"OFFICIAL '92 CLEARANCE" I MEDIA MONITOR I "WE SELL FOR LESS & THAT'S A FACT!" Was Jim Baker Anti- Israel at Princeton? NEW '93 CONTINENTAL ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Executive Series Special to The Jewish News L #4 Volume Dealer in U.S,A. Bu, $27,705 fi30093 FULL LOADED PREFERRED EQUIP PKG. 952A LOADED WITH LUXURY • oca L vccoceave,ne.., NEW '93 TOWN CAR 2 0% 14 Ict01-- BUY $29 111 Executive Series Ultimate Luxury! 300,50 FULLY LOADED WITH LOTS OF OPTIONS PARTS & 4178 Highland Road SERVICE (M-59 near Pontiac Lake Rd.) Open 7:30am-8pm Closed 6pm Friday WATERFORD Advertised lease prices require 20% down. Option to buy after 24 mos. All rebates included in advertised buy price rebates assigned to dealer. All leases require 1st month and sec. deposit. 11 , per mile charged to lessee in excess of 15,000 per year. Lessee responsible for excess wear and tear. See dealer for exact amount down and sec. dep. on all 24 mo. leases. Sale ends 6 p.m. Fri., Oct. 2, 1992. CALL NOW! 1-800-ME4F ARR Toll Free 24-hour message center Leave name & phone number for quick response INTERFAITH UNAFFILIATED FAMILIES A 25 session educational experience open to children 5-18 years old whose parents desire to give them an opportunity to learn more about their Jewish heritage. STEPPING STONES TO A JEWISH ME Starts October 25, 1992 1:30 to 3:30 PM at Temple Emanu-El, Oak Park, MI 48237 TUITION FREE • Parent Orientation OCTOBER 4, 1992 REGISTER NOW!!! 661-5700 A community project for children of unaffiliated interfaith families developed by the Conservative and Reform Rabbis of Metropolitan Detroit with assistance from the Jewish Welfare Federation and the Max Fisher Foundation. Now Scheduling For Sprinkler Winterization RICK WALD Call For Details 489-5862 eave it to Vanity Fair to unearth the not par- ticularly prescient thesis that James Baker did in his senior year at Princeton. Mr. Baker, late of the State Department and cur- rently the head of George Bush's reelection effort, made his bid for history by getting Arabs, Palestinians and Israelis to sit down at the same negotiating table. But Mr. Baker had been preoccupied with the Middle East as long ago as 1952, when he was a senior in col- - lege. For his thesis, according to a Vanity Fair profile of the president's best friend, Mr. Baker addressed the ques- tion of Israel's founding and "concluded, on balance, that the United States had erred in supporting it." The thesis, a study of the post-World War II British Labour Party, argued that Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin was justified in press- ing for a Palestinian state that would incorporate a "Jewish National Home," but would be dominated by an Arab minority. "Ernie Bevin was as con- cerned as the next fellow about the suffering of the Jews," wrote undergrad Baker, but "in his usual realistic manner, was look- ing to the future . . . Bevin realized that supporting the two million Zionists would mean incurring the enmity of the 60 million Moslems in the Arab states surrounding Palestine .. . "History has already James Baker: Undergrad Mideast discontent. begun to vindicate him," stated young Baker, noting the anti-British, anti-French and anti-American feelings brewing in the Middle East in the early 1950s. "If we lose Near Eastern oil, air- bases, and other strategic concessions, it will be small consolation, indeed, to know • that we can count Palestin- ians among those nations which are friendly toward us." Vanity Fair writer Mar- jorie Williams comments that "Baker seems to feel no innate sympathy toward Israel . . . and it possible that this coolness may be to some degree a function of his in- sular Wasp background." But she concedes that "however coldly Baker may have continued to view the power struggles of the Mid- dle East, it is hard to quarrel with the results of his efforts there. The (peace) talks resumed in August — along lines largely chosen by Israel." Still Human After All These Years To mark the 10th anniver- sary of the massacre in the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatilla in Leb- anon (for which Israel bore partial complicity because its soldiers let Lebanese Christian troops enter the camps during the 1982 war in Lebanon), the Washington Post's Style section featured a lengthy profile of Mounir Mohammed, a 22-year-old survivor of the massacre who lost his mother, a brother, and four sisters in the carnage. Mr. Mohammed, now liv- ing in a Virginia suburb of Washington, was described by Post writer Martha Sher- rill as having a "deadpan face and romantic eyes and uneasy mouth and perfect manners." More important, though, is his sense of com- passion — and his inability for forgive: "He thinks Jews sometimes care more about peace — and about people —than some Arabs. He doesn't think he can forgive the Israelis or the Lebanese. But I would never hurt them, either,' he says. ( rJ