Thi .tzty„ , Uri DIVIDING BY TWO 36 Months, 36,000 Miles $1,000. Down $1,559.12 Due at Signing Mo. Lease Plus Tax GM EMPLOYEE LEASE Mo. Lease Plus Tax 30 Months, 30,000 Miles $1,000 Down $1,326.10 Due at Signing FIRST PAYMENT WAIVED! 36 Months, 36,000 Miles • $1,000 Down $1,609.46 Due at Signing LEASE FOR $ 3 7 2 5 * 30 Months, 30,000 Miles $1,000 Down $1,372.56 Due at Signing . indudes moonroof Mon. & Thurs. till 9 pm Tues., Wed., Fri. till 6 pm 7/14 2000 28 THE POWER OF & . THE FUSION OF DESIGN & TECHNOLOGY " 7100 Orchard Lake Road fat 14 1/2 Mile) • West Bloomfield 248.851.7200 'Plus all applicable taxes, title, plate with approved credit through GMAC. All rebates to dealer. Must be currently leasing a Cadillac. Photos may not represent actual vehicles. from page 25 Jerusalem and the refugee issue are the two most intractable issues facing the two sides as they headed for Camp David. The fact that there will be some changes, though relatively small ones, in the pre-1967 lines is taken in Israel as a given. If Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat sticks to his public demand for a return to the 1967 boundaries, there will be no agreement. It is also widely believed that the two sides have agreed to a demilita- rized Palestinian state and the station- ing of Israeli troops at selected key points on the Jordan River. Similarly, it is also believed that Israel will annex three settlement blocs close to the old border — although the Palestinians are said to be demanding compen- satory slices of Israeli territory along- side the Gaza Strip. This annexation was originally pro- posed in the "Beilin-Abu Mazen" agreement, an informal accord negoti- ated during 1995 between Yossi Beilin, now Barak's justice minister, and Abu Mazen, Arafat's second-in- command. Arab Capital On Jerusalem, the Beilin-Abu Mazen accord envisaged a Palestinian capital, to be called "al-Quds" — or "holy city," the Arabic name for Jerusalem — alongside the city's present bound- aries. Those boundaries — drawn up by then-Defense Minister Moshe Dayan in the wake of the 1967 war and subsequently proclaimed sover- eign Israeli soil by the Knesset — do not embrace important Palestinian suburbs such as Abu Dis, Azariya and a-Ram. These areas, Beilin and Abu Mazen believed, could develop and become a credible Palestinian capital. Palestinians, however, insist on control of the Temple Mount and the Muslim Quarter of the Old City. They also insist on control of Palestinian areas within Jerusalem that are close to the Old City walls — such as Sheik Jarrah, the American Colony and Wadi Joz. Informed Israeli observers said this week that no Israeli government could turn over any of these areas and hope to survive politically. To carve up the city would flatly contradict Barak's pledge of a "united Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty." ❑