DESIGNS IN DECORATOR WOOD & LAMINATES, LTD. People lined up to ask questions about the Iran deal. Obama's Take Supporters give view on Iran pact. It Doesn't Have To Cost A Fortune... Only Look Like It! Complete kitchen and bathroom remodeling Harry Kirsbaum Contributing Writer as well as furniture design and installation including granite, wood and other materials. Lois Haron Allied Member ASID 248.851.6989 i e,Berkley si ■ urgent +care K-12 School/Sports/Camp Physicals Exp. 1-1-2016 Uninsured Patients `$50 To See the Doctor (New Patients Only) Exp. 1-1-2016 facebookik www.BerkleyUC.com + Family Walk-in Clinic Convenient and Reliable for all your Health Needs Urgent and Non-Urgent • • • • Most Insurances Accepted 8:30am — 9:00pm 7 Days/Week Pharmacy/X-Ray/Lab Walk-in and by Appointment (248)-268-1525 3270 Greenfield Rd., Berkley, MI 48072 2014280 NOW OPEN! FREE Your NEW DELIVERY Neighborhood Pharmacy rranklir Health Mart Pharmacy FREE MEDICATION CONSULTATION Franklin Health Mart Pharmacy 29113 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield 248.355.1910 OTC Medications I Blood Pressure Monitors I Diabetic Supplies I Immunizations I Medical Equipment 1978990 1 .1 PRIMMIM - ■ 14 September 17 • 2015 O n Sept 9, Democrats in the U.S. Senate successfully filibus- tered the bill disapproving of President Obama's pact with Iran — which means the nuclear agreement will never come up for a vote in the Senate. Forty-one votes were needed by the president's supporters, and they received 42. Both Michigan Democratic senators, Debbie Stabenow and Gary Peters, voted with the presi- dent to block Senate consideration of the Iran deal. This relieves the presi- dent from having to use his veto power to put his plan into effect. Six days earlier, on Sept. 3, the White House made its case for the Iran deal at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield as two Obama administration officials laid out the terms and answered questions for a crowd of 60 people. "It's been an issue of great concern to many Jewish people in this country, and it's a concern that we understand and appreciate:' said Matt 0 Nosanchuk, Obama Matt administration liai- Nosanchuk son to the American Jewish community. As a senator, Obama was committed to working on nuclear non-proliferation, Nosanchuk said, and as president and "a strong opponent of Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon, he has made this a sig- nature issue during his administration. "Over a two-year period, there were negotiations with Iran that have resulted in this deal that will verifiably prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon through extensive inspection and veri- fication measures:' Nosanchuk said. And one of the negotiators to the deal tried to back it up with facts. "The real problem Paul Irwin with Iran is that they've been lying and cheating for more than 10 years," said Paul Irwin, director of nuclear non-pro- liferation on Obama's National Security Council. Without a deal in place, Iran is capable of producing a nuclear weapon in two to three months, he said. With the deal, several key objectives will prevent Iran from producing enough nuclear material for 10 years. The deal also gives the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) over- whelming controls over the nuclear material Iran needs to build a nuclear weapon in several ways, he said. Iran must reduce the number of oper- ational centrifuges it has in its facilities from 19,000 to 5,060, and a 98 percent reduction of its stockpile of enriched uranium from 12,000kg to 300kg, before sanctions are lifted. And those reduc- tions last for the next 10 years. The IAEA will also use sophisticated equipment developed in the U.S., which sits on their centrifuges and monitors what level of uranium Iran is producing every 20 seconds, he said. Electronic seals will allow the IAEA to know instantly if someone is tampering with them. "The breakout time is now one year just to get the material, and it will take even longer to actually take that mate- rial, make it into weapons-usable form and build it into a weapon:' Irwin said. "We feel that it would be sufficient time if Iran breaks out from its declared pro- gram for the international community to detect and respond:' Iran must also close the previously secret Fordow facility, which was built into a mountain and sized to produce a nuclear weapon, remove 33 percent of its infrastructure, 75 percent of its centri- fuges, and put it under continuous moni- toring, with no levels of uranium for 15 years. It must convert the facility to an international research technology center, [meaning that] people from around the world will be "crawling all over the facil- ity:' he said. Iran will also remove the "plutonium pathway," he said. "They will yank out the reactor, fill it with concrete and replace it with another one that cannot