..................... .. . THE PICTURE ...... ................................ .. ............... .. . ' . !?.2! .. . Agreement At Last With the Hebron accord, Binyamin Netanyahu has cemented the partition of the Land of Israel. ERIC SILVER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT S 6704 ORCHARD LAKE RD., WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322 (1ST STOPLIGHT SOUTH OF MAPLE) even months after Binyamin Netanyahu's right-wing coalition came to power, the Israeli-Pales- tinian peace process is back on its wobbly course. Mr. Netanyahu and Palestin- ian leader Yassir Arafat cleared the remaining obstacles to an Is- raeli redeployment from most of Hebron, the last of eight West Bank cities under occupation. They also endorsed what the tireless U.S. mediator, Dennis Ross, termed a road map for fur- ther stages of the 1993 Oslo ac- cords. Israel will begin to pull out of West Bank rural areas in March and complete a three-part withdrawal in mid-1998. claves, will remain under Israeli military rule. Netanyahu's position: The prime minister claimed that he had improved on the previous government's terms for protect- ing the settlers by creating buffer zones between Jews and Arabs and by limiting the range of the weapons the Palestinian police will be allowed to carry near the settlers. Restrictions will also be im- posed on the height of new Arab construction on the hills over- looking them to reduce the temp- tations of sniper fire. The opposition's position: Labor ex-ministers contend that the changes are merely cosmet- JANUARY FUR SALE SAVE 40% - 75% • Microfiber Coots; Sheared Rabbit Lined with Fox Collar Regular SALE 1200 $399 • Block-Dyed, Sheared Raccoon, Abstract 3/4 Coats $3000 $999 • Natural Beaver Coats $2500 $1299 • Ranch or Mahogany Female Mink Coats $7000 $3699 5 Plus hundreds of other furs— all drastically reduced! 181 S. Woodward Ave Next to the Birmingham Theatre Free Adjacent Parking (810) 642-1690 Sofa Hours: Mon., Tues., Weds., and Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thurs.—Fri, 9:30-8:30 Sun 1:00-5:00 Financing available. Prior sales excluded. All furs labeled to show country of origin. 011110.. fhe Sales Department (810) 3 54-7123 . Ext. 209 Get Results... Advertise in our new Entertainment Section ! THE JEWISH NEWS AP/GREG MARINO VICH NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, JANUARY 26 Members of the Palestinian Preventative Security Police are deployed in Hebron. This represents a compromise between the September 1997 deadline agreed by the previous Labor government and demand- ed by Mr. Arafat, and the May 1999 target date offered by Mr. Netanyahu. What is important for the Palestinians is that the prime minister has locked him- self into a timetable. An embattled Mr. Netanyahu won a narrow majority for the new agreement in his 18-mem- ber Cabinet, but he faced stiff re- sistance in the Knesset from his coalition partners. The evacuation from 80-85 percent of the disputed holy city, where 450 fanatical Jewish set- tlers live among 150,000 equally zealous Muslims, is expected over the weekend. Four hundred Palestinian police will be de- ployed there for the first time. Be- tween 15,000 and 20,000 Arabs, who live close to the Jewish en- ic, as is Mr. Arafat's reaffirma- tion of his commitment to fight Palestinian terrorism, extradite fugitives suspected of murdering Israelis, and repeal clauses of the 1964 Palestinian National Covenant which call for the de- struction of the Zionist state. The settlers' position: The Hebron settlers do not delude themselves that the lion will now lie down with the lamb. Their spokesman, Noam Arnon, said defiantly: "We are armed and we are staying." For him, the Pales- tinians' long-term objective was still to drive the Jews out of the city, and Mr. Arafat's police were nothing more than licensed ter- rorists. In any case, the new agree- ment is a landmark in the cen- tury-long conflict between Jewish and Palestinian Arab national- ism. An elected leader of the Zion- ist right has laid to rest the