28 Friday, September 21, 1979 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS INVITATIONS I Hussein-Carter Summit Soon? I' bel-crest photo 1 a visit with Carter. According to Newsweek, Hussein wants to propose his idea for a West Bank- Jordan confederation. Washington sources are skeptical that he has the support of the PLO and be- lieve he won't stray far from the Arab rejectionists who supply Jurdan with oil. I . I Also Matches, I WASHINGTON — King -I Napkins & Favors I I Savings no % 1 Hussein of Jurdan wants to meet with President Carter I Up To L 1 following his upcoming visit I Large Selection Available I to the United Nations. According to Newsweek magazine, Carter's aides AND CAMERA SHOP I I are angry with Hussein's -I I STUDIO 6698 Orchard Lake Rd. attacks on the U.S. in- I West Bloomfield Plaza volvement with the Middle I East peace initiative and I 1 851-5840 ilanirinliq of his motives for sr au "Riff THE EHAPTERS IN THE BOOK BF NOM LIFE BE FIIIED WITH +MAIM Mn HAPPINESS IN 4A WORLD BF PEAEE " Aladdin Drugs Athens Souvlaki Charlotte's Knit Shop Di Rosa Beauty Shop Jules Doneson Travel Empress Gardens Farmer Jack's Haber Cleaners Al Harris Clothier Harvard Row Barber Shop Harvard Row Kosher Meats Hilsum's Jerome's Shoes Jewel Bakery Malter Furs Manufacturers Bank of Southfield My Florist George Ohrenstein Jewelers, Ltd. Original Esquire Deli Pazazz, Ltd. Picture Talk Said Shoe Repair Sculptures & Jewelry by Cariann & Mark Nocera Shoe Time Spitzer's Hebrew Books & Gifts Warren Optical 11 Mile and Lahser Spanish and U.S. Jewish Leaders Protest Arafat Visit to Spain WASHINGTON (JTA) — Jewish organizations in Spain and the U.S. pro- tested sharply over the weekend to the Spanish government for 'receiving Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasir Arafat. Leaders of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organ- izations met with Kose Liado, the Spanish Ambas- sador to the U.S., to tell him that American Jews were "deeply disturbed" by the honors the Spanish regime had accorded Arafat during his visit. In New York, the Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith deplored the visit as a setback to the Middle East peace. Arafat's visit was also denounced by Mauricio Toledano, leader of Mad- rid's 3,000 Jews, who called upon the govern- ment to establish dip- lomatic relations with Is- rael. Spain is the only Western nation which does not have diplomatic ties with Israel, a situa- tion Toledano described as absurd. Arafat, who left Spain Sunday after a 48-hour visit, had been officially -in- vited by the government. While there he met with Prime Minister Adolfo Suarez. It was the first time that a West European leader acting as the head of state had received Arafat. Last July, the terrorist leader met with Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, who is also vice president of the Socialist International. Kreisky claimed that his talks with Arafat were in the context of his role in the International. The PLO chief also met with Foreign Minister Mar- celino Oreja, Spain's gov- erning Union of the Demo- cratic Center, Socialists, Best Wishes For A Very HEALTHY & HAPPY NEW YEAR SAVE 30 % OFF MAN. SUG. RETAIL NOW THRU SEPTEMBER 30th SELECTED VERTICAL BLINDS DEL MAR WOVEN WOODS DEL MAR 1-INCH BLINDS (PREVIOUS ORDERS EXCLUDED) INCOMING FREIGHT ADDED = ..11 Itsitta cil IgifiC111111. IC dk WALLPAPER ,INSTALLATION AVAILABLE PAINT , s 542-3315 23061 COOLIDGE HWY., OAK PARK, AT 9 MI. Communists, the far-left Workers Party, and with Bishop Hilarion Capucci, the former head of the Greek-Melkites in Jerusalem who served three years in an Israeli prison on charges of gunrunning for the Palestinians. He ar- rived in Madrid from Rome where he now lives. However, Manuel Fraga Iribarne, leader of the right-wing Demo- cratic Coalition, refused to meet with Arafat. He said that while he sup- ports the "legitimate rights" of the Palesti- nians, he did not want to contribute "to the flourishing terrorism and revolutionary war in Spain and the confusion that this visit would create." Fraga was refer- ring to Spain's problems with the Basque nationalist organization ETA. In the meeting in Wash- ington with Liado, Theo- dore Mann, chairman of the Presidents Conference, and Yehuda Hellman, executive director, pointed out that while the Spanish govern- ment accorded official hon- ors to Arafat it still refuses to grant diplomatic recogni- tion to Israel. They also told the envoy that receiving Arafat had "seriously in- jured" Spain's reputation among American Jews. Liado, who left for consul- tations in Madrid following his meeting with Mann and Hellman last Thursday evening, promised to transmit their protest "to the highest levels of the Spanish government." Abraham Foxman, ADL's associate national director, termed the official welcome to Arafat by Suarez "strange behavior for the head of a government seek- ing the world's help in cop- ing with Spain's own brand of terrorism among the Basques." He noted that the red carpet treatment "for the king of terrorists" fol- lowed closely after Spa' broke ranks with West( countries to send a delegate to the conference of non- aligned nations in Havana. Foxman said the two developments coming in such' close proximity "makes us wonder whether Spain is signal- ing a new political al- liance with elements that are unfriendly to the free world." Prior to leaving Madrid, Arafat praised the Spanish government's "progressive" stand on the Mideast. How- ever, there was no joint statement. The Spanish Foreign Ministry issued a press statement noting that Spain will"continue main- taining and developing spe- cial ties of friendship and cooperation that unite Spain with the Arab world, to the benefit of both peoples, and the support of the latter's just causes." The statement added that peace in the Mideast "cannot be reached without a just, overall and lasting solution, based on the prin- ciples and resolutions of the United Nations and the Palestinian people's exer- cise of its inalienable na- tional rights." Judge Agrees With Arabs After Gush Emunim Violence TEL AVIV (JTA) — A serious clash between Jewish squatters and an army unit sent to remove them from an unauthorized site near Kiryat Arba on the West Bank has led a member of Israel's Supreme Court to agree, at least in principle, with the conten- tion that Jewish settlers on the West Bank do not con- tribute to security but are themselves a security prob- lem because they disobey military government`orders and fight with soldiers. Acting Chief Justice Alfred Vitkon made that observation last Friday in the course of a hearing on the Elon Moreh case. Elon Moreh is a new Gush Emunim settlement near Nablus where work has been halted pending a Sup- reme Court decision as to whether the expropriation of Arab-owned land was jus- tified for security reasons. The counsel for the Arab land-owners argued that in light of what happened near Kiryat Arba last Thursday night, no one can take seri- ously the claim that the settlers contribute to Is- rael's security. One soldier was badly burned when the squat- ters, Gush Emunim members from Kiryat Arba, poured kerosene on tires and set them on fire to prevent the troops from reaching the site. The squatters had broken through a perimeter fence and erected prefabricated huts on the land which they demand must be added to Kiryat Arba so that the Orthodox town- ship adjacent to Hebron can be expanded. They stationed woir and children in the huts a_ defied entreaties by army officers to leave peacefully. After hours of fruitless negotiatons, army units were called in including a squad of engineers with cranes and women soldiers to evacuate the women and children. The squatters were eventually removed by force and their huts disman- tled. Some were taken to mili- tary government headquar- ters and others to a local police station. The injured soldier was hospitalized for treatment of his burns.