Make your dreams come true Yassir Arafat and his wife chat with Geid Lundestad, director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute. Smoke And Mirrors Loungewear Sleepwear Lingerie more. The Zamir Chorale of Metropolitan Detroit Invites the entire Jewish Community to try out for membership. Tryouts will take place 7 PM Tues., Jana 3, 1995 and Tues., Jan. 10, 1995 at Hillel Day School, 32200 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills Please call 810-851-2393 for appointment 5 days before tryout time. Experienced choral singers welcome COATS UNLIMITED Oak Park Lincoln Center 26150 Greenfield Road Oak Park, MI 48237 (313) 968-2060 West Bloomfield Orchard Mall 6337 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (313) 855.9955 Troy Troy Commons 871 R Big Beaver Road Troy, MI 48237 528-9966 Israel's Nobel Laureates take the ambiguous route back from Oslo. INA FRIEDMAN ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT illows of verbal smoke wafted around Israel last week as the Israeli gov- ernment, and above all Nobel Laureates Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, pussy-footed around the issue of the how to proceed with the next stage of the Declaration of Principles: the Israel Defense Forces' redeploy- ment in the West Bank. Despite ministerial predictions that "fateful decisions" would be taken in the days to come, a three-session government meet- ing produced little more than a vague communique stating: "The government will continue nego- tiating in line with its commit- ment to the DoP and will act according to its principles and the lessons learned up till now." And so Messrs. Rabin and Peres were able to fly off to Oslo to receive their august honors sheltered by a mantle of am- biguity. But the dilemma posed by the third stage of the Decla- ration of Principles — redeploy- ing the Israel Defense Forces in the West Bank, holding elections for the Palestinian Council, and concluding an interim agreement that will hold until May 1999 — remained unsolved. The complexity of that dilem- ma and the inherent contradic- tion in the government's latest policy statement were summed up by Ha'aretz columnist Uzi Benziman. How can the govern- ment reconcile its commitment to the Declaration of Principles and the "lessons learned up till now," he asked, if "the lesson learned from ... Gaza and Jericho is that Arafat is not seriously act- ing against terrorism and that it's impossible to turn responsibility B for public order throughout the West Bank ... over to the Pales- tinian Authority." `The trap," as Ha'aretz Defense Editor Ze'ev Schiff calls the situ- ation, is deeper than that. "Arafat is regarded as Israel's sole part- ner today and should, therefore, be strengthened. ... But handing him [additional] territory and authority, when he has failed to truly exercise his powers and help wipe out terrorism, is a recipe for failure. And slowing down or sus- pending the process may likewise lead to Arafat's downfall." All of which sounds ominously like the conclusion that Israel is damned if it does and damned if its doesn't. The matter is further compli- cated by the fact that Israel regards each stage of the Dec- laration of Principles as a test the Palestinians must pass before graduating to the next one. "The DoP does not provide for auto- matic transition from one phase to the next," writes Dr. Mark Heller of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv Uni- versity in a study entitled "The Israel-PLO Agreement: What If It Fails? How Will We Know?" But in the Palestinian view, any Israeli attempts to revise the ground rules are essentially violations of the agreement. Before leaving for Oslo, Messrs. Rabin and Peres further clouded the matter of how they intend to resolve these blatant contradictions by expressing opposing views on a number of proposals for enhancing the security of the settlers. So how does the Israeli gov- ernment expect to resolve the problem of both redeploying its