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Other Rates and Terms Available • FIRST SECURITY FSLIC SAVINGS BANK •IN, ....••• ■ N 1.011 M•1111=1111MMI.M.... TSB 1760 Telegraph Rd., Suite 201, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48073-5875 Just south of Orchard Lake Rd. (313 ► 22 FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1987 338-7700 NEWS Shultz Hopes To Further Mideast Peace Process Washington (JTA) — Secretary of State George Shultz said last week that he hopes to find the "key" to progress in the Middle East peace process during his up- coming visit to the region. "Everybody wants to move it (the peace process), and yet we can't seem to figure out the key to get it going," Shultz said on ABC-TV's "Good Morning America." But the Secretary denied that he will be bringing any "dramatic" proposals when he visits Israel, Jordan and Egypt on his way to the Soviet Union this month. Shultz rejected a sugges- tion that he plans to put "pressure" on Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir to drop his objections to an in- ternational conference as a means to bringing about direct negotiations between Israel and the Arabs. "It's not a question of pres- sure," he stressed. "It's a question of what's the prob- lem, and how do we solve the problem. And we want to do it together with all of the leaders there.", Shultz indicated he also hopes to go to Saudi Arabia, although the State Depart- ment later could not confirm that Riyadh is on his itin- erary. The Secretary noted , that he plans to meet with Shamir and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, King Hussein of Jordan, Egyptian Presi- dent Hosni Mubarek and "I hope (Saudi) King Fand." Shultz's last visit to the Mideast was in 1986. At that time, he visited Israel, Jordan and Egypt. He was in Israel in 1983 to help work out an agreement between Israel and Lebanon. In another development, Shultz and Peres held an hour-long meeting at the United Nations Plaza Hotel across from the UN, where both officials were attending the General Assembly. "We discussed the upcoming visit of Shultz to the Mideast," Peres said after the meeting. `I told the Secretary that I am glad that his trip to Israel takes place prior to his visit to Moscow, where he would like him to discuss with the Soviets the Mideast peace process and the issue of Soviet Jews." Shultz is expected to visit Israel, Jordan and Egypt, in that order, starting Oct. 16. He is scheduled to arrive in Moscow Oct. 22. In Israel, he will receive honorary doc- torates from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot and Thl Aviv Uni- versity. N.J. Synagogue Wins Eruv Case In Court New York (JTA) — A case was won last week in United States District Court in Tren- ton, New Jersey, on behalf of Congregation Brothers of Israel in Elberon, N.J., a sec- tion of the city of Long Branch, to erect an eruv around its neighborhood. The American Civil Liber- ties Union of New Jersey brought suit against the city of Long Branch in May of this year, because the city had authorized the eruv and approved the synagogue's erection of two additional telephone poles, extension of the fence and lengthening of two fence poles on public property in order to complete the eruv. The ACLU claimed it un- constitutional as a violation of the principle of separation of church and state, according to the United States Consti- tution, as well as Articles 1, 3 and 4 of the New Jersey Constitution. The ACLU maintained that both the city, and Monmouth County, had violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the Con- stitution, as applied by the Fourteenth Amendment, by authorizing the eruv. In addi- tion, the plaintiffs, both the ACLU and Deborah Jacoby — who brought the complaint to the ACLU's attention — alleged that their access to the park in which the tele- phone poles were erected were impeded, and that they had aesthetic objections to the pole and the fence. The judge did find that these "aesthetic and psychological" conse- quences were sufficient to bring suit. The eruv consists of ex- isting telephone poles and fences with wires connecting them, according to the court description. Nathan Lewin, a Washington attorney who represented the synagogue, which was the sponsor of the eruv, said, "All that the con- gregation wanted to do was erect two additional poles and to extend the fence. The con- gregation maintained the eruv."