56 Friday, February 7, 1986

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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Jerusalem (JTA) — Prime
Minister Shimon Peres last
Sunday briefed the Cabinet on
his 12•day trip to Europe. No
details were released but Peres
reportedly avoided raising ex-
pectations with respect to the
Middle East peace process and
said he did not foresee an ear-
ly breakthrough in contacts
with Jordan.
There were reports from
Cairo that President Hosni
Mubarak has invited King
Hussein of Jordan and Pales-
tine Liberation Organization
chief Yasir Arafat to meet with
him there soon. Hussein ap-
parently was unable to per-
suade Arafat to accept terms
for PLO representation at
future peace talks during their
meetings in Amman recently.
There was also a report from
Washington that Secretary of
State George Shultz might
consider a personal visit to the
Middle East next month after
a further shuttle mission to the
region by Assistant Secretary
of State Richard Murphy.
Murphy had three meetings
with Peres while the Prime
Minister was in Europe. He
also met in London with Hus-
sein who left before Peres ar-
rived there.
Peres, who returned home
after three days in West Ger-
many and a visit to West
Berlin, faces serious dif-
ferences with his Likud coali-
tion partners over Israel's
position on the Middle East
peace process in general and ef-
forts to improve relations with
Egypt in particular. The most
immediate problem is a settle-
ment of the Taba border
dispute.
The Inner Cabinet agreed on
January 13 to Egypt's demand
to put the matter to interna-
tional arbitration, but with an
initial try at conciliation, in-
sisted on by Likud. The pro-
cess is linked to an overall
package deal aimed at normal-
izing relations with Egypt, in-
cluding the early return of the
Egyptian Ambassador to Tel
Aviv. The Israeli concession
had a cool reception in Cairo.
Peres will consult shortly
with Foreign Minister Yitzhak
Shamir, leader of Likud and
Defense Minister Yitzhak
Rabin, prior to the resumption
of talks between Israeli and
Egyptian diplomats to draft
the terms of reference for ar-
bitration over Taba. The Prime
Minister is said to be resisting
Likud demands for another full
scale Inner Cabinet debate
before the diplomatic talks
resume.
Sources close to Peres,
meanwhile, are putting out the
word that Ezer Weizman's
hurried trip to Cairo for a
meeting with Mubarak was
not as barren of results as
Likud circles have depicted it.
They got an unexpected boost
from Mubarak who warned in

Cairo against writing off Weiz-
man's mission and hinted it
concerned much more than
just the Taba dispute.
Weizman, a Minister-With-
out-Portfolio, undertook his
mission with the approval of
Peres and Shamir but appar-
ently failed to get Mubarak to
agree on a date for a summit
meeting with Peres.
Sources close to Peres have
taken pains, since his return
from Europe, to create an im-
pression of movement in the
peace process; that it is indeed
proceeding in various capitals
and efforts continue to put
together a Jordanian-Pales-
tinian delegation that would
not include avowed represen-
tatives of the PLO.
Peres seems to believe that
once Hussein is convinced
Arafat will not accept the basic
terms — recognition of Israel's
right to exist and acceptance
of Security Council resolutions
242 and 338 — he will search
for new negotiating partners
among non-PLO Palestinians.
Peres, at least, has been trying
to convince Hussein, through
Murphy and possibly other
mediators, to follow such a
course.

Beth Shalom RSP
Meeting Sunday

The Religious School Parents
of. Cong. Beth Shalom have in-
vited funeral director David
Techner of Ira Kaufman Chapel
to speak at their next meeting
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. in the
synagogue social hall.
Techner's topic will be: "How
To Discuss Death with Your
Child." Coffee and cake will be
served. All are welcome.

ON THE AIR

RELIGION IN THE NEWS:
9:05 a.m. Sunday, CKWW (580),
Rabbi Jonathan V. Plaut is the
moderator.

NATIONAL JEWISH TELE-
VISION: 1-4 p.m. Sunday, Conti-
nental Cable Channel 11, and
Tribune/United Cable Channel
119, includes "Hello Jerusalem,"
at 2 p.m., Booth Communications
Channel 53, 6 p.m. Mondays.

HA-KOL: THE JEWISH
VOICE: 4:30 p.m. Sunday,.
WDET-FM (101.9), Hebrew
melodies; excerpts of an address
by Dr. Irving (Yitz) Greenberg of
the National Center on Learning
and Leadership.

THE . JEWISH SOUND: 11 p.m.
Sunday, WNIC-AM (1310). Rabbi
Yitzchak Kagan is the moderator.
--rerporone-o4rissvft.tenvirome4-Amove

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