I'lirCHLAIC, 900 REDUCTION page 137 Why Lease A 19G When You Can Lease A '97 For Less? NEW '97 960 LUXURY SEDAN, LOADED WITH WHAT MATTERS Per Month 24 Months Zero Cap Cost Reduction 8 7 5 `96 9604D,. D W Sale Price $29 9 MSRP $34,850 Stock# 1412 R A N D S ON S NTCOLATCO Maple Rd. West of Haggerty 624-0400 http://www.stoneage.com/dwyer *24 mo. closed end lease based on approved credit. Lessee resp. for excess wear & tear. Option to purchase at end of lease end at a price to be determined at inception. Due at inception 1st mo. pmt. S525, sec. dep. $495, acq. fee, tax , title & plates. To get total multiply pmt. by term plus fees. Prior sales & lease excluded. Tug Of War BUBARU® Israeli and Syrian leaders are trying to pull each other closer to their positions. TheBeauofAll-WheelDrive: NEW '96 LEGACY WAGON Back To School With All Wheel Drive • All Wheel Drive • Roof Rack INA FRIEDMAN 2 in stock C/D 138 SONS SUBARU Maple Rd. West of Haggerty 624-0400 El fl ±: T H- MAC RIM 11 NIL E MN MOM UJ Open `til 9p.m. on Mondays & Thursdays; and Saturdays until 4 p.m. A LI M re, P 01.1 SITI AND CC LU DWYER I ..39 7V11 O CONVENIENT HOURS ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT inyamin Netanyahu's lication Jane's Sentinel revealed method for bringing Pres- sobering details of Syria's missile ident Hafez el-Assad back capacity and biological and chem- to the negotiating table ical warfare programs, rating the latter as the most advanced in has been mercurial. First, he suggested to Mr. As- the Arab world. It has long been known that sad that the West would add Syr- ia to its list of "rogue states" that Syrian missiles can hit targets use terrorism as a key foreign throughout Israel. Now there are policy instrument. Then he tried signs that some of Syria's Frog- to woo Mr. Assad by publicly lav- 7 missiles already are fitted with _ / ishing compliments on him dur- chemical warheads. Coupled c___\ ing a visit to King Hussein in Jordan. Most recently, he at- tempted to outwit Mr. Assad by offering to pull Israeli troops out of South Lebanon — and then mocked him / for rejecting it. In his latest plan, according to Israeli press reports, he has proposed creating a Middle Eastern Re- gional Security Sys- tern with Syria and Israel at its heart. News of the plan President Clinton at a meeting with Hafez el-Assad. came soon after the Would failed peace with Israel mean Syria becomes British military pub- "a rogue state"? B 161 999 -Pius Tax • Automatic Trans. • Mud Flaps, and More Interviewing nearly 2,500 teenagers, Dr. Gal found: "The two groups that in the past had the highest motivation among army recruits — the youth of the kibbutzim and of the secular, academic high schools in the large cities — are now at the bot- tom of the list. In their place, the outstanding groups in motiva- tion for army service are the youth of the religious kibbutzim and moshavim [cooperative agri- cultural settlements], of Judea and Samaria and the students at yeshiva high schools." At Dizengoff Center, the teen- agers readily admitted that their generation's attitude towards the army is a major problem. They said the schools didn't encourage them to take the army seriously. They spoke of a lack of "values." The boy who planned to get out of the army just like Aviv Geffen was asked if he thought Israel needed an army. "Defi- nitely," he replied. Why? "To de- fend the homeland," he said. As the discussion went on, the boy looked as if he might have been starting to realize the con- tradiction in his thinking. He was 16; he would have two more years to mull it over before de- ciding whether he would take up the defense of Israel or trust somebody else to handle it. I] Of 1.611 k .e, 4 7,,, 1 *KC 7 URI :.. lO 1.14 JEFFRIES \ AP/MARCY NIG HSWANDER $47 5 studies. "They believe in the Land of Israel, in love of Israel, that's what motivates them to go into combat units," the girl said. Everyone in the group said they "appreciated" this attitude. Kibbutz youth traditionally have been the elite of army re- cruits, but now have been sup- planted by the national religious. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Amnon Shahak recently said that corn- pared to its past military perfor- mance, "the kibbutz movement has collapsed — in volunteering for combat units, and especially in willingness to serve as offi- cers." By contrast, Gen. Shahak said, the yeshiva soldiers are as highly motivated as ever. A member of a northern kib- butz who fought as a paratroop- er in three Israeli wars said he was trying to pull strings in the hope that his son, about to be in- ducted, would be posted close to home with plenty of time to pur- sue his budding soccer career. "Enough fighting," the father said. Dr. Reuven Gal, former chief army psychologist and now di- rector of the Cannel Institute for Social Research, conducted a re- cent survey that backed up all these random statements about Israeli youths' waning enthusi- asm for soldiering.