MICHIGAN NATIONAL CHAMPIONS WE HAVE THE AREAS LARGEST SELECTION OF U OF M NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP MERCHANDISE AND APPAREL! W/MORE GOODS ARRIVING DAILY! =MI NMI MIMI MIEN MN MENI II•1•• MIN =IN MOM MIC HIGAN NATIONAL I CHAMPIONSHIP I PENNANT I — — .„ FE of $30 or more L w/purchase mom IN= NMI INIM w/coupon ONLY 1. ■ ■ 11 MOM offer expires 1 /1 1 /98 Nom ■ 11 (We Also Carry... MSU, Pistons, Tigers, Lions, AND THE AREAS LARGEST SELECTION OF RED WINGS MEMORABILIA!) FANATIC U "EVERYTHING FOR THE FANATIC — YOU" 6 New Outdoor Locations! 2 Locations in Livonia WOODHAVEN REDFORD (Just West of Inkster) (313) 513-5855 Ray Hunter Florist at King & Allen Rds. Marathon Oil at Inkster & Plymouth Rds. 31188 Five Mile Road DEARBORN Flower Shop at Beech Daly & Plymouth Rds. 27420 Joy Road (In the Merri-5 Plaza) (313) 762-0893 MasterCard Mobil Oil at & Gulley Rds. DEARBORN HEIGHTS Majestic Donut at Michigan & Merrimen Rds. Mobil Gas Station at Ann Arbor Trail & Warren FINAL CLEARANCE 10 •11' / ) o OFF ALL SEASONAL SHOES & BOOTS Sizes 4 to 12 in a great selection of widths! Flus handbags & acc e ssories! Sale starts Jan. 2, 1995 1/2 1998 34 Somerset Collection (248) 637-3060 The World 3. "Dual containment" RIP. That bedrock American policy, which aims to "contain" both Iran and Iraq through tough economic sanc- tions and a policy of international iso- lation, is under growing pressure from the Europeans, who are eager to trade freely with both countries, and the Russians, who are eager to be some- thing more than a great power has- been. With some recent hints of modera- tion in Teheran — and with the con- tinuing crisis over Iraq's arsenal of chemical and biological weapons — Washington will face strong pressure to explore limited normalization with Iran as a way of keeping allies lined up in the fight against Iraq. Washington will move warily, and officials here will continue to look for ways to leverage the Iranians away from support for terrorism and from their own non-conventional arms buildup. Jewish groups, which have turned dual containment into hard dogma, won't be happy, but the handwriting is on the wall. 1998 promises to be another roller coaster ride. 4. More of the same for the Middle East peace process. Does Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu genuinely want peace, or is he simply trying to find a way to derail Oslo without taking the blame? Is Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat committed to living in peace with his Israeli neighbors, or are the negotiations just a tactical maneuver in pursuit of his ultimate goal — all of "Palestine," which just happens to include all of Israel? U.S. policymakers are trying to close the Israeli-Palestinian gap with- out really knowing the answers to those core questions. With the frac- tious Israeli government in a deal making frenzy over the deadlocked _ budget, it's unlikely the ambiguity will be cleared up anytime soon. So look for more of the same: more movement toward a big U.S.- Israel clash, but also a continuing reluctance in Washington to really mix it up with the Netanyahu government. With elections just around the corner, who needs those kind of tsuris (worries)? 5. Pluralism problems continue. For Reconstructionist, Reform and Conservative Jews — the overwhelm- ing majority of American Jews — the perception that they are being disen- franchised by a politically dominant Orthodox minority in Israel is becom- ing the only Mideast issue that mat- ters. That threatens to weaken the pro- Israel coalition in Washington at a time when U.S.-Israel tensions are on the rise, and it promises dire commu- nal consequences. Memo to Bibi: If you care about the ongoing commitment of American Jews to Israel, you must devote more than lip service to the pluralism ques- tion in 1998. ❑ Hollywood Saves Jewish Cemetery Los Angeles (JTA) — The last resting place for some of Hollywood's famous Jews has been rescued from oblivion. The cemetery holds the graves of actors Paul Muni and Peter Lorre; Mel Blanc, the voice of many popular car- toon characters; producers Harry Cohn and Jesse Lasky; composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold; and mobster Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel. Famous Jews rest in peace. Beth Olam is the Jewish section of Hollywood Memorial Park Cemetery, which has been in bankruptcy for 18 months and earlier was close to being padlocked and abandoned. Trustees had been fruitlessly seeking a buyer for more than a year and were ready to close down the cemetery when the Callanan Mortuary offered $375,000 for the memorial park and promised to refurbish the badly neglected grounds. The bailout came as a great relief to the city's Jews, who feared that they might be prevented from visiting and tending some 20,000 graves. Others faced the loss of pre-paid burial plots, crypts and mausoleum vaults.