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May 15, 1998 - Image 40

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1998-05-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

The World

3160 HAGGE
SHOWROOIVI HOURS: M-F 1

D '• 248-624-7300
OR BY APPOINTMENT

CUSTOM CABI

Take a Room from
Ordinary to
Extraordinary!

'The .dome Accessory Warehouse

Decors of distinction'"

• Glass and ceramic accessories

• Large floor urns & vases

• Custom original art

• Silk floral arrangements and trees

... and so much more!

Stop in soon and experience the
visual treat that is waiting for you!!

Decors of distinction'

1017 West Maple Road
Walled Lake
Phone: (248) 624-6700
Fax: (248) 624-5325

M-F 8:30 — 5 • Sa I I — 4 • Or by appointment
In-home consultations available.
Interior Designers always welcome!

Maze! Toy!!!
Sheri Feldman Brown

On receiving your Masters Degree in
Physical Therapy from U of M with
High Honors and scholarships.
Sheri is married to Michael Brown,
Doctor of Chiropractic Medicine.

5/15
1998

40

Good luck to you both.
Your Nana is extremely proud!

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

'TN

Now Available at These
Ann Arbor Locations:

Borders Books
Barnes & Noble
Little Professor Bookstore
Hillel. House
Mainstreet Books
Zingerman's

His patron, Bill Clinton, was not
looking for a confrontation with
Jewish voters or Jewish campaign
donors. Nor were Congressmen who
face the ballot box in November. But
that could change, which is why
Netanyahu is still offering "creative
new ideas."
At best, these could lead to a deal
he can live with. At worst they could
put off the day of reckoning with
Uncle Sam — and the Land of Israel
loyalists. "It is very unclear," one offi-
cial told me, "what the United States
is going to do. There is nothing in
what the Administration says until
now that indicates a major turning
point. But we shall have to see how
everything pans out. So far, the
Americans are sticking to the principle
that the parties must work out their
differences. If they move away from
that principle, that would be a major
turning point."

Despite hard-line
tactics,
Netanyahu still
yearns to be seen
as a dove in
hawk's plumage.

Until then, Netanyahu can strut in
the role he likes best: the brave patri-
ot, defending Israel's honor and sover-
eignty. "We're no suckers," he boasts.
"No one else can determine our fate."
A Palestinian state would be "another
Iraq, another Iran." Every percentage
point of land is presented as a city the
size of Tel Aviv. The Prime Minister -
conjures up his old nightmare sce-
nario: the coastal plain, where most
Israelis live, would be exposed to rock-
et and artillery attack. Ben-Gurion
International Airport could be para-
lyzed.
Most strategic analysts are unim-
pressed. "The security of the State of
Israel depends, first and foremost, oz
a strong Israeli army," Amos Gilboa,
a former deputy chief of military
intelligence, wrote this week. "And
also the strong, strategic support of
the United States, and not on a few
dozen square meters of land." Never
mind, the Bibi scenario plays well on
CNN. El

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