INFINITI®
of Farmington Hills
YOUR INFINITI PRESIDENT'S AWARD CIRCLE DEALER
1997 INFINITI 130
1997 INFINITI QX4
Automatic, leather, moonroof, air, dual airbags, ABS, power windows,
locks, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette/CD, alloy wheels, dual pwr. seats, remote
entry, security system, 190 hp V6, home-link, Bose sound syst. w/CD.
$351-0
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Is
All-mode full time 4WD, V6, ABS, 16" alloys, roof rack, pwr. moonroof,
seats winds., locks, leather, cruise, tilt, roof console, compass, defrost, air,
outside temp. display, home-link, remote sec. syst., Bose sound syst.
w/CD, dual airbags.
BUY FOR
$439*
28,895+
Ms. OR
BUY FOR
$36,995+
36 MOS .
1997 INFINITI J30
INFINITI:
#1 car line in
customer
satisfaction
$399 * 1$
V8, leather, automatic, sunroof, pwr. windows, locks, tilt, cruise, security
system, memory seat, traction control, Bose sound syst. w/ CD alloys,
home link, dual airbags, ABS.
BUY FOR
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BUY FOR
$549*
0.13 31 , 995+
36 MOS.
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*36 mo. closed end lease based on approved credit. Due at inception: 130 $1000 down, J30 $1500 down, QX4 $1500 down, Q45 $2750 down. 1st payment doe. acq. fee,
title, license, ref. sec. dep. & applicable taxes. 12,000 miles per year w1154 per mile overage. Lessee has option to purchase but is not obligated to buy at lease end. All
subject to factory programs & vehicle availability. Standard gap insurance included. Total pymts:pymts. x term. Excludes prior sales & leases. Plus tax, title, license &
doc. One payment lease, 24 mo. based on approved credit. All previously stated lease terms apply. No down payment due on One Payment Lease. Doc. acq. fee, title, lie.
refundable sec. dep.:to 1st mo. pymt., rounded to next $25 increment & applicable taxes due at lease inception on One Payment Lease. All Incentives applied to dealer.
24355 HAGGERTY RD.
(A)
Between 10 Mile & Grand River Ave.
CA)
810-471-2220
OPEN SATURDAYS http://www.infinitifIccom SALES & SERVICE
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JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT
t hasn't exactly been a love fest
between Israeli Prime Minis-
ter Binyamin Netanyahu and
Palestinian leader Yassir
Arafat, but in a way, the two lead-
ers have become each other's best
friends. Each is serving as pro-
tector of the other in their trou-
bled relations with Washington.
This perverse three-way rela-
tionship is preventing open con-
flict between the Clinton
administration and the two sides
in the unraveling Israeli-Pales-
tinian negotiations, but it also
may be keeping Washington from
doing what it needs to do to get
the talks moving again. Last
week's decision by Washington to
step back a few paces and give
Egyptian mediation efforts a
chance is one clear sign of that
timidity in U.S. policy.
Mr. Netanyahu has benefited
from Mr. Arafat's behavior in ob-
vious ways. Each time the prime
minister does something that U.S.
officials believe jeopardizes the
peace process, Mr. Arafat does
something worse, thereby de-
flecting American criticism.
Officials were unhappy last
September when Mr. Netanyahu
summarily opened a second en-
trance to an archaeological tun-
nel near the Temple Mount, but
Mr. Arafat's direct incitement of
violence in response quickly ob-
scured those concerns; Mr. Ne-
tanyahu's actions may have been
"unhelpful," as the State Depart-
ment delicately put it, but Mr.
Arafat's were downright destruc-
tive to the peace process.
The administration was equal-
ly unhappy with delays in con-
cluding the Hebron pact, but Mr.
I
1997 INFINITI Q45
Automatic, leather, sunroof, pwr. windows, locks, tilt, Cruise, dual airbags,
ABS, security system, remote entry, alloy wheels, 210 hp V6, dual pwr.
seats, limited slip, Bose sound syst. w/CD.
Yassir And Bibi:
Bumbling Buddies
•
,--)?)/11( 2 ',147
p ► n ..A,P29.;)
•
Next time you feed your face,
think about your heart.
Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods
that are high in saturated fat and cholesterol. The
change'll do you good.
V American Heart Association
WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE
Binyamin Netanyahu
Arafat's brinkmanship obscured
Mr. Netanyahu's maneuvers that
also delayed an agreement.
The White House and State
Department strongly disagreed
with Mr. Netanyahu's decision to
proceed with the Har Homa hous-
ing project in east Jerusalem, but
Mr. Arafat's eagerness to use the
decision as a pretext for seeking
added leverage in the talks and
his unwillingness to abandon vi-
olence as a negotiating tool quick-
ly took the focus away from the.
Israeli government's actions.
Mr. Netanyahu doesn't look
very good to officials in Washing-
ton — they continue to see him as
unfocused and visionless, regard-
ing every issue in the peace
process as simply a domestic po-
litical issue — but he looks like a
world-class statesman compared
to Mr. Arafat.
If the Palestinian leader had
responded to shifts in Israeli pol-
icy after Mr. Netanyahu's election
a year ago with restraint and an
unequivocal determination to
keep the peace talks on track, he
would be sitting pretty with
Washington right now; that would
have made it much harder for the
Clinton administration to post-
pone politically risky pressure on
the Jewish state.
But Mr. Arafat's reckless,
threat-filled negotiating style has
given Mr. Netanyahu a big sup-
ply of get-out-of-jail-free cards with
the administration. At least in his
dealings with Washington, Mr.
Arafat is Bibi's best friend.
On the other side of the equa-
tion, Mr. Netanyahu provides a
measure of protection for Mr.
Arafat, as well. The Palestinian