NEWS • WE'VE GOT YOU COVERED BETTER TIM EVER And on September 4 we'll show you why. Only a few short weeks from today you'll open your mailbox to find this fall's fabulous NEW Style Magazine. We've refocused it, redesigned it and refined it into a magazine that reflects the way you live today. It's still a magazine with local flair, refreshingly filled with interesting news and features. This fall's issue will bring you coverage of the latest fashion trends for women, men and children; travel features on Europe's castle hotels and the major tournaments in men's golfing. You'll find depart- ments filled with what's happening in your area, including savvy shopper tips and much more. Simply put, Style is a magazine tailor-made for you So watch for it. Our hot, new Style Magazine is coming your way, September 4th . . . and we've got you covered. STILE The Right People . . . At The Right Times Old _minty Al int ICT 01 1000 Israeli Consul Decries Camp Plaque Bonn (JTA) — Israel's con- sulate in Berlin has lashed out against the state of Thuringia, in what was formerly East Germany, for failing to correct the inscrip- tion on a plaque at the site of a former labor camp where many Jews died. The consulate called it "infamous" that nearly two years after German reunification, the former Dora-Nordhausen camp is marked by a plaque where Communist propaganda still prevails over the historic truth of the Nazi persecution against Jews. In fact, in a situation that is unusual even by the old Communist standards, while there is no tablet mention- ing Jewish persecutees, there is one for "victims from Arab states." The mayor of Nordhausen, Manfred Schroeter, re- sponded to the Israeli charge with an investigation. He said he learned that the Arab commemorative tablet had been erected to kowtow to the Arabs, considered friends and allies by the former East Germany and joined together in the battle against "imperialism and the Jews." Mr. Schroeter said he had been told that no tablet had been dedicated to Jews be- • cause, by East German standards, the Jews were not* considered a separate peo- ple, let alone a nation. Israeli diplomats in Berlin called the tablet an affront and a scandal and urged they town of Nordhausen and the government of Thuringia tit., take immediate action. The Israeli criticism in facto follows an announcement by the state of Thuringia that it will erect- a new plaque at the Buchenwald concentrel tion camp to commemorate the 10,000 Jews who perisli- ed there. 4 Nordhausen officials said the memorial at the former Dora labor camp would be rebuilt anyway. They4 pointed out that plans are being drawn up for memorial that would bell more consistent with historical fact rather than one that reflects Communist ideology. Thousands of Jews, along with French, Belgian and, other countries' citizens, comprised the 60,000 slave laborers in the underground., arms factory where, under wretched conditions, they, toiled to build V-2 missiles, to be used against Britain. A third to one-half the prisoners there died becau4 of the inhumane working 4 conditions. Right Wing Plans Settlement Activity Jerusalem (JTA) — Jewish settlers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, outraged at the government's freeze on new settlements, are seek- ing the formation of a right- wing shadow government to help promote a drive to fund continued settlement activi- ty. The daily Yediot Achronot reported that proposed members of the shadow Cabinet include former Min- isters Ariel Sharon and Moshe Katsav, Knesset members Binyamin Netanyahu and Ze'ev (Benny) Begin, and Rabbi Haim Druckman, a former Knesset member. The settlers said they would establish contacts with Diaspora Jewry and with foreign governments as part of an overseas informa- tion campaign. Despite government cur- tailment of construction in the territories, work con- tinues without interruption at such sites as Eli, Talmon, Shiloh and Beit El in the Samaria region of the . West Bank, they said. Meanwhile, Rafael Eitart leader of the right-wing op- position Tsomet party, 1 charged in an Israeli army radio interview over the weekend that Prime Min ister Yitzhak Rabin had sold Israel in exchange for U.S. loan guarantees, foreclosing any possibility of his party's1 joining the coalition. Mr. Rabin had met with., Mr. Eitan prior to his depar- ture for the United States, leading to speculation that negotiations with Tsomet ono joining the government would resume on his return. But a day after the prime minister arrived home &mit Washington, Mr. Eitan vetoed continued negotig: tions with Labor. He blasted Labor's settlement policies.