() (V ) NiN0•14 rfri e r 77-g7/077E /FA/ OATEMcfger,e0 MOW The Pressure Mounts CUISINE BAKERY NOW OPEN! [FREE CUP OF GUMBO; with the purchase of any entree • Fresh Pita and Sambosak Bread • 25 Different Fresh Juices • Come In For A Free Sam s le! 1 coupon per couple expires 11/30/96 L dine in only Featuring Live Music Tuesdays, Fridays & S aturdays. LIVE ENTERTAINMENT This Weekend, Fri. & Sat. Night, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. "OVERTIME BAND" (International Music) Russian, Hebrew, German, Italian, Armenian, American Blues! Jazz! Zyd.eco! 29110 Franklin Rd. (Corner of Franklin • 15 Years in Business • Banquet Room Available • Open 7 Days, Serving Lunch and Dinner • Serving Cocktails • Carry-Out I Catering Available gr Northwestern) Southfield Serving Lunch gr Dinner Orchard Mall, Orchard T ake & Maple Roads West Bloomfield (810) 737 - 6688 (E10) 356-4972 All credit cards accepted Your brain sends billions of messages to your body every second HERE ARE A FEW YOU SHOULD ALWAYS PAY ATTENTION TO. These are signs of stroke, or brain attack. Get help immediately. Get the message? For more information ca111.800.AHA.USA1. American Heart Association,.. Th.5 space pmvicle0 as a public sevoca . H Authentic Szechuan Cooking •Cocktail •No MSG On All DisheS 10% OFF A Superior Mira Experience ■ loiillIsfor SolliKildtesitlylilltereilt w SZECHUAN EMPIRE •Fresh Seafood •Home of General TSO'S World Class Chicken 0**** Detnittiews DelnitfreePress UJ TOTAL BILL DINE IN OR CARRYOUT Not good with any other offer 1 coupon per table • with coupon Exp 11/30/96 ■ cC Pike Street 18 West Pike keel • (810) 3347878 106 Fightog Heart Disease and Stroke 1995. Amet1Can Heart Association cn w 4 lingfitiliteS11 0f: 39450 14 Mile Rd. corner of Haggerty in the Bar/141dd. ben hilerszies Wei 11113: Mies Sweet Wm Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11-3 • Dinner Mon.-Thur. 5-10 • Dinner Fri. & Sat 5-11 Newberry Square Plaza (810) 960-7666 woo"' Original location: 29215 5 Mile Rd at Middlebelt - Livonia KENNETH W. STEIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS After more than 100 days in office, Binyamin Netanyahu's govern- ment is coming under enormous pressure and admonition. A variety of external sources are urging a hastened pace of ne- gotiations and implementing of existing agreements with the Palestinians. A diverse group of Arabs, Europeans and Ameri- cans are forming a consensus negative view about recent Israeli policies. While there are significant dif- ferences in tactics, three pre- ferred but as yet uncoordinated mechanisms for dealing with Is- rael are emerging: • Blame Mr. Netanyahu di- rectly. • Punish Israel in some real fashion. • Try to influence the future outcome of Palestinian-Israeli ne- gotiations. Whether some of these means are even partially successful re- mains to be seen. But by any barometer, rocky times could be looming in Israel's foreign rela- tions. In the last month, Egyptian leaders have lashed out angrily. Newspapers, radio commen- taries, and television interviews, usually not very enthusiastic about Israel, have taken their an- tagonism to new heights. In ear- ti ly 1978, then Israel Prime Minister Menachem Begin was vilified by the Egyptian media for not responding with a commit- ment to a full Israeli withdraw- al from Sinai after Mr. Sadat's visit to Jerusalem. Today, it's worse. The negative epithets lev- eled against Mr. Netanyahu have been so stringent, that the Israeli cabinet requested President Ezer Weizman during his recent trip to Cairo to ask for a cessation of oral hostilities. Though unlikely, Egyptian President Mubarak has threatened to postpone next month's economic summit in Cairo. The Syrian government has openly asked Arab states to freeze all diplomatic normaliza- tion with Israel and describes Mr. Netanyahu in the most hostile terms imaginable. Jordan's King Hussein is normally the most calm of Is- rael's Arab neighbors. Upon his recent return from the Wash- ington summit, he said, "anger [with Israel] is coming close to despair. We are sliding into an extremely serious psychological condition in which people will c„-='‘ Dr. Kenneth W. Stein is professor of Near Eastern history and political science at Emory University.