FINE HOME FURNISHINGS AND ACCESSORIES NEW AND "PREVIOUSLY LOVED" • LIGHTING • ART • RUGS • CRYSTAL SIGNMENTS 430 THREE • Terrific selection of gifts for every occasion... always 30% off • Fine designer furniture and accessories... always 20% off • Professional Interior Design Service • Complimentary gift wrapping • Personal, courteous service * most mfrs. Sosa41 k Shop Shaavacil 6644 Orchard Lake Road at Maple Tue-Wed-Sat 10-6 • Sun 12-5 West Bloomfield Mon-Thur-Fri 10-9 • (810) 855-1600 130 Opposition To PNC Decision Jerusalem (JTA) — Not all Is- raeli leaders are sharing Prime Minister Shimon Peres' enthusi- asm for the PalestineNational Council's decision to amend its charter. Prime Minister Shimon Peres hailed the vote in Gaza, saying, "Maybe ideologically it is the most important change in the last 100 years." Mr. Peres said, "The Pales- tinians removed all that was written in the covenant as re- quired by Israel in the 1993 let- ters of mutual recognition" signed by Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat and Israeli Prime Minis- ter Yitzhak Rabin, who was as- sassinated Nov. 4. But Likud opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu played down the vote's significance. "I would be cautious about giv- ing unlimited credit to this step," Mr. Netanyahu said. The PNC "gave a committee the power to amend clauses sometime in the future which it rules run counter" to the Israel- Palestinian agreements, he told Israel Radio. In its decision, the PNC did not adopt a new covenant, but ap- pointed a legal committee to draw one up. The new document is not expected to be completed for several months. The Israeli group PeaceWatch, which monitors implementation of the Israeli-Palestinian peace accords by both sides, also said the PNC decision fell short of what was required by those agreements. "The PNC did not actually amend the covenant, but instead approved in principle that changes would be made, without specifying which clauses would be changed, in what manner or - by what date," the group said in a statement. In legal terms, "there is a sharp difference between calling for something to change and ac- tually implementing the changes," PeaceWatch added. Deportation For U.S. Man? New York (JTA) — The U.S. Jus- tice Department has begun de- portation proceedings against a New Jersey man who promoted the persecution of Jews in Hun- gary during World War II. The proceedings against Fer- enc Koreh, 86, were launched April 19, after a federal court up- held a 1994 decision to strip Mr. Koreh of his U.S. citizenship. Mr. Koreh, a retired Radio Free Europe producer and broad- caster, admitted two years ago in U.S. District Court in Newark to being the founder and editor of a virulently anti-Semitic, anti- American newspaper between 1941 and 1944 in Hungary. "Propagandists such as Koreh laid the foundation for Nazi geno- cide by fostering a climate of hate in which inhumane measures could be carried out without protest," Eli Rosenbaum, direc- tor of the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations, said in a statement after the de- portation proceedings began. Some 435,000 Hungarian Jews were sent to Nazi concen- tration and death camps between - May and July of 1944. In February, the 3rd U.S. Cir- cuit Court of Appeals upheld the lower court's decision regarding Mr. Koreh's citizenship. The court noted that as editor of the Hungarian newspaper, Mr. Koreh fostered "a climate of anti- Semitism in northern Transyl- vania which conditioned the Hungarian public to acquiesce, to encourage and to carry out the abominable anti-Semitic policies of the Hungarian government in the early 1940s." The Justice Department al- leges that Mr. Koreh served as a press officer and then deputy sec- tion chief in the information sec- tion of the Hungarian government's Ministry of Na- tional Defense and Propaganda and that he was an editor and writer for three other pro-Nazi, anti-Semitic publications. Terrorists Remain A Threat Jerusalem (JTA) — Police Com- missioner Assaf Hefetz has warned that terrorist groups may launch attacks in order to change the course of Israel's May 29 na- tional elections. Addressing a meeting of police commanders to review prepara- tions in the run-up to the elec- tions, Mr. Hefetz said that even though Israeli security forces have cracked down on terrorist groups, some of these groups may still be able to carry out attacks. Mr. Hefetz said special secu- rity measures were being taken. Recently, police found the body of a terrorist in eastern Jerusalem. They say he was killed when a bomb he was preparing exploded prematurely. Police think that the terror- ist was on his way to carry out a suicide bombing against Is- raelis in downtown Jerusalem. The man planned to detonate the explosive, which was estimated to have weighed more than 20 pounds, at a bus stop or on a bus, police said. Support for the government of Prime Minister Shimon Pere slipped after the series of suicide bombings in late February and early March.