THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 20 Friday, September 19, 1980 Autonomy Discussions Held in U.S. • 046 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • THE PERFECT FINISH • • • • • • at 20% DISCOUNT ($10 & over — Gift Wrapped Free of Charge) • • 6641 Orchard Lake Rd. at Maple • Great Beginnings For Gift Elegance • Old Orchard, West Bloomfield • 626-1500 Mon. thru Sat., 9:30-5 • • • • • • • I FUNKY FUN & WHIMSICAL THINGS • ••••••••••••••••••••••• WASHINGTON'(JTA) — Secretary of State Edmund Muskie has declined to speculate on whether the Egyptian-Israeli meeting in New York or the meetings that followed in Washing- ton this week would result in a resumption of trilateral discussions on West Bank- Gaza Strip autonomy. Egyptian ,Minister of State Butros Ghali brought to Egyptian Foreign Minis- ter Kamal Hason Ali a copy of the latest Egyptian posi- "I'm not deaf I just can't understand some words." If this is your problem .. . Dahlberg Miracle -Ear III may be your answer. 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Ghali came from Cairo to New - York to see Ali who is in the United States for medical treatment. Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir was to see Ghali in New York and then go to Wash- ington to meet Muskie. Prime Minister Menahem Begin confirmed reports that Israel is consid- ering the release of Palesti- nian security prisoners. But he insisted that this , would be purely a "humanitarian move, not a "gesture" to Egypt connected with the planned resumption of the autonomy talks. Begin told Israeli dip- lomatic correspondents he had been approached regarding the release of prisoners some weeks ago by U.S. Ambassador Samuel Lewis. The ap- proach had been uncon- nected to special envoy Sol Linowitz's mission to the area to seek a re- sumption of the long- stalled negotiations. Though the premier in- sisted that the prospective release of prisoners is not a "gesture to Egypt," obser- vers immediately read it as part of a goodwill package. Both sides pledged, in the agreed statement issued by Linowitz at the end of his trip, to "strengthen the foundations ofmutual trust and friendship," and this was widely interpreted as including such gestures by Israel as prisoner release and postponing moving the premier's office to East Jerusalem. On this latter point, Begin firmly denied that he had changed his intention to move the office. He was not responsible, he said, if Linowitz or others had come away from meetings with him having formed that im- pression. "I definitely intend to bring (the office move) be- fore the Cabinet," Begin de- clared. Significantly, though, he declined to say when he would bring the matter to the Cabinet, say- ing vaguely that there were "considerations" to be borne in mind. Meanwhile, President M.E. Arms Sales STOCKHOLM (ZINS) — The Stockholm Interna- tional Peace Research Insti- tute reported that Middle East arms expenditures dropped from $34.7 billion in 1978 to $32.1 billion in 1979. The Institute said the major expenditures were made by the OPEC coun- tries. Saudi Arabia spent $14.6 billion in arms in 1979 and $12.7 billion in 1978. Israel increased its spend- ing from $2.3 billion to $3.0 billion. Egypt dropped from $3.2 billion to $2.8 billion, while Syria went from $1.1 billion in 1978 to $1.9 bil- lion for weapons purchases in 1979. Anwar Sadat of Egypt is firmly opposed-to Jorda- nian participation in the autonomy talks "at this stage" because it might jeopardize the entire peace process. He said that King Hussein had of- fered to join the Camp David meetings in Sep- tember 1978 but that he, Sadat, had discouraged him because of the Jor- danian ruler's low esteem in the Arab world. Sadat expressed his views in the course of a two-hour conversation with former Premier Yitzhak Rabin, a leader of the opposition Labor Party, who visited Cairo last week. 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