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LEARNING DISABILITIES CLINIC • Private Tutoring • Evaluation • Therapy LYNNE MASTER, M.Ed Director 545-6677 433-3 3 2 3 See you at Roslyn's Intimate Apparel. 25201 Coolidge, Oak Park • 4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills — MARK'S Qc8lyn CLEANING AND TAILORING 32730 Northwestern Hwy. Farmington Hills, Michigan 48018 737-0360 L 32 No tailor shop in West Bloomfield, Farmington Hills or any other city can offer a service like this. LET US BE YOUR TAILOR — FREE 1989 CALENDARS FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1989 1 Intimate Apparel J APPLEGATE SQUARE Northwestern at Inkster Daily 10-5:30, Thurs. 10-8 353-5522 resident George Bush and other senior ad- ministration official made clear during a closed- door meeting with American Jewish leaders that they ex- pect Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir to arrive in Washington next month with some "new ideas" on how to advance the Arab-Israeli peace process. They expressed hope that Foreign Minister Moshe Arens, during his own preliminary meetings with Bush, Secretary of State James Baker and other U.S. officials, would be prepared as a first step to discuss substan- tive ways to ease the tensions on the West Bank and Gaza. But the recent appointment of Israeli Air Force Col. Aviem Sella to a senior posi- tion with a major Israeli defense company may strain relations between Israel and the United States. The respected U.S. military publication Defense News has called on the U.S. government to cut aid to Israel by $200 million this year because of Sella's appointment. In March 1987, Sella was indicted by a U.S. federal grand jury on three counts of espionage related to the Jonathan Pollard spy ring. According to sources pre- sent during the March 9 White House meeting with the Jews, Bush said he was impressed by some of the re- cent proposals floated by Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin who has called for Palestinian elections in the territories. Bush acknowledged, the sources said, the great dif- ficulties facing Israel and in- sisted that he had no inten- tion of pressuring Israel. The State Department said that the Arens talks in Washington reflect "the con- tinuing close, strong and cooperative relationship we have with Israel." Bush received two delega- tions of Jews at the White House — one from the Republican Party's National Jewish Coalition and the other from the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, chaired by Seymour Reich. The President was accom- panied by his National Security Adviser, Brent Scowcroft, the White House Chief of Staff, John Sununu, and other senior aides. After the meetings, Reich told reporters outside the White House that the Presi- dent was convinced that a cautious and slow approach would be most productive in laying the groundwork for peace negotiations. • Reich said the Jewish leadership had no complaints about U.S. policy, which he described as "very consis- tent." He said the United States opposes the creation of an independent Palestinian state and an Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 lines. He said the president also supports an undivided Jerusalem and direct peace negotiations. The Jewish leaders, while expressing their continuing concern about the PLO, did not ask Bush to suspend the U.S. dialogue with the PLO. And Bush made clear to the Jewish leaders that the Bush made clear to the Jewish leaders that the United States would continue to pursue this dialogue. United States would continue to pursue this dialogue despite the Israeli govern- ment's opposition. Another U.S. official said the administration would be "cautious but not inactive" in trying to get peace negotia- tions off the ground. The United States, he added, would continue to prod the PLO into ending all military operations against Israel. In addition, the official said, the United States would strongly resist efforts by its West European allies to lean on Israel to make unilateral concessions. Among the organizations represented at the Presidents Conference meeting were the American Israel Public Af- fairs Committee; the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith; American Jewish Con- gress; Union of American Hebrew Congregations (Reform); Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations; and others. A senior Israeli official in Washington said that the Bush administration was hoping that Israel would im- prove the political climate on the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the coming weeks in