http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/002007.html"Now, Salem just got his website up online. And he seems to have gotten some help because up until a couple days ago the site address was registered under the name of Marc Zell. Right, that Marc Zell, Feith's former law partner. And the help continues. According to Chalabi, Zell is working as the firm's "marketing consultant." In fact, at the bottom of the IILG website in the 'contact' section it lists the "Partner for International Marketing" as someone with the email address 'mzell@iraqlawfirm.com'. And I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that that's an email address for Marc Zell. Call me crazy."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,2763,1057562,00.html"An ultra-Zionist Israeli settler has joined forces with the nephew of the Iraqi leader Ahmad Chalabi to promote investment in Iraq.
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"American-born Mr Zell, 50, became interested in Zionism in the mid-1980s and made several trips to Israel - one of them sponsored by the Gush Emunim (Bloc of the Faithful) movement, which claims the territories occupied in 1967 were given to Israel by God.
"In 1988, at the start of the first Palestinian uprising, Mr Zell moved with his family to the Jewish settlement of Alon Shevut on the West Bank, acquiring Israeli nationality.
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"In the 1996 Israeli election Mr Zell campaigned for the rightwing Binyamin Netanyahu and was also at one time a member of the Likud party's central committee and policy bureau."
http://www.homemaker.org/kislev_57/cover.html"By 1988, the Zells had become both orthodox and Zionistic. And despite strong parental objections, they made Aliyah and settled in Alon Shvut, a Yishuv forty-five miles southeast of Jerusalem. At the time, the Intifadah had just started but even then their new neighbors welcomed the Zells with cakes and greetings of 'Kol Hakavod!' The Zells agree that Alon Shvut is an ideal place for children. 'It's like a small town in Iowa.' The Gush Etzion regional swimming pool, Yeshivas, and community center, and quiet roads all add to the quality of life. However, Robin admits, that her youngsters have been exposed to a lot: The Gulf War, rock-throwing, shootings and the loss of many dear friends to terrorism. A barbed-wire fence surrounds the Yishuv; there is only one gate in or out.
"'We get used to things real fast,' she notes. During the Gulf War, there was even an art project for the kids?'Decorate your gas mask box.'"
And much, much more.