Q DEPORTEES page 51 itality you can build on, a name you can trust. Recognized by Remade r y Mactaiiiw for excellence in design and construction. Quality craftsmanship. Whether it's for your home or business, we take your ideas and bring them to life...with creativity and cost efficiency. Zawize peAbokaa a always ui diepla#14, c% We specialize in design & build for Americans with Disabilities. ADA... Barrier free construction. NATM4111,ASSOCIATION of NuavoeuNG INDUSTRY Regional "CONTRACTOR of the YEAR" QUALITY CONSMUCT1ON RESIDENTIAL-COMMERCIAL INRECON RAIMEIN Call for a FREE estimate: 846-5735 7937 Schaefer Road • Dearborn, MI. Walled Lake Collision, Inc •Free Loaner available during repairs •lifetime Warranty on all work •Paint match guarantee •Hi-Tech Frame & unibody repairs •All Insurance claims honored SHIRT 341)( 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 CHIROPRACTIC WORKS "We are an Alstate and AM Direct Repay Shop!' 2025 Maple ad. (Willies west of Haggerty) • 6244547 Tables • Desks • Bedrooms Wall Units • Dining Rooms SELECTIONS FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME OR OFFICE IN FINE WOODS, LAMINATES, MARBLE, GLASS, AND LUCITE, 52 Ftlr. Muriel Wetsman 661-3838 Coolidge Park Plaza 23120 Coolidge Highway Oak Park, MI 48237 398-1650 Find It All In The Jewish News Classifieds Call 354-5959 bounds of the autonomy area is mentioned in the Camp David accords, where it is referred to gen- erally as "a strong local police force." Just what constitutes "strong" is now a matter of debate between the two sides. Israeli Police Minister Moshe Shahal has spoken of constituting a force of "a few thousand" policemen equipped with "light arms." Mr. Husseini has spoken of a body of 20,000 policemen armed with automatic weapons and perhaps even mortars. Whatever its eventual size and disposition, how- ever, representatives of the settlers in the West Bank have threatened to defy the authority of the Palestinian police — and worse. "If anyone dreams that any settler in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza will lay eyes on an armed Arab and not shoot him, he's mistaken," warned Pinhas Wallerstein, head of the Benjamin Local Council. The control of public land in the territories is an equally sensitive problem — if only because of the distribution of the settle- ments the West Bank. As matters stand, Palestinians control (by virtue of inhabiting or cul- tivating it) some 20 per- cent of the land in the West Bank and Gaza. Jewish settlements account for 6-7 percent; the army directly controls 2 percent; and the remain- ing area is regarded as "state lands." Israel has proposed that for the duration of the interim settlement, the Israeli government and the Palestinian self-gov- erning authority share control of this public land. Until now, the Palestinians have been demanding exclusive authority over not only the state lands, but the Jewish settlements, to avoid what they call the "Swiss-cheese syndrome" — pockets of Israeli sovereignty scat- tered through the area subject to their control. It's hard to imagine Israel ceding control over the settlements — certain- ly not during the interim period. Yet the fate of the state lands is a matter of equal concern to the set- tlers. If the autonomy authority has the right to issue building permits, the settlers say that could choke the settlements by allowing Palestinians to build right up against their perimeters, or desig- nating land for garbage dumps at their entrances, or any number of other "plots" to drive the settlers out by making life (in an area to which so many were drawn by visions of an enhanced "quality of life") unbearable for them. Coping with these and countless other thorny details is the challenge the negotiators will have to meet. Yet despite the many difficulties, there's a budding sense that this Palestinians have been demanding authority over Jewish settlements and other controls. time the two sides are really serious about reach- ing an accommodation. There's even a sense of urgency in the air — a desire to proceed quickly not only to restore the Palestinians' faith in the profitability of negotia- tions, but to exploit the popularity that "separa- tion" (the latest buzz word) enjoys among Israelis. (When last polled, 85 per- cent of the Israeli public was in favor of continuing the closure.) "A bit belatedly," wrote Yoel Marcus in Ha'aretz, "the government has man- aged to ride the wave of disgust and desire to effect a divorce between the two peoples — regardless of how much it costs." Time, therefore, is of the essence — and it now appears that both sides may know it. ❑ Annie Nathan Meyer, a cousin of Emma Lazarus, was one of the pioneer ad- vocates of higher education for women and was one of the founders of Barnard Col- lege.