WE'VE MOVED! Agenda Continued from preceding page TO 17422 WEST 10 MILE ROAD rEW ra_ 0 cr IL I- 0 w CEKI IL 10 MILE I- D z w 0 OLD (/) 0 Our new location is on the corner of 10 Mile & Lathrup. 1 block east of Southfield. DR. I. STEINER & DR. J. DANTO PODIATRISTS/FOOT SURGEONS 557-2400 FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION excluding lab tests, x-rays, treatments, infant exams taxi service and house calls available • 1 somerset mall UP TO FT pp Ili/ FINAL DAYS! 1 V 1 11 O F F ALL MERCHANDISE French Fashions. American Fit. Worldly Attitude. N EW® For Men and Women MTh.F. 10-9, T.W., Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-5 maN 32 FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1987 649-9415 many controversial issues ex- amined and debated by 500 members of the seven-year-old Jewish organization with positions to the left of the U.S. Jewish mainstream. NJA's five national task forces presented strategy papers that will set the organization's course for the next two years. A key strata- gem is to form alliances for political change. For the first time, NJA took up the issue of Soviet Jewry. Delegates agreed that NJA must be- come active on behalf of rights in the Soviet Union. Arab-Jewish Business Group Goes Public A group of prominent American, Jewish and Arab citizens urged the U.S. government last week to sup- port an international con- ference for Middle East peace because failure to grasp the current opportunity could en- danger world peace. That warning was contain- ed in a statement released by The Business's Group for Middle East Peace and Development at a press con- ference in New York, accor- ding to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. The group, whose members have close ties to Israel and the Arab world, has been working quietly for the past five years to advance the Middle East peace process and promote the economic development of the region, particularly the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The members include Na- jeeb Halaby, former chairman of Pan American Airlines, whose daughter, Queen Noor, is the wife of King Hussein of Jordan; Howard Squadron, a New York attorney and former chairman of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- tions; and former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. Vance noted at the press conference that he is the only group member who is neither Jewish nor Arab. He said the group is mak- ing its views public because developments in recent months have created an op- portunity to bring together the parties to the Middle East dispute. "If this opportunity is not grasped, there is a danger that peace in the Mid- dle East and the world will be shattered," he said. The group agreed that a peace conference should be convened without precondi- tions and that the Soviet Union should have a part in it. Vance and Squadron disagreed over participation by the Palestine Liberation Organization. Vance, stressing that he spoke for himself, said the PLO should be included if it renounces violence and ac- cepts United Nations Securi- Howard Squadron: Now is the time for peace conference. ty Council Resolutions 242 and 338, which imply recogni- tion of Israel. Squadron, also speaking for himself, said that in view of the PLO's radicalization at the Palestine National Coun- cil in Algiers earlier this year, its participation should be ruled out. EEC To Resume Ties With Syria Brussels (JTA) — The European Economic Com- munity (EEC) will resume high-level diplomatic rela- tions with Syria, suspended last November after the Syrian Embassy in London was linked to a terrorist at- tempt to blow up an Israeli airliner in London, it was reported last week. The decision was taken by the Foreign Ministers of the 12 EEC member states atten- ding the European Political Cooperation conference in Copenhagen. But other EEC- imposed sanctions against Syria will remain in effect for the time being. These include an embargo on arms deliver- ies, freezing of EEC aid and surveillance of Syrian diplomatic activities and Syrian airlines.