CONGRATULATE YOUR STUDENT'S SUCCESS NEW GAME PLAN from page 32 with an ad in The Jewish News featuring our 2005 graduates! ISSUE DATE: May 19, 2005 AD DEADLINE: May 13, 2005 • / sample ad (4.75"x 3" size) Congratulations, liaddy lingle We are very proud of you and all your accomplishments! May your future be filled with health, happiness and success. Border #1 U Love always, Mom, Dad & Max is the main factor in bringing Hamas into the political field," Steinberg said. "The ideal situation for Hamas would have been for most of Palestinian society to accept its ultimate values, but the fact that society is tired, worried and yearn- ing for a kind of time-out from the intifada compels Hamas to enter the political arena." The group's rhetoric remains nearly as belligerent as always, but the political consequences are different. A Hamas leader in Gaza, Mahmoud Al-Zahar, said his movement wants to join the Palestine Liberation Organization, the main umbrella body for Palestinian groups, "to consolidate the resistance option in its capacity as the strategic option toward the liberation of Palestine." Zahar reacted to growing concern among secular Palestinians that Islam SIZES/PRICES 4.75" x 2" - '45 4.75" x 4" - '85 4.75" x 3" - '65 4.75" x 5" - '100 and democracy can not go together. The issue recently was raised by Ghassan Khatib, the P.A. minister of planning, in an article on Bitterlemons. The Web site has dealt at length with Hamas' growing power. Secularists question whether Islamists who take power by democratic means are committed to maintaining democra- cy, Khatib wrote. Fatah would be expected to rally its forces to face the challenge from Hamas. But Fatah, the ruling party, is preoccu- pied with an internal crisis that is devel- oping mainly along the rift between the so-called old and new guards. "Today, in the eyes of most of the population, Fatah is identified with cor- ruption and the dysfunctionality of the PA, whereas Hamas is considered clean by comparison," Steinberg said in the Bitterlemons interview. ❑ TABLE TO TABLE from page 33 Additional sizes available upon request. Border #2 U.:, For more information, call 248.351.5100 Please write your congratulatory message legibly. Be sure to enclose photo if you'd like. If you would like your photo back, please include a self-addressed stamped envelope sabras and immigrants. We mix big companies — Intel was just here — with college students and elementary schools. We mix Ashkenazi and Sephardi families. We love it when new immigrants from absorption cen- ters come. Everyone works side by side." "We work with anyone who shows up to glean," Gitler says. "We don't necessarily get their names, and we don't ask anyone for their family back- ground. "So the truth is, we don't always know which people, within which groups, are immigrants and which are sabras." Hunger manifests itself differently in Israel than it does in less-developed parts of the world, Swartz says. "Hunger isn't the right word. It's not little kids with bloated tummies," he says. "What we do have is nutritional insecurity — a clumsy phrase — but it means single mothers who have to choose between a nutritional meal for their kids or paying the rent. "Or a senior citizen who has to choose between food and medicine. The unemployed or working poor. People who can't afford nutritional foods, like meat and vegetables, and try to live on cheaper foods, like rice and pasta. "Of those kinds of people, unfortu- nately, there doesn't seem to be any end." ❑ For more information on Table to Table, email info@tabletotable.orgil. For the gleaning operation, check the Web site at http://www.tabletotable.org.il/fruit. Amaginv-dvg Israel's Critics Border Choice #: Check Enclosed for $ Acct. # ■ Visa ❑ MasterCard Signature ■ AmEx Exp. Date The Answer Israel is in a war against terrorists. War's cruelties include destruction, road- blocks and disruptions to the economy and education. To defend itself, Israel must arrest terrorists and thwart, sometimes with deadly force, those in the act of executing terrorist attacks. But Israel's army is civilian controlled by a democratic government that punishes its own lawbreakers and has strict rules of engagement to protect civilians. Israel has agreed to every cease-fire and peace initiative. The war will end on the same day that the Palestinians end the terror. WE CANNOT PRINT YOUR AD WITHOUT THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION, WHICH WILL BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL. Name Telephone Address City State The Charge Israel's military oppresses the Palestinians. Zip E-mail 4/21 2005 34 Attn: Meg — The Detroit Jewish News 29200 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 110 Southfield, MI 48034 Phone: 248.351.5100 • Fax: 248.304.0049 — Allan Gale, Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit .0.0