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Brick oven fresh bread brought to your table
The Attisha family invites your family to enjoy the best
in homestyle Mideastern and Mediterranean cuisine plus
barbecued to perfection kabobs, steaks, baby lambchops
or sweet baked whitefish.
Sumptuous dining at affordable prices. Fresh juice bar and
vegetarian specialties.
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VALUABLE COUPON
Half off your second entree
18 Pike Street • Pontiac, Michigan • 810-334-7878
with another of equal or greater value.
and
Lunch or dinner.
Bistro
One North Saginaw • 810-338-7337
Pontiac
BETWEEN A ROCK page 121
OAK PARK'S FAMOUS FAMILY-OWNED
RESTAURANT
Good Monday through Thursday
Does not include gratuity
Valid through Apri127, 1997.
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Orchard Mall, Orchard Lake & Maple Roads
West Bloomfield (810) 737 6688
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GOURMET CHINESE RESTAURANT
Featuring
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Wonderful traditional favorites...
superb variety of dining specialties
• Live fish, lobster and crab in our
tanks, cooked to order
• Dim Sum lunch specials 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
• Banquet Facilities • Business Lunches
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6407 Orchard Lake Road
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(810) 626-8585
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Special Carry-Out Menu
BEST WISHES TO OUR
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FOR A HEALTHY & HAPPY
PASSOVER!!!
PETER BERSHAJ AND EMPLOYEES
WITH THEIR CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS
A HAPPY AND HEALTHY PASSOVER
We Will Be Open Only From 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
April 21 thru April 27, And Resume Our
Normal Hours, From 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Beginning Monday, April 28.
Open
Mon.-Sat.
7 a.m. -
4052 Haggerty Walled Lake (810) 360-0190
SHIVA
DINNERS
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8 p.m.
Closed
Sundays
DELI AND GOURMET RESTAURANT
21754 W. 11 MILE RD.. HARVARD ROW - 352-4940 FAX: 352-9393
Wew Seout Garden Restaurant
Korean & Japanese Restaurant
When you plan to dine out
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27566 Northwestern Hwy Southfield, MI 48304
(On I Imile rd. between Telegraph & Lahser)
Phone (810) 827-1600
Fax (810) 827-1944
VISIT US AT
OUR NEW LOCATION
2 DOORS DOWN IN THE PARK PLACE PLAZA
22120 COOLIDGE AT 9 MILE • 398 - 5502 or 398 - 5503
Oak Park
Dine In and Carry-Out
GOLDEN BOWL
Szechuan • Mandarin • Cantonese
OPEN 7 DAYS: Mon.-Thurs. 11-9:30, Fri. & Sat. 11-10:30, Sun. & Holidays 1-9:30
• Banquet Facilities
• Your Chet FRANK ENG
in Hebron now makes us believe
that the people are with us."
Since the campus elections, he
said, the small, dingy room of the
student council headquarters has
been redecorated with pho-
tographs and drawings of Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin, the ailing leader
of Hamas who has been in an Is-
raeli prison since the late 1980s;
Yehiye Ayash, the "engineer" re-
sponsible for terror-bomb attacks
against Israel, who was killed last
year when a cellular phone ex-
ploded in his hand; and a number
of local "shuhada" (martyrs).
And many students do not be-
lieve that any Israelis want peace.
"[The Labor Party] knew how to
make dress up the occupation, es-
pecially for the eyes of the world,"
Jaabri added. "But Netanyahu
has given the Palestinian people
a timely present by showing the
world Israel's true intention in the
peace process.
Frighteningly, the leader of the
young Fatah activists, a PLO
group, on the Hebron campus
agrees with much of Jaabri's
analysis.
"Most of the young people
throwing stones in the casaba to-
day are followers of Fatah, not
Hamas, though they cannot open-
ly identify themselves as such,"
says Kifah al-Jiwawi, a 27-year-
old business administration ma-
jor. "Fatah is moving away from
the PNA. Most of our soldiers are
Fatah people, but they are alien-
ated from the leaders who have
come from the outside. You can
see this movement moving away
from the Authority in the latest
elections in Hebron, including
here at the university."
He is a prime example. As a
prominent leader of the Fatah
youth movement, he participat-
ed in a special program in which
Israeli and Palestinian students
were flown to Oslo for a month to
build a people-to-people peace.
"The Israelis I met were regu-
lar people, people with whom you
could build relationships and be-
come friends," he says a bit wist-
fully. "Sometimes old beliefs and
prejudices blocked our working
together, but I made friends, even
one good friend. But because of
the closure, we've lost contact
now. Personally, I was happy
about the Oslo process when it
started; now I feel it won't work
on the ground."
That situation, in the eyes of
young Palestinians, is less a dif-
ficult present than a future even
more bleak than it seemed before.
"At first, their expectations with
Oslo, especially their economic ex-
pectations, were very high," Ji-
wawi explains. "Now all you hear
and see is disappointment, and it
isn't necessarily disappointment
over the way things have devel-
oped politically ... Anyone who
openly says that he is in favor of
Oslo today is considered to be
crazy." ❑