Strike?? What Strike???

Cleveland
Toronto
Chicago
Pittsburgh
Dayton

$ 260 Columbus
$ 340 Cincinatti
$ 420 Louisville
$ 400 Buffalo
$ 300 Traverse City

$ 280
$ 360
$ 450
$ 350
$ 320

Rates are based on one-way travel for up to four passengers in a full size sedan.
Van rates & flat rates to other locations available upon request.

Rates through 10/10/98 & assume departure from the tri-county area & arrival within 20 miles of the stated destination. Reservations required.

CITIZENS CAR SERVICE

First for door-to-door reliability since 1985...

1-800-TRUST US

4

DR. KENNETH W STEIN

Special to The Jewish. News

Seasons Prep nee & Barbecue

Orr

rRgE MEASURLMENTor

ANY

MENACE OAS LOO SET

FOR PREPLZUERDTSTM OAS LOOS

INCLUDING SALE ITEMS

OAS BARBECUE SERVICE *40.00 PARTS
EXTRA it NEEDED INCLUDES FIRST 35 MINUTES LABOR

1313Q TANK
EXCHANGE

(241)555-0202

ENDS
9/4/98

.ALE

MEM Mil

(240) 1F55-0202
20902 ORCHARD LAKE RD
MI Hunts!. Spam between 12 & 14 Mile by THE OAP
CLOSED SATURDAY Opan Sunday 10 am-8 pm
Monday to Thum* 10 em-9 pm, Friday 10 am-6 pm
=III MEM s
IEEE

Seventh Annual Chupah Celebration
RENEWING THEIR VOWS - U.S.S.R - U.S.A.

Please join as
as we renew our vows under the Chupah
Sunday, September 6, 1998

2:00 p.m.
at Charlotte Rothstein Park
behind the 10 Mile Jewish Community Center
— Community invited —

Anna & Leonid Beznosov

9/4
1998

Call The Sales Department (248) 354-7123 Ext. 209

42 Detroit Jewish News

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Camp David •
Plus 20

DIMWIT
JEW= NEWS

IV

ith suddenness, on Nov.
19, 1977, Egyptian
President Sadat did the
unexpected. He flew to

Israel.
Speaking from the Knesset podium,
with Theodor Herzl's picture behind
-him, he accepted Israel as a reality. He
told an attentive world that if Israelis
wanted peace, they had to withdraw
from all of the territories taken in the
June 1967 Middle East war.
Sadat's primary goal — his objec-
tive since going to war in 1973 — was
the return of Sinai to Egyptian sover-
eignty Half of it was returned via
diplomacy, but the process of getting
it all was stalled.
In his first year in office, President
Jimmy Carter tried to resolve the
Arab-Israeli conflict with bare fists, in
public view. Those efforts frustrated,
shoved, threatened, befriended and
alienated Arabs and Israelis alike.
Further, after Henry Kissinger's suc-
cessful step-by-by step diplomacy,
Carter tried to resolve the conflict in a
comprehensive manner. He invited the
Russians to co-convene a Mideast con-
ference and defined a way for low level
PLO members to join a unified Arab
delegation.
Though impressed with Carter's
commitment, Sadat grew impatient
with the details, especially the dilly-
dallying of Arab contemporaries. In
going to Jerusalem, he wanted to cre-
ate diplomatic momentum.
Five weeks later, on Christmas
Day, Israeli Prime Minister
Dr. Kenneth W. Stein is professor of
Middle Eastern history and political sci-

ence at Emory University in Atlanta.

--\

C_\

