DISORIENTED from page 23 I roped I VLitaag TEE ISSUE Celebrate Jewish Love Songs Craig Taubman a me. of traditional and A colle contem ary songs that will passions and stir your imagination! cap . an. U I a 1 _sr _at I I.Ukv115.111_ UPI/ r katft:1 ed A World Cantor Benjie Ellen Schiller r 1. t „,,, As professor of cantonal p,r - t L iori" l ert.,00 Hebrew Union Col p elstanding o Benjie brings a contemn rR c and traditional - exit ecording of original lici English selections. .h.ctf4. Funny Jewish Songs - Doug Co-tier 13 hilariously funny Jewish parodies of familiar songs by the Beach Boys, Hank Williams, Jimmy Buffet and others. Wait til you hear" g OTITAd .fir Away Again In A tt to # lieff f orid - Judy Caplan Ginsburgh For kids... This award-winning and educator infuses her ow other's songs with the war enthusiasm that mark her •4t.t:s .ta,ylotr All CDs $15.95 www.jewish.com • 800-875-6621 n 11/29 2002 24 vewtsh.confstore 4 0 % The store for the Jewish community online' list Quartet members — three of whom it considers biased toward the Palestinians — will serve as moni- tors, playing a role that until now has been filled by the United States. _ The new version speaks of moving through the process with the "consen- sus" opinion of the Quartet — essen- tially giving the United States veto power — but Israeli officials argue that isn't enough: They want any monitoring to be left solely to the United States. Several analysts say that, unlike Bush's June 24 speech, the road map essentially allows Palestinian Authority leader Yasser Arafat to remain in power. Bush also said no Palestinian state could be created until the Palestinian leaders "engage in a sustained fight against the terrorists and dismantle their infrastructure." Israel has com- plained that the security steps the plan demands of the Palestinians are too vague. "The road map is not faithful to President Bush's June 24 speech, which makes crystal clear that removal of Yasser Arafat is a prerequisite of any American diplomatic initiative," said David Makovsky, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Also of concern is the lack of conse- quences for Palestinian non-compli- ance. If the road map is released next month, it will come during national elections in Israel, where Haifa's dovish mayor, Amram Mitzna, will lead the Labor Party. The Likud leadership will be decided in a primary Nov. 28, with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon a heavy favorite to defeat his challenger, Foreign Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. Delay Requested Israeli officials have been asking for the release to be postponed until after the Jan. 28 national elections. .Sharansky made the request in Washington last week, but so far the United States has resisted. "We haven't made any decisions in terms of announcements or anything," State Department spokesman Philip Reeker said last week. Releasing the road map during the election campaign would be seen as a gift for Mitzna, who has said he will meet with any Palestinian leader, including Arafat. Sharon has refused BEzinn) TIKE ISSUE ener to the "is decla r ed ‘last Israel s e.edkwi6hs t a tIsrael h6' n t i the e acne . . ,. :,. elek'., , e „:., ,..,,:.: at, la' its i C ;'tr defense eC1S () W Allan Ga eiths 67112DMUrli Council of,Metr op olitan Detro i t meet with Arafat because of Arafat's ties to terror groups. However, Martin Indyk, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel, said Monday that postponing the release would be as much an act of interfer- ence in Israeli politics as releasing it. He also suggested that Sharon would not be hampered by the road map. "He needs to show the Israeli elec- torate not only that he can fight ter- rorism but that he has a way out of the process," Indyk said at a forum at the Brookings Institution, where he is a senior fellow. "He needs to support it." Indyk also said that, based on the fate of other peace plans presented over the past two years, Sharon knows there is little chance the road map will be implemented. Therefore, Indyk said, he has little to lose by supporting the plan. Makovsky speculated that the United States may be insisting on releasing the document quickly to strengthen U.S. attempts to woo Arab support for a potential attack on Iraq. "Introducing the document at such a sensitive juncture, very little can be accomplished," he said. "It makes me wonder if Arab states are seeking to insist upon the Quartet's passage of the road map as a prerequisite for their acquiescence to the American actions in Iraq." Li