as er ROUND TABLE page 116 technology for younger looking skin Call for a free consulta- tion to learn more about Laser Facial Peel. This technology improves facial wrinkles and skin imperfec- tions caused by scarring, acne and discoloration. All entries may be picked up at the Round Table office by April 25, 1997. The publicity committee will choose a winner from two age groups: 13-15 and 16-18. The two students will then be guests of the Interfaith Round Table at the conference and each will re- ceive a plaque, as well as one for their school. The overall winner will be chosen from those two de- signs and his/her art work will be on the cover of the conference brochure. The Greater Detroit Interfaith Round Table, as the Detroit Chapter of the National Confer- More Laser Facial Peel • Over 60years of experience • Accredited by AAAHC • • Specializing in all cosmetic procedures of the face and body • Reconstructive & hand surgery • Free consultation ence, works to strengthen racial, religious and ethnic under- standing and respect. For fur- ther information, contact Barbara Gray, (313) 869-6306. Council Plans Shabbat Service The Grosse Pointe Jewish Coun- cil will hold a Shabbat Service, 8 p.m. Friday, Jan. 31, at the Grosse Pointe Unitarian Church, Maumee at St. Clair. Aftcr • Free monthly seminaWbroc STRAITH CLINIC Please note our new address and phone number! 32000 Telegraph Road Bingham Farms, Michigan 48025 Tel: (810) 647-5800 Unity At Last, Sort Of A group of Labor and Likud leaders have reached a nonbinding consensus agreement on the peace talks. ERIC SILVER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT B Presents GRIGORY 0 0 SOKOLOV, Piano Thursday, February 6, 1997 • 8:00 p.m. • Orchestra Hall Sponsored by Helen and Clyde Wu for the Chamber Music Society of Detroit Van Dusen Endowment Challenge. JOSEPH SILVERSTEIN, VIOLIN & DAVID BREITMAN, Piano Sunday, February 16, 1997 • 3:00 p.m. • Orchestra Hall Sponsored by Andrea and David Page for the Chamber Music Socitey of Detroit Van Dusen Endowment Challenge $16.00 — $36.00 Adults/ $6.00 Students (Concert prices include a mandatory $1 Hall Restoration fee per Orchestra Hall Ticket.) Orchestra Hall Box Office (313) 833-3700 118 c4,:ts' • Calf The Sales Department (810) 354-7123 Ext. 209 Get Results... Advertise in our new Entertainment Section! THE JEWISH NEWS ipartisanship has come, "no Jewish settlement will be up- kicking and screaming, to rooted." Most of the settlements Israeli politics. A panel of would be annexed to Israel with Likud and Labor legislators territorial continuity. The rest this week published a joint blue- would come under Palestinian print for a permanent arrange- rule, but, the still-hawkish Mr. Ei- ment with the Palestinians. tan pledged, "we'll do our utmost The question, as critics from to protect their linkage to Israel." right and left reminded them, re- The Likud and Labor MKs mains whether the Palestinians agreed to disagree on two major will buy it. At best, so far, the pan- points: a Palestinian state and el has made peace between prag- the future of the Jewish settle- matic Jews. Even that is no mean ments along the Jordan valley. achievement. Likud participants favored an The group of six Knesset mem- "enlarged autonomy" for the bers from each party met for 14 Palestinians; their Labor inter- weeks at the Israel Democracy In- locutors were ready to live with stitute, a Jerusalem think tank a Palestinian state. Likud saw that is funded in part by the At- the Jordan valley as part of sov- lanta Jewish Federation. The doc- ereign Israel, Labor only as a ument is not binding on either "special security zone." political party. Yet, it is certain to Mr. Beilin is no stranger to serve as a framework for a poten- backstage maneuvering. As a tial national unity government. minister in the last government, The co-chairmen were Michael he reached an understanding on Eitan, the Likud caucus head, and a final peace framework with Yossi Beilin, an architect of the Yassir Arafat's deputy, Mah- Oslo accords and a candidate to moud Abbas (known as Abu succeed Shimon Peres as Labor Mazen). He said the Likud-La- leader. (Labor's Ehud Barak is bor proposal "does not contradict widely expected to win the party's the Beilin-Abu Mazen paper." June contest.) Although the parties dis- As one of the Labor signatories, tanced themselves from the Ei- former Interior Minister Haim Ra- tan-Beilin document, Mr. Beilin mon, put it, both sides came to hailed it. "We found a common terms with unpalatable realities. denominator," he said, "and it The Likud people accepted that was not the lowest common de ; the 1993 Oslo agreement with the nominator of saying, 'no, no, no. Palestinians was a fact of life. For the first time, they endorsed the However, three of the six Labor idea of a border separating Jews panel members and one from and Arabs in the Land of Israel. Likud declined to sign. Eliezer The Labor people, Mr. Ramon Zandberg, parliamentary chair- added with a sour smile, recog- man of the Tsomet faction, which nized that Likud won the last elec- ran with Likud in the last elec- tion. tions, did sign. Then he was in- The key Labor concession was, stantly repudiated by his leader, as Mr. Eitan spelled it out, that Rafael Eitan.