said, "I know Bill Harrop. I
met with him. I think he'll
be a wonderful ambassador
like all the other ambas-
sadors were" in recent years.
Mr. Harrop, who joined the
State Department in 1954, is
not considered an ideologue,
although most of his recent
assignments have dealt with
Africa, including a stint
from 1977 to 1980 as deputy
assistant secretary of state
for African affairs.
Mr. Harrop most recently
served as U.S. ambassador
to Zaire and earlier was
chief envoy to Kenya, the
Seychelles and Guinea.
He told the Jewish Tele-
graphic Agency that it is
"nonsense" to think he
would bring a Third World
approach and, by extension,
a pro-Arab approach to the
job.
"I've worked a lot in
Africa, but I've also worked
in Australia" and Italy, Mr.
Harrop said after the hear-
ing. "I think you'll find that
I am very much aware of the
historic relationship with
Israel and the importance of
maintaining that relation-
ship," he said.
The weekly Israeli news
magazine Jerusalem Report
published a story this
summer saying that some
Israeli officials were nervous
about a statement Harrop
made to the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee in
1978, when he reportedly

said he did not consider the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization to be a terrorist
organization.
But one source in the pro-
Israel community dismissed
that statement as not being
"anything of any conse-
quence," since the State
Department has tradi-
tionally argued that the
PLO as a whole does not
engage in terrorism.
The ambassador-designate
has been making the rounds
to Jewish groups during the
last two months, including a
meeting in October with the
Conference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish
Organizations.
At the hearing, Mr.
Harrop vowed to help move
Israel "more toward a true-
market economy and to try

Mr. Harrop is
perceived as "the
president's own
man," in that he
was personally
picked by Mr. Bush
rather than
through any
screening process.

to move beyond some of the
historical restrictions on
economic activity."
Such "rigidities" as
government ownership of
companies and import
quotas are "only gradually
being dismantled," he said.
He also called Israel's 11
percent unemployment rate
"a cause for worry."
When asked about future
U.S. arms sales to the Mid-
dle East, Mr. Harrop said it
is important to "find a way
for each country to be
satisfied by its own defense
and not only be afraid of its
neighbors."
"We have a flat commit-
ment to the Israelis to main-
tain some edge for them
militarily in the area," he
said, adding that Israel
could count on that in the
future.
Mr. Harrop was born in
Baltimore and received a
bachelor's degree from Har-
vard University. He and his
wife, Ann, have four chil-
dren.
Mr. Brown, whO speaks
fluent Hebrew, has been
U.S. ambassador since early
1989, when he replaced
Thomas Pickering, now the
U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations.

--\

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