second-grade students to
write what they knew about
the peace conference and
what they would tell Prime
Minister Shamir: "We should
go and argue and not leave
until we have peace," said one.
"Dear Mr. Shamir, it was wor-
thwhile going to the con-
ference. Don't give up," wrote
another. "What do they want
from us? We're such a small
country, how can we give up
land?" said a third.
At the David Raziel Youth
Village, a residential junior
high school in Herzliya, af-
filiated with the Youth Aliyah
network of the Jewish Agen-
cy, principal Dalia Bashan
said, "We brought everyone to
the auditorium to see the
opening of the conference —
live. The air was charged with
tension and expectation and
the students expressed deep
concern about what was hap-
pening."
An Israeli delegate to the
conference came to speak
with the children in Eyal and
Rans' class. "He was op-
timistic," said Eyal. "He said
that the Arabs wanted peace,"
added Ran, "but making
peace is very difficult. He met
with some Arabs from the
Jordanian delegation and
said that they were very nice.
Maybe we have to get to know
each other to bring peace."
Elad, a fifth-grade student
at the same school said, "I
learned a lot about who was
at the conference and why
they were there. I think it's
important for us to know
what happens in the world.
Because if there's a war, it
will come to our area and
maybe someone in my family
will get hurt."
Let us hope that the peace
conference was the beginning
of an unprecedented change
in the politcal, military,
economic and social relation-
ship between Israel and her
Arab neighbors. As the in-
heritors of today's decisions, it
is imperative that Israel's
children learn about and
understand the harsh
realities continually facing
their country.
❑
May the coming year be
filled with health and
happiness for all our
family, friends
and customers.
1
Ethiopians
Reach Accord
Jerusalem (JTA) — Ethio-
pian religious leaders won a
pledge for fuller recognition
this week and agreed to end
a two-week strike outside
the Prime Minister's Office.
The kessim agreed to a
compromise proposal under
which they will undergo a
study program of up to a
year.
,
ii
-to*
'"•.-Ifiiii!0
oNoolei
aNiur
io'IN woo!'
\,,,,iii
0 -No
moN - of.-
- 0 00
-
-
-
o•
. - - 0
,\01•
0
lo.2
oi
N
0
0.
' 0.
s•AN,„,,,e-100,,,
iiiii;
IN•010.
fiii!
411001
";,,:o
0110%%'-iii
1
°1-
0411
1114.— N‘N \
- 1 IIIIT
r N gi i• •
.. s-N'
N.-
SUPERIOR BUICK - GMC TRUCK
and
NATIONWIDE AUTO BROKERS
WALTER, ALLEGRA & SARI SCHWARTZ
BRIAN & AARON
All of us at
DESIGNS UNLIMITED
wish everyone a
joyous and prosperous
New Year
624-7300
HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO OUR
CUSTOMERS
& FRIENDS
.rate
Southfield Plaza
Southfield Rd. & 12 1/2 Mile
WZPS
N EWS
fi °ill
,
Irfi
fi faittoolf
wirtogio Too
11111 oaktflf" 11111,1
11/1.11 ,•••1111.10/01
iilo 0,-/Ar.0010Nijoisg,
0 viO ,
0110
00001 ,. iiio
op ,,,,,,,,,I,
Bridal Boutique
(313) 557-2670
Happy New Year
from*
BA B
661-CUTE
YOU
Best Wishes
to all of our
clients L friends for a
Happy ( Healthy New Year
form all of us
at
The Principal Financial Group
Ron LeVine, Agency Manager
Marty Davidson, Assistant
Steve LeVine, Management Assistant
Paul Alekman ❑ Jack Baroff
Jeffery Salz
Paul Davidson ❑ Burt Gold
Jerry Kaufman ❑ Sue Bornstein Hodess
❑
1700 N. Woodward, Suite 200, Bloomfield Hills
645-6770
T
Wish Their
MIKE it MARY MUS
Friends
A
Very Healthy
And
Happy
New Year
89
Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.
September 25, 1992 - Image 89
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-09-25
Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.