Reflect Beauty & Dimension with Decorative Glass Products From Our Glass Design and Installation Specialists .. . Table Tops, Glass Furniture, Etched Glass, Custom Pieces & More Media M onitor Press Club To Cite Jailed Palestinian BERL FALBAUM SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS I Unique Framed Mirrors Save 20-50% Visit Our Showroom Today! 22223 Telegraph Road Southfield (South of 9 Mile Road) Or Call: 313 353-5770 For A Free Estimate or Consultation REID GLASS A Clear Reflection of Quality Since 1964 This Week's Special $1199 5 pc. Queen WATERFALL BEDROOM SET Set Includes: 72" Dresser or 72" Armoire LLJ C/) LLJ F- LOW OVERHEAD — NO FANCY SHOWROOM Because of this we are able to offer our quality merchandise diredey to the consumer and pass the savings of up to 60% to You! BeRoomSm•DiNinTABIES •ENTERTAIMMT UMW. COMAIL, SOFA, &DTA= ClioosEftom 100's OF COLORS -Goss, MATTE Laminate .Furniture Manufacturer's Now Open To The Public! O CC F- HOURS: w Wed.,-SaL,10-7 Sun., 12-4 F— 04 tem FURNITURE OUTLET 2599 Crumb Rd., Commerce Twp. • 669-0066 SHIRT N.30X Men's furnishings and accessories 19011 West Ten Mile Road Southfield, Michigan 48075 (Between Southfield and Evergreen) 352.1080 Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Thursday 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. PARKING AND ENTRANCE IN REAR AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' Help us keep winning. gnoring the symbolism and political implications of its action, the National Press Club in Washington this month will bestow one of its highest awards on a Palestinian journalist who is awaiting trial in Israel for allegedly aiding the Is- lamic fundamentalist group Hamas. The writer, Taher Shriteh, was scheduled to have been deported in. December but Israeli officials decided to try him instead. Shriteh works as a freelance writer for several news agencies, including Reuters, the New York Times and CBS. He is charged with possess- ing an unregistered fax ma- chine belonging to a Hamas leader and for giving Hamas Reuter's fax number. Israeli officials say Shriteh also helped the terrorist or- ganization publish their leaf- lets in Jerusalem, and they claim to have information tying him to armed Hamas fugitives for whom he organ- ized a meeting with a foreign diplomat. National Press Club Presi- dent Clayton Boyce, in an in- terview with The Jewish News, confirmed that Shriteh will receive the Freedom of Press award. Boyce said the club acted on the nomination by the Committee to Protect Journalists and a letter it received signed by five or six major news organizations. "I don't think there is any symbolism here," said Mr. Boyce. "We are not making a political statement." Mr. Boyce did not seem to have any first-hand informa- tion about Mr. Shriteh. He said Mr. Shriteh had been arrested several times but faces only one charge — own- ing the fax machine. He had no knowledge about Mr. Shriteh's political activity. And, of course, that is the major point. Should the National Press Club have investigated the nomination a little more thoroughly before making its decision and, most impor- tantly, considered whether it might turn down Mr. Shriteh? Not because he might be in- volved politically with Hamas but because that certainly would make his objectivity suspect. Mr. Boyce said Mr. Shriteh is charged with helping Hamas distribute its material which, he said, is what a jour- nalist is supposed to do. But Mr. Boyce is wrong. His job was to distribute his own material on Hamas, not the organization's propaganda. And, if true, arranging meetings for Hamas hardly reflects impartiality, which is the bedrock of objective journalism. If nothing else, the National Press Club certainly could have waited for the results of the trial. If found innocent, it would have had an even stronger case for honoring Mr. Shriteh. This is the second troubling action taken by the National Press Club concerning Jews in recent years. At the height of the con- troversy about the Rev. Louis Farrakhan and his anti- Semitic remarks, the club in- vited him to address its members, giving Mr. Far- rakhan the privilege of speak- ing from one of the nation's more prestigious podiums. ❑ Fundamentalism Warning Set Amsterdam (JTA) — Israel's President Chaim Herzog, in Holland on an official visit, addressed the Dutch Senate and spoke of the dangers to the entire world of spreading Muslim fundamentalism. Mr. Herzog mentioned in particular the fundamenta- list group Hamas, which Israel has had to face in the administered territories. But Dutch Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers criticized Israel's deportation last December of Hamas ac- tivists' to southern Lebanon as a response to the funda- mentalists' challenge. "It is our impression that the most effective method to combat Hamas opposition to the peace process is to reach early and tangible results, in particular with regard to the living conditions in the oc- cupied areas. "The Netherlands, therefore, supports the con- demnation by the United Nations of the recent depor- tations by Israel," he added.