60 Friday, December 21, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Ash /n Jeweler NEWS BACK IN BUSINESS!!! Fine Jewelry & Watch Repair 26001 Coolidge 545-5114 Oak Park Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Closed Saturday - Mid-East Pastry Delights Everything on special this month. We have the finest cakes, nuts and pastries including many different flavors of baklava with nuts, lady fingers with pistachio nuts, Bird nests with pistaChio nuts, and half moons, many roses with walnuts and cashews. Come try our fabulous desserts. WE CATER TO WEDDINGS, PARTIES & SOCIAL FUNCTIONS 8230 W. 9 Mile Rd. Oak Park, MI 48237 545-7111 Member Detroit Area Retail Kosher Meat Dealers Assoc. Sun., Dec. 23rd thru Thurs., Dec. 27th Empire FRESH FROZEN TURKEY DRUMSTICKS 69c per lb. Breaded CHICKEN WITH MEAT PATTIES $2 ■ 99 per pckg. 3/4 lb. Cohen & Son Kosher Meat Market 26035 Coolidge, Oak Park Dexter Davison Kosher Meat Market 24760 Coolidge, Oak Park Harvard Row Kosher Meat Market 21780 W. 11 Mile Rd., Southfield Franklin Kosher meat 5564 Drake Rd., W. Bloomfield Northgate Kosher Meat Market 25254 Greenfield, Oak Park Louis Cohen & Sons New Orleans Kosher Meat Market 15600 W. 10 Mile, Southfield Singer's Kosher Meat Market 13721 W. 9 Mile, Oak Park . MORE PURE MEAT FOR YOUR MONEY AT YOUR MEMBER MARKETS New tactics pushed for the PLO? Italy urges diplomatic approach Rome (JTA) — Italy will encourage the Palestine Libera- tion Organization whenever it employs diplomatic means to achieve the Palestinian right to self-determination but will con- demn it when it resorts to "unac- ceptable methods," Foreign Minister Giuglio Andreotti told the foreign affairs committee of the Italian house of representa- tives last week. Andreotti spoke in reply to sharp criticism from opposition members of Parliament, notably Republican Giorgio La Malfa who presided over the session. They objected vigorously to the meeting Andreotti and Premier Bettino Craxi had with PLO chief Yasir Arafat in Tunis earlier this month — at the initiative of the Italian leaders. La Malfa noted that Arafat is "not the heaad of a government but a representative of a political movement for many years con- nected with acts of armed battle in the territory of a State friendly to us (Israel) and above all he has not yet completely abandoned his use of the language of arms — if it is true that in a declaration pub- lished the day after Arafat's meet- ing with 'Italian government representatives, he declared that the rifle remains the only means for obtaining the liberation of Palestine." Andreotti was called before the committee to explain his conten- tion that the PLO, in the past year, has shown definite signs of moderation. He said that the Prices Good 12-21 thru 12-27 BUY A LITTLE, BUY A LOT. YOU SAVE EITHER WAY! Also Carry NEW CONVENIENT LOCATION Gourmet Foods 31170 Southfield & 13 Mile Rd. 644-0477 We CORNERS Shopping Center Monday thru Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-5 meeting of the Palestine National Council (PNC) in Amman Jordan last month — convened by Arafat — was "a politically important though not a decisive turn in the history of the PLO." Andreotti added that his and Craxi's "meeting with Arafat convinced us that the fulfillment of the Palestinian right to self- determination must be encouraged every time the PLO makes an effort to use diplomacy, while it must be condemned when these aspirations are defended by unacceptable methods. "The foundations of diplomacy that lead. to cooperation between Israelis and Palestinians are based on reciprocal recognition, evacuation from the occupied ter- ritories and creation of confedera- tive ties between Palestinians and Jordanians," Andreotti said. The latter is similar to one of the points of President Reagan's Sept. 1, 1982 Middle East peace pro- posals. Improved ties urged Rome (JTA) — An "absolutely privileged" position must be given the Jewish community and tradi- tion in interreligious dialogue, Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini of Milan told the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency here last week. He also spoke of how interpreta- tions of Biblical text injurious to Jews can be removed from Chris- tian teaching. Cardinal Martini was inter- viewed after releasing to the press a new Papal dialogue, a "post- synodal apostolic exhortation on reconciliation and penance" which examines conflict in human society on all levels. He explained to the JTA that three of the four Biblical passages claimed as basic source material for the Papal document — Genesis 3, Genesis 11 and Psalm 50 — are passages from the Jewish scrip- tures, clear evidence, he said, of Christianity's Jewish heritage. The Cardinal recalled the statement he made last July at a meeting of the International Con- ference for Christians and Jews at Vallombrosa, on the necessity "to remove tendentious or injurious interpretations of Biblical texts from Christian teaching." Asked how, in light of the new Papal document's stated aim of "promot- ing sincere ecumenical dialogue" this could be implemented, Mar- tini said he believed it must be done on two levels. One was "the idea of dialogue . . . the capacity to understand the other's values and point of view. And this is true — a fortiori — in a sense of absolute privilege for the Jewish community and for the Jewish roots of Christian his- tory." He pointed out that "passages of the Old Testament are at the basis of this vision of man." The second level, according to Cardinal Mar- tini, is centered around the catechism. "It is within catechistical (teaching) that we must work at the enlightenment . . . Catechism must be presented with care, with attention, with precision, bound to the word of God. As guidelines we already have, for example, the norms laid down by the Secretariat for Christian Unity which are an invitation to this type of catechism, and which can be applied through the indica- tions in this document of apostolic exhortation," the Cardinal said. "It seems to me," he added, "that these are the two lines we must emphasize in our progress toward knowledge, throwing light on ambiguities — if only in ter- minology — and then in giving full value to the Jewish heritage, to Jewish culture, to Jewish com- passion and piety." The Papal document examines conflicts between peoples, be- tween religions and social classes. It emphasizes individual respon- sibility as opposed to the passive acceptance of evils by shifting the blame on abstractions such as "society" or "class.' While the document admits that injustice everywhere and in every form must be fought, it does not consider hate or violence as admissible. Israel bars German's entry Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel has barred entry to Brigitte Heinrich, member of a delegation of the West German Green Party, plan- ning to visit Israel during their tour of the Middle East. Heinrich reportedly had been convicted in Germany for cooperating with the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion. The Green Party, which won representation in the Bundestag for the first time last year, is re- garded as pro-Arab and un- friendly to Israel. Its delegation is due here next week but the Foreign Ministry plans to keep the visit as low key as possible. Three injured in bus bombing Tel Aviv (JTA) — A hand gre- nade tossed at a bus near a veget- able market early Monday eve- ning sent three people to the hos- pital for treatment of slight wounds and shock. Police cor- doned off the area in central Tel Aviv to search for the assailants. The bus was waiting at a stop on Hashmonayim Street outside the wholesale vegetable market at 7 p.m. local time when a grenade flew over the wall that surrounds the market. Eyewitnesses said they saw several men running from the scene. All the bus win- dows were shattered, littering a wide area with broken glass.