100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

October 02, 1992 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-10-02

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

r.

Complete
Financial
Services

CSTOM
DESIGNED
WOODWORK

A classic chair rail...

PaineWebber
We invest in relationships.

A unique chair to bump

the rail...

JAMES DAVID BESSER

A special room for the
chair that bumps the rail...

Gerald E. Naftaly

Vice President-Investments

UliCOMM011 WOOd14 .ork and
trim for the exceptional
home around the room that
holds the chair that bumps
the rail.

32300 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 150
Farmington Hills, MI 48334

(313) 851-1001 or (800) 533-1407

Timeless design...
Installation that endures.

COMPUTERS 'N MORE i r CivORDPERFECT
33290 W. 14 MILE ROAD

1 41
_ 1"T'f
- —,
or• '

1 . ---' .,.._,

IN MAIL WORKS PLUS
SIMSBURY PLAZA
WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322

•=1:

1

(313) 737.4121

386DX 40

486DX 33

Reg. $289

Exp.

/0/9/92

• Flyers • Image Scanning
• Invitations • Brochures

WITH 256K CACHE

Starting as low as 5 1395

2400 B. INT. MODEM
$41
5 1/4 " DSDD DISKETTES QTY 25 $ 8.75
5 1/4" DSHD DISKETTES QTY 25 $ 11.25
3 1/2" DSDD DISKETTES QTY 25 $ 11.25
3 1/2" DSHD DISKETTES QTY 25 $ 19.95

LT LASERIWASTER

1

$259"

DESKTOP
PUBLISHING

IVITH 64K CACHE
Starting as low as $995

-,8,..t5 rg ,., D , ,

5.1 For DOS

I
I

,

A uthorized Outlet

Come see our 800 DPI
Postscript Printer $1395
or upgrade your HP Laser* $650

.

We Buy & Sell Used Computers

VISA iim

WE SERVICE
MOST PCs

Ca

Callanetics Studios by Maureen
Callanetics' exercises are for every body!






Pram* this ad for
SAO
towards a We&
CALLANFIICS clam

Fast, visible results
Non-impact, gentle and safe
Small, personalized dasses
Transforms stress into energy

Sugar Tree Square, 6235 Orchard Lake Road
West Bloomfield, MI 48322
313-855-3555

• SUNDAY CLASSES NOW AVAILABLE'

Call Bruno Trentacost to view
Our portfolio.
10 years of
designs and installations.
From one-of-a-kind pieces to
complete trim and woodwork
for many exclusive, fine
homes.

(313) 628-1406

WE SHIP
FURNITURE

_51'Paciragittg -Store

2717 Woodward Ave.
(Just No. of Catalpa)
Berkley

542.2500

2523 W. Maple
(at Cranbrook)
Bloomfield Hills

433.3070

3954 Rochester Rd.
(at Wattles)
Troy

680-0993

•Clinical Teaching
•Testing/Evaluation
•Therapeutic Tutoring

545-6677 • 433-3323

LYNNE MASTER, M.Ed

Owner, Director

25201 Coolidge, Oak Park
4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills

6453 Farmington Road
W. Bloomfield

855.5822

A Break For
Grandparents
& Seniors

_..,_

N

Suzy Rons

Science of
SiVv I\ G

DESIGNS UNLIMITED

"THE FINEST IN CUSTOM
CABINETS FOR HOME OR OFFICE"

624-7300

Big Shake-Up On
Foreign Affairs Panel

The Lifestyle Approach
to Weight Control

932-0300

In the Orchard Mall

- -,

Practically
Everything
20%

Off

Show Your
A.A.R.P. Card or Sign Otr Grandparents
Pledge To Receive A Discount.
Get A Jump On The
Holidays!

Mon.-fllurs. 10-5:30, Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-5

74 nil Viosfteted &

7of sit 546fr
z,,,-„ ,,,,,,,R, .,,,,,,„ 5 4 3-3 11 5

Washington Correspondent

T

he recent primary
defeat of Rep. Stephen
Solarz, D-N.Y., means
there will be further radical
changes in the make-up of
the House Foreign Affairs
Committee in the next Con-
gress.
The committee has already
lost several pro-Israel
stalwarts, and its chairman,
Rep. Dante Fascell, D-Fla.,
has announced he will retire
from Congress. The defeat of
Rep. Solarz, who consistent-
ly supported Israel on the
committee, will plunge the
committee into further dis-
array and turn it into a less
predictable body on such
issues as the Middle East.
Other pro-Israel members
who have been defeated in
primaries are Rep. Mel
Levine, D-Calif., Rep. Ed-
ward Feighan, D-Ohio, Rep.
Wayne Owens, D-Utah, and
Rep. John Miller, R-Wash.
Compounding these losses
was the death of Rep. Ted
Weiss the day before the
New York primary.
Plus, five of the corn-
mittee's 10 ranking mem-
bers, including Rep. Howard
Wolpe, D-Mich., will retire
at the end of this session.
Mr. Fascell's likeliest
replacement as committee
chairman is Rep. Lee
Hamilton, D-Ind. The con-
gressman heads the com-
mittee's Europe and the

Rep. Stephen Solarz:
Defeat muddies Foreign Affairs.

Middle East subcommittee
and is regarded as one of the
smartest, most thoughtful
legislators on the Hill. But
he has sometimes taken
tough stands on Israel, and
his independence worries
some pro-Israel activists.
Mr. Hamilton is reportedly
on the short list for Secre-
tary of State if Arkansas
Gov. Bill Clinton gets to the
White House.
If Mr. Hamilton goes, next
in line for the committee's
chairmanship sis Rep. Sam
Gejdenson, D-Conn., a mem-
ber of the House Jewish con-
tingent.
But Mr. Gejdenson is fac-
ing a tough race for reelec-
tion in November. His defeat
could result in a free-for-all
in the battle for the chair-
manship.

(

c= „

The Winner,
Please .. .

It's official: One of the
nation's leading presidential
prognosticators has an-
nounced his pick for
November.
The winner, says political
historian Allan J. Lichtman,
is Arkansas Gov. Bill Clin-
ton. And according to Mr.
Lichtman, Jews will play an
important part in that vic-
tory — even without a seri-
ous effort by Gov. Clinton to
court them.
Lichtman's system for
predicting elections has been
eerily accurate in recent
years. It is based on 13
"keys" to the presidency.
Each key is a simple
"Yes/no" question on issues
like incumbency, the
presence of a viable third
party and crises in foreign
affairs.

Recent bad economic news,
said Mr. Lichtman, tilted the
balance in favor of Mr. Clin-
ton.
Where does the Jewish
community fit into these pro-
jections?
The professor estimated
that up to 80 percent of Jews
will vote for the Democratic
ticket.
Since more Jews than that
are unlikely to vote for Mr.
Clinton no matter how much
his party invests in a
"Jewish strategy," Professor
Lichtman said the governor
must devote only enough
resources on the Jewish
community to avoid any im-
pression that he is slighting
Jews — and to support voter
registration efforts now
underway by a number of
Jewish groups.

CSI

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan