I • The World "waft 1 `ft • ft • 41* ■ ...0.,• . • • BLOOMFIELD HEALTHCARE proudly presents • SUTTON HOMES • • •P • 4 • pressed Netanyahu to retreat from his stance that no prisoners who have blood on their hands or are members of the militant Hamas movement would be freed. The premier refused to relent, and he is now making much political capi- tal out of that refusal. But Mordechai, and the relatively moderate Third Way Party, another coalition partner, have yet to say how they feel about the virtual collapse of the implementation of the Wye accord. Netanyahu's aides were hinting this week that the premier himself may call for early _elections, a move that would spare him the possibility of suffering a humiliating defeat in the Knesset. These hints were perhaps intended to whip shaky coalition members back THE ALZHEIMER'SIDEMENHA CARE SPECIALISTS SAY YU TO BETTER CARE WITH DIGNITY & COMPASSION • Call (248) 258-8282 For more information or mail coupon to: SUTTON HOMES 30700 Telegraph Rd. #2504 Bingham Farms, Ml 48025 lin inquiring for: ❑ self • ❑ parent ❑ other Netanyahu's aides hint he may call for early elections. Name ' Address . City, State ' Phone ( NNW • (• 'rumor 71,11 171,, f o nn • 1 / "Citywide Dance -- Only place in town" BLOW-OUT BASH PARTY College Age and Older 2 DJs . . . 2 parties in one Alternative / Club / Dance in one room; Disco / Oldies / MoTown ... and all requests in the other Something for everyone! Thursday, December 24th 8:00 p.m. till ??? Club Laboom (Modern Rock Cafe) 1172 Pontiac Trail Walled Lake, MI 0 Minutes from the JCC; No,:h Muple Road, West of Decker Tickets $12 at the door For information, call (248) 626-9550 .S. ponsnred by The Jewish News • Hillel of Metro Detroit Jewish Professional Singles 12/18 1998 30 Detroit Jewish News • into line so that the Likud leader can regroup and carry on. But they could also mean that Netanyahu has come to believe, after a hardheaded assessment of the govern- ment's inherent weakness, that the end is near. Either way, the prime minister is now clearly determined to head off any challenge against his leadership from the right-wing "national camp." Whether he-stays in--office or seeks new elections, he will project himself as the leader who refused to give ground to the Palestinians, despite intensive, almost public pressure from no less a figure than the president of the United States. Where does all this leave the peace process? Despite brave attempts by U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to claim some progress during the president's three days in the region, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are making no such pretense. Despite the move to annul the char- ter, Israel is flatly refusing to carry out any further redeployments until the Palestinian Authority carries our fur- ther obligations — including the con- fiscation of weapons, the elimination of anti-Israel rhetoric from school- books, ending incitement and retract- ing the threat to declare statehood uni- laterally in May. For their part, Palestinian officials are saying these demands reflect noth- ing more than Netanyahu's desire to survive the Knesset vote. World Digest Jewish Woman Heads Switzerland Ruth Dreifuss became the first Jew — and the first woman — to be named president of Switzerland, where Ruth Dreifuss women only earned the right to vote in 1971. Dreifuss, who formally becomes head of state on Jan. 1, inherits a country that is attempting to cope with an anti- Semitic backlash after a stream of embarrassing disclosures in recent -years about the financial ties that existed between the country's leading banks and Nazi Germany. After months of international pressure, two of the banks agreed earlier this year to pay a $1.25 billion settlement of Holocaust- era claims. Dreifuss, 58, was born in an eastern Swiss canton. As the Nazis approached the Swiss bor- der, she moved with her parents to Geneva. In 1970, she graduated from Geneva University with a degree in mathematics and was then appointed an assistant in the Faculty of Economic and Social Sciences at Geneva University. She served in the Swiss Development Corporation at the Swiss Foreign Ministry from 1972 to 1981, when she was elected secretary of the Federation of Swiss Trade Unions. Dreifuss was a member of the Berne Municipal Council from 1989 to 1992. and was appoint- ed home affairs minister in 1993.