gINFINITI
Of Farmington Hills
INFINITI OF FARMINGTON HILLS IS RANKED NUMBER 1
NATIONALLY FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IN SALES & SERVICE
1996 J30
1996 130
$399*
NO MONEY DOWN:
Attitude Adjustment
Is Slowly Developing
DR. KENNETH W. STEIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS
CD, Power Windows/Locks, Tilt, Cruise, Air, Dual Air
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$39
Auto, Air, Dual Airbags, ABS, Power Winaows, Locks,
Tilt, Cruise, CD/Cassette, Alloy Wheels, Dual Power
Seats, Remote Entry, 190 HP V-6, Leather, Moonroof.
1996 G20
1996 Q45
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V-8, Power Windows, Locks, Tilt, Cruise, Air, Dual Air Bags,
ABS, Alloy Wheels, Built-In Alarm, Leather, Power Sunroof &
Remote Entry. Traction Control, Memory Seat
Auto, Air, ABS, Alarm, Dual Air Bags, Power Windows & Locks,
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Power Moonroof.
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INFINITI
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<A6 11) 24355 HAGGERTY ROAD • (810) 471-2220 • BETWEEN 10 MILE & GRAND RIVER
* 36 mo. closed end lease on G20, J30, Q45. 39 mo. lease on 130. 12,000 miles per year allowed. G20, J30 12c per mile overage. 130 15c
per mile overage. Leases require. SO down on 130, $2,500 down on Q45, $3,000 down on J30, S1,500 down on G20. 1st mo. payment doc.,
title, lic., acq. fee, sec. dep., plus applicable taxes due at inception. Lessee has option but is not obligated to purchase at lease end. All
leases subject to credit approval, factory programs & vehicle availability. Standard Guaranteed Auto Protection included. Excludes prior
sales & leases. — Plus all applicable taxes, title, license & fees.
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I
t's been a long, hard road to-
ward peace in the Middle
East. But with all of the an-
guish and rancor, are Arab at-
titudes toward Israel changing?
Yes, slowly, but with severe
reservations about accepting a
long-term peace with Israel.
Small but important shifts are
evident. Changing attitudes have
created major policy divisions
within Arab states about the de-
gree and magnitude of Arab state
relations with Israel.
Such findings are critical be-
cause, with Israel's national elec-
tions next week, no matter who
wins, Israel must chart policies
to take into account continuity
and changes in Arab attitudes —
and to see if these changes are
long-lasting and deep or merely
ephemeral.
Contributing to the absence of
Arab unity in dealing with Israel
has been Jerusalem's policy of ne-
were done of Arabs living in
states surrounding Israel (except
Egypt), and of Palestinian Arabs
living in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
Arab endorsement of Arab-Is-
raeli negotiations emerges not
because of a newly discovered
love for Israel or for her policies,
but because of a growing prag-
matic belief that there is no al-
ternative for the time being.
Though thoroughly vilified by
Arab leaders and in Arab edito-
rials for her recent shelling of
southern Lebanon, neither Arab
states with diplomatic ties to Is-
rael, nor those in the process of
negotiating relations with
Jerusalem, have severed diplo-
matic ties.
Recently, Professor Hilal
Khashan of the American Uni-
versity of Beirut published Part-
ner Or Pariah? Attitudes Toward
Israel in Syria, Lebanon, and Jor-
dan. The mono-
graph, issued by
the prestigious
Washington Insti-
tute for Near East
Policy, is perhaps
without precedent
and the findings
enlightening.
Undertaken in
1993 and 1994,
Professor Khashan
compared opinion
poll data among se-
lected segments of
the Lebanese, Syr-
ian, Jordanian, and
expatriate Pales-
tinian populations.
He found that the
percentage of Lev-
antine Arabs who
support the peace
process has in-
creased signifi-
cantly since 1993.
Such support, he
wrote is particu-
larly noticeable
among Jordanian
and Palestinian
professionals living
in Amman and
gotiating With each Arab partner Maronite Christians living in
separately.
Lebanon.
Recent and reliable polling
For those supporting the peace
data reveal that among impor- process, of the Lebanese sur-
tant segments of Arab popula- veyed, of the professionals sur-
tions that surround Israel, veyed in 1994, 60 percent of the
minimum but significant support Shia, 40 percent of the Sunni,
for the peace process exists. In- and 82 percent of the Maronite
dependently undertaken studies Christians supported the peace
process. He found similar sup-
Dr. Kenneth W. Stein is professor
port among 45 percent of the pro-
of Near Eastern history and
fessionals in Damascus, 66
political science and director of
percent in Amman, and 63 per-
the Middle East Research
cent among professional expa-
Program Emory University.
triate Palestinians.