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August 05, 1994 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-08-05

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

Art Moran's

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AIR CONDITIONED, ABS & AIRBAG

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r. defr., much more. Stk #2405F

AM/FM stereo, pwr. locks, rr. defr., 2.3 OHC, red. cloth buck-
et seats, fog lamps, trunk/fuel tank rel., carpeted mats, anti-lock
brakes, oust. whl. covers, sport mirrors and more. Stk. #6739

SALE PRICE

$21,339

$2777

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$

MSRP
ART MORAN SAVINGS
REBATE
PRIME TIME REBATE

1 7,062*

$1000 $2000 $4000
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DOWN DOWN DOWN DOWN

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LEASE
SPECIALS

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i

windJlocks, air,
tilt, alum. whls.,
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#5177F

Arab Media Warming
Up To Peace

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w9.
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world is softening its stand
toward Israel is the recep-
tion Arab media gave the
accords that Israeli and Jordan-
ian officials signed in Washing-
ton last week.
Not surprising was that in Jor-
dan, editorials and commentaries
largely supported King Hussein's
move, although some skepticism
was voiced against complete nor-
malization with Israel. Much
more startling was that Syrian
television broadcast the entire
ceremony live from Washington
— including Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin's speech. But a
commentator on Damascus Ra-
dio said Syria wants "a just
peace" and denied that partial
and separate agreements have
put the region on the road to
peace.
The Syrian newspaper, A-
Thawra, editorialized that for Is-
rael to agree to the principle of
withdrawal means dismantling
settlements from occupied terri-
tories, withdrawing from steps to
"Judaicize Jerusalem" — and
ending attempts to make "sepa-
rate and flawed agreements." In
what may have been a reference
to what it perceives as American
strong-arming to get Syria to ne-
gotiate with Israel, the paper also
said that Syria cannot be "forced"
to do what it does not want to do
and that the country "is in con-
trol of matters, and the keys to
regional security are all in its
hands."
In Saudi Arabia, Al-Madinah
suggested that the Washington
summit may advance talks be-
tween Syria and Israel. Al-
Riyadh stated that despite
difficulties in making a peace be-
tween Israel and Syria and
Lebanon, there is no turning back
from the peace process. It also

suggested that the Israeli-Jor-
danian agreement could be a
model for Israeli accords with
Syria and Lebanon "if other par-
ties show psychological and men-
tal readiness to the same extent
for a real and serious wish for a
just, comprehensive peace."
And it scolded Arab leaders for
not following earlier the exam-
ples of President Habib Bour-
guiba of Tunisia or Egypt's late
president, Anwar Sadat. If these
leaders' ideas regarding peace
with Israel had been emulated,
stated Al-Riyadh, the Arabs
might have had "a smaller loss"
of territory and of lives.
Another Syrian newspaper, A-
Kadh, said Israel must under-
stand that Arabs are determined
to "march on the road" to a peace
that must be comprehensive and
that progress on one track in-
creases chances of progress on the
others.
But as expected, Iran did not
gush with unrestrained enthusi-
asm at Israel and Jordan's qua-
si-peacemaking. Tehran Radio
said Jordan's signature on a
peace agreement is the equiva-
lent of officially recognizing Israel
and that it grants the Jewish
state equal rights to the waters
of the Jordan River. Moreover, it
advances the American aim of
preserving the "occupying enti-
ty" in the region and exerts pres-
sure on Syria and Lebanon.
It also made the point that at
the very moment that Prime
Minister Rabin and King Hus-
sein were shaking hands in
Washington, Israel attacked civil-
ians in South Lebanon. This
"proved," stated the official gov-
ernment radio outlet, that peace
agreements, be they bilateral or
multi-lateral, will not solve the
region's problems "until the Zion-
ist regime is restrained."

Who's The Best
Religion Writer?

t's new. It's pointed. It's sassy.
And it's tough.
"It" is the 1994 edition of
Forbes Media Guide's 500: A
Review of the Nation's Most In-
fluential Journalists, a blow-by-
blow rating of some of the
country's more influential news-
paper and magazine writers.
Although this is the guide's
eighth edition, it marks the first
time it rates religion writers. Tops
in this category was Peter Stein-

I

fels, the New York Times' na-
tional religion writer who got 3
1/2 stars (out of a possible four
stars). The guide praised him for
being "a thorough reporter and
clear writer ... [who] crafts solid
stories on the news of the day."
(Readers of the Times, by the
way, will have to get by without
Mr. Steinfels' writing starting in
September, when he goes on a
one-year sabbatical.)
Three religion writers from

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