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Write or call (313)352-0208. •Spacious, elegant apartments •Flexible transportation service Name oa •Restaurant style dining nightly •24-hour concierge Address •Weekly housekeeping service 'Valet parking State Zip •Weekly linen service •Snack shoppe Phone ( •Full activities & events calendar •Full service hair salon MAIL TO: 24111 CIVIC CENTER DRIVE, SOUTHFIELD, MI 48034 A PREMIER RENTAL RETIREMENT COMMUNITY MARV SAYS SAVE FROM -) 20% TO 50%* CUSTOM WALL MIRROR SPECIALISTS TUB & SHOWER ENCLOSURES MIRRORED BIFOLD OR SLIDING DOORS ( (INSULATED GLASS REPLACED j • TABLE TOPS • STORM DOORS & WINDOWS • PATIO DOOR WALLS REPLACED • STORMS & SCREENS REPAIRED VISIT OUR SHOWROOM 'Suggested List Price MOBIL AUTO GLASS SERVICE "Barbara Kopitz designs dreams to come true . . The Detroit News Barbara Kopitz Design Associates, Inc. Residential & Commercial Interior Design & Furnishings Barbara Kopitz, ASID 355 S. Woodward Suite 280 Birmingham, Michigan 48009 • ■ ■ 644.0700 By Appointment Barry's Let's Rent It tae :74 ;c 7 PARTIES EXCLUSIVELY • Tents • Tables • Chairs • China • Paper Goods as TIRES & ACCESSORIES GLASS & AUTO TRIM CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph 333-2500 Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park 4393 ORCHARD LAKE RD. N. OF LONE PINE IN CROSSWINDS I 855-0480 4 010610110.8.006mmimmommummaP. 1 page 9 wing opposition parties, Mr. Rabin and his ministers counter, with satisfaction, that it was the Likud's patri- arch, Menachem Begin, who , signed the treaty authorizing the Palestinian police, once autonomy were established. To that argument, Knesset member Ron Nachman, may- or of Ariel and the only settler in the Likud's Knesset fac- tion, says, "Just because Men- achem Begin made a mistake, does that mean we have to make the same mistake?" The government maintains that Palestinian police would have law enforcement au- thority only over Palestinian cities and villages, and that the Jewish settlements would continue to be policed and protected by the Israeli police and army. But what about on the roads between the Jewish set- tlements and Palestinian ar- eas? Who would have authority there? Who would settle a dispute between a Jew and a Palestinian? Even Elyakim Rubenstein, head of the Israeli delegation to the talks with the Palestinians, has said he doesn't know the answers to these questions. Another dilemma: who would serve in the Palestin- ian police? Police Minister Shahal has suggested that the force be limited to Pales- tinians with no record of crim- inal or security offenses. The settlers believe it would turn out otherwise. "Anybody with eyes and ears knows that the people who are going to run to Jor- dan and Egypt to train for this police force are going to be the terrorists, the opera- tives of the intifada violence," said Mr. Leiter. "Rational and reasonable people don't allow the terrorists of yesterday to become the policemen of to- day." At a junction north of Jerusalem, the settlers' coun- cil recently staged for the press a mock confrontation between Palestinian police and a car full of Jews. The re- sult: the police cursed and roughed up the Jews, who were sent off humiliated. "We're saying, 'Look, this is really going to happen (if the autonomy talks succeed),' " Mr. Leiter said. The settlers plan to esca- late their demonstrations, to try to draw tens of thousands of protesters as they did at an anti- government rally in Tel Aviv some months ago. Be- yond that, Mr. Leiter said, "we will hopefully move onto a track of civil disobedience, along the lines of the Ameri- can civil rights protests and anti-Vietnam War demon- strations. Israelis are not very adept at civil disobedience, but we're going to have to teach them the art." Mr. Leiter said he hoped the "extreme minority" would not resort to violence. Asked what sort of passive resis- tance he had in mind, Mr. Leiter did not come up with any examples, but said, "What I'm talking about is having thousands of people go to jail." It's sensible to expect that the settlers' opposition will in- tensify in direct proportion to the progress made at the peace talks. If, on the other hand, the peace talks fail, the specter of a Palestinian police force will be gone and the set- tlers' threats of open warfare will end. But, as Armed Forces Chief of Staff Ehud Barak warned, Israel may then be on the way to war. 111 Torah Program Set For Summer Chabad of Michigan would like to acquaint Jewish university students with the Jonas M. and Sadie Rennert Ivy League Torah Study Pro- gram. Now in its ninth year, the program is a summer fellowship in Judaic studies for college men and women. Seventy select students from across North America will live and learn authentic Torah Judaism at a camp set- ting in the Catskill Moun- tains in New York. Students will receive full room and board plus a $900 stipend, while attending an intense program of classes. The cur- riculum will include biblical studies, Hebrew language, Jewish ethics, Jewish law and customs, Talmudic studies, Chassidic philosophy, tutori- als, and independent study projects. The women's program will take place June 13-July 18; the men's program will run July 19-Aug. 22. It is spon- sored by NCFJE and a grant from Ira Leon and Ingeborg Rennert. For information, call Rabbi Silberberg, 855-6170. Iran Is Talk Focus Rabbi Sherwin Wine will con- tinue a series of three talks on Muslim Fundamentalism. He will discuss "Fundamen- talism and Iran" 8:30 p.m. May 10 at the Birmingham Temple.