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There's a whole new generation of office technology that's changing the way we think about the office and how we generate, transmit and store business in- formation. you think about very often. Unless you need a new desk in a hurry. Or run out of diskettes or copier paper. If a mini-crisis comes up in your office, it's good to know there's an office expert close at hand who's as interested in keeping your office running smoothly as you are. Some things, though, don't change. Like the serv- ice you get from us. It's probably not something If you want service that's prompt, personal and reliable, give us a call. Yates Office Supply Co. 313-538-4444 18225 W. 8 Mile Road Detroit, Mi. 48219 38 Friday, August 22, 1986 WE DELIVER THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Travelers Tower 26555 Evergreen Road Southfield, Mi. 48076 * . NEWS Israel, Soviet Helsinki Talks End Abruptly Tel Aviv (JTA) — The Israel-Soviet talks wound up in one short 90-minute ses- sion in Helsinki, the Finnish capital, last Monday. Neither side would say that the talks had broken down and polit- ical sources steered away from any negative description of the meeting. Israeli delegation spokes- man Ehud Gol indicated that the brief session was inevita- ble as the Soviet side had an extremely narrow mandate — to state the Soviet case, listen to the Israelis and then report back to Moscow. Israeli spokesmen were at pains to emphasize that the talks had not broken down. The very fact of the direct meeting between official Soviet and Israeli diplomats was important, they stressed. The Israeli delegation said they had anticipated that talks would not last longer than "one or two days:' In telephone interviews from Helsinki with the pres- tigious "New Evening" news, an interview television pro- gram operated by educational television, and the radio sta- tion of the Israel Defense Force and later with Israel Radio, Gol said that the meeting had been "frank and correct...held in a pleasant at- mosphere." The conversation was carried out in English. "At the request of the Finn, we set aside two days for the talks. But there was no agen- da, and we did not know how long the talks would last,"he said. Gol said the Soviet delega- tion outlined its three points dealing with the proposed dis- patch of a Soviet delegation to Jerusalem to discuss Rus- sian property matters, and the Israelis had read out their verbal statement stressing the right of Russian Jews to emigrate to Israel to join their families and the freeing of Jewish Prisoners of Zion, and outlining the Israeli view of the Middle East in general. "The Russians wrote down every word. We then handed them the written text of our verbal statement?" Gol said. Future contacts will be maintained through the reg- ular diplomatic channels, with the Dutch and Finnish Embassies representing the two sides. The Netherlands represents Israel in Moscow, and the Finnish embassy in Tel Aviv has a Soviet interest section which handles USSR affairs in Israel. The continued contacts are expected to focus on a request by the Soviets to send a dele- gation to Israel to deal with Consular matters. Israel has insisted that an Israeli dele- gation be reserved in Moscow at the same time. The Hel- sinki delegates have not yet ft responded to that demand. In Jerusalem before the Helsinki talks began, new im- migrants from the Soviet Union, as well as members of the Thhiya Party and a new organization calling itself Israel Action, held demon- strations in Jerusalem and ml Aviv demanding the inclu- sion of the Jewish emigration question inthe Helsinki talks. In Jerusalem, the demon- strators chained themselves to a steel chain padlocked across a main street in the middle of the city, causing a mammoth traffic jam. Their spokesman said Israel should put forward prior conditions about the Jewish question before the negotiations begin. Natan (Anatoly) Shcharan- sky wrote in an article pub- lished in The Jerusalem Post Future contacts will be maintained through the regular diplomatic channels. that linkage between any Soviet consular and property claims in Israel and Israel's demands for the right of Jews to leave the USSR is an essen- tial key for emigration from the Soviet Union to Israel. "Thstimony to the impor- tance of linkage as a weapon against Soviet repression is provided by the constant Soviet machinations to un- dermine that linkage, to free themselves of the obligation to honor human rights as a quid pro quo for economic and strategic gains," Shcha- ransky said. "We are witness today to a major Soviet pro- paganda attack against linkage." He warned that "If Israel betrays the principle of link- age, it will have dealt a mor- tal blow to the position of Israel's champions in the free world who have battled for two decades to establish that principle." Shcharansky urged that the right of Jews to emigrate be set forth as a precondition both for progress on consular relations and for further negotiations on improved relations between the two countries. Prime Minister Shimon Peres, asked in an Israel Radio interview before the talks whether he thought there was a chance of any political developments in the talks, said, "I believe that there is an opportunity, but there is no certainty?' Peres said he had "received various informal messages from the USSR, and I accept them as informal ones:'