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December 31, 1993 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-12-31

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

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***ANNOUNCEMENT"'

Australian
Supports Accord

• •• •

Franklin Club Apartments

is celebrating the anniversary
of its beautifully designed
catered living unit.


• • •

• •





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Designed for Seniors who deserve
an independent lifestyle and
need some level of daily assistance
but not total medical care.

• • • • •

• • •

•• •

We extend an open luncheon invitation
to those who wish to inquire about
these services.


• • • 110 •

Please contact the receptionist at
(313) 353 2810 for reservations.

• • • •



•• •

• • •

•• •


• • •

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i

'FRANKLIN
CLUB APARTMENTS

A Luxury Retirement Community

28301 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan 48034

t 1 4P

&

(313) 353-2810

358-2333
FRANKLIN
`v PLAZA

trt

I of Southfield

• PASSPORT
SPECIAL
$ 795
495

1 set



2 Sets

"Must Be Done At The Same Time"
2 Photos per passport (with coupon)

20%-50% off on large
selection of frames

r

FILM PROCESSING

$3.00 OFF 36 exposures
$2.00 OFF 24 exposures
$1.00 OFF 12 exposures

Or
2nd set of prints Free

Not good with any other offer - C-41 process only.

Restore your old photos with our
new in-house computer!

We transfer your old movies, prints & slides to video cassette.

FULL PHOTO SERVICES INCLUDING: BLACK & WHITE, ENLARGEMENT, POSTERS

29215 Northwestern Hwy. at 12 Mile Rd. in Franklin Shopping Plaza

851-5566

Dreg

W. Bloomfield

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Orchard Mall

Evergreen Plaza

559-3580

Southfield

"Serving The Community For 36 Years"

Sydney, Australia (JTA) —
Australia's foreign minister
has reaffirmed that
Australia would not be
recognizing a "State of
Palestine," despite a peti-
tion calling for such recogni-
tion signed by 80 parliamen-
tarians from the ruling
Australian Labor Party.
Foreign Minister Gareth
Evans made his comment
when he said Australia
"remained a strong sup-
porter of the Middle East
peace process."
Mr. Evans said the
Declaration of Principles
signed on Sept. 13 between
Israel and the Palestine Lib-
eration Organization "made
clear that negotiations on
the permanent status of the
occupied territories would
commence no later than the
beginning of the third year
of the interim period of Pa-
lestinian self- government."
He said "it would be quite
premature to anticipate the
outcome at this stage."
Parliamentarians told the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
that the petition had been
promoted and circulated
since April by the PLO
representative in Australia,
Ali Kazak.
Mr. Kazak stepped up the
campaign for Australian
support for recognizing the
"State of Palestine" after
the accord was signed.
The petitioners wrote that
the measure would be
"aiding the peace process," a
claim firmly rejected by the
foreign minister, Israel's
ambassador and Australian
Jewish organizations.

Israel's ambassador to
Australia, Yehuda Avner,
wrote to the 36 federal and
45 state legislators, express-
ing "surprise, indeed,
bewilderment" at the peti-
tion.
He particularly noted sur
prise that it had come "at
this most delicate juncture,
at the very hour when repre-
sentatives of the Palestine
Liberation Organization and
Israel are intensely engaged
in hammering out the final
details of the first phase of
their peace accord."

Colin Rubenstein, edito-
rial chairman of
Australia/Israel Publica-
tions, said the call to recog-
nize the "State of Palestine"
violates "elementary rules
of diplomacy, distorts the
situation and, above all, is
damaging to the current
peace process.



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