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February 10, 1995 - Image 23

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-02-10

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

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tricts have no plans to sell any
buildings.
Birmingham Public Schools is
considering the sale of two of their
elementary schools in the
Inkster-Maple Road area, too far
for Darchei Torah and Akiva.
"Ninety percent of our student
body is in Southfield and Oak
Park," Dr. Beneson said. "Ideal-

One kindergarten class has al-
ready been moved to the boys
school in Southfield to allow more
space for older grades.
Also, the boys school has just
shelled out $1 million to complete
a renovation and expansion.
"The trick is going to be how to
pay for it and where to put it,"
Rabbi Mayerfeld said. "We have
to figure out how to do this on a
shoestring budget."
As for Hillel, the Federation
task force is waiting for the
school's parent-based study group
to deliver a recommendation on
a potential move to the Jewish
Community Campus at Maple
and Drake roads.
The school's task force was
spurred by a $5 million proposed
donation from Oakland Mall
ly, we would like to stay within owner and developer Jay Kogan.
the boundaries of our student The donation carries the stipula-
body."
tion that the school move from its
The challenge for Bais Yaakov current Middlebelt Road and
is different. With a population of Northwestern Highway location.
approximately 410 girls, the
'We will not even discuss Hillel
school is trying to figure out until they make a decision," Fed-
where to add classroom space. eration's Ms. Sherman said. ❑

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FEBRU ARY

"We don't expect 100 percent
results, only effort," he said.
"We demand a more concerned
reaction."
In addition to NJCRAC dele-
gates, ambassadors from Egypt,
Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia and
Qatar and the Washington rep-
resentative of the PLO attend-
ed the Peres and Sha'ath
speeches.
In contrast to Mr. Peres' plea
for continued support for the
peace process, Mr. Netanyahu
called for an immediate halt in
negotiations with the PLO and a
reworking of the accords with the
Palestinians. Mr. Netanyahu,
who has been topping Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Rabin in recent
opinion polls among the Israeli
public, received a standing ova-
tion from about one-third of the.
plenum delegates when he called
for an overhaul of the peace
process.
Mr. Netanyahu called Yassir
Arafat's Palestinian Authority a
"dictatorial regime" and labeled
its police force "terrorists."
The peace process is "leading
to the creation of a huge terror
base" in the West Bank that
amounts to the "planting of a
huge bomb in the Middle East
that will explode on all of us," he
said.
Mr. Netanyahu dedicated
about half of his 45-minute
PEACE VISIONS page 24

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Washington (JTA) — Two of the
chief architects of the Israel-
Palestinian peace agreement and
one of its leading opponents of-
fered sharply different visions
this week for the future of rela-
tions between Israel and the
Palestine Liberation Organiza-
tion.
One after the other, Israeli For-
eign Minister Shimon Peres;
Nabil Sha'ath, minister of plan-
ning for the Palestinian Author-
ity; and Likud Party leader
Benjamin Netanyahu addressed
some 800 people gathered for the
opening sessions of the National
Jewish Community Relations Ad-
visory Council's annual plenum
here.
Speaking after a standing ova-
tion, Mr. Peres called on Ameri-
can Jews to extend "clear and
unwavering" support for the
peace process.
Israel is waging a "battle for
peace" in the face of terrorism,
the foreign minister said.
"We have to fight for peace as
we fight to win wars," he said.
"We need to fill the political
framework of peace with eco-
nomic progress."
The people of the Middle East
need to be shown that "peace is
not just a ceremony of politi-
cians," he added.
Mr. Peres also called on the
PLO to "give a 100 percent effort
to combat terrorism."

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