CAPITOL REPORT • It's new! • At the Jewish Home for Aged, we have promised that the Jewish tradition of caring for our elders will be maintained. The new Respite Care Program is helping us keep the promise. Prentis Manor and Borman Hall are now prepared to admit elderly members of the community needing 24-hour coverage for short-term respite care. This new program is designed to provide respite care from a minimum of one-week to a maximum of three weeks for: ■ • • ■ • Alzheimer's patients Recovering stroke victims Elderly persons recuperating from accident or illness Adult Day Program participants Elderly persons considering long-term care Family members... When you go • Help take care of your newest grandchild ■ Take a much needed vacation ■ Enjoy an out-of-town wedding • Rest and relax ...you can be sure your loved one is getting quality care if they're staying at the Jewish Home for Aged... Participants will be able to take advantage of all of the services available including: ■ Professional nursing and medical staff services • Medication supervision and distribution • Three meals prepared freshly each day in accordance with Jewish dietary laws ■ Daily, holiday and Shabbat religious services MA complete- rehabilitation program including structured physical, occupational and speech therapy routines • Therapeutic recreation activities — music, dance, lectures, performances, and social events — which enhance the quality of care • Bathing ■ Beauty shop IA safe environment with 24-hour security Borman Hall 19100 W. Seven Mile Road Detroit, MI 48219 JEWISH HOME FOR AGED Prentis Manor 26051 Lahser Road Southfield, Michigan 48034 For Respite Care Program information and fee schedule, call the Jewish Home for Aged corporate offices at Borman Hall. Ask for Jean Epstein, A.C.S.W., Director of Admissions. (313) 532-7112. JOB RESUMES THAT WORK RESUMES and COVER LETTERS • Professionally Written, 'Wed and Printed • Stored and Revised As Needed • Mass Mailing Available • Prompt Service • Reasonable Fee Cali: JOB SEARCH DYNAMICS 642.3617 32 FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1989 I Quayle Supports Shamir's Proposal In a recent interview, the vice president expressed support for Israel — but criticized further West Bank settlements. WOLF BLITZER Capital Correspondent W ashington — Vice President Dan Quayle does not shy away from the growing im= pression in both Washington and Jerusalem that he may eventually emerge in the Bush administration as Israel's great champion. In- deed, he appears to welcome it. "Clearly," he said in an ex- clusive interview at his White House office, "I have a deep affection and a lot of friends and interest in the security of Israel. I have developed that throughout my years and have done a lot in the Senate to be of assistance to Israel on various matters." Quayle insisted, however, that President George Bush is also a strong supporter of the Jewish state. "The Presi- dent understands and has a strong appreciation for the strategic relationship bet- ween the United States and Israel," he said. "He has a long comprehension and is very much a student of the Middle East, and of par- ticular Israel." Asked how strategically im- portant Israel is to the United States, Quayle replied: "Let's look at the world, and let's look at the Middle East, a key region of the world . . . Israel is a friend in an area where we need to have more friends." Despite differences, the vice president said the current U.S.-Israeli relationship is good. He said, however, that Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Gaza con- tinue to concern the administration. Quayle strongly urged Israel to stop all new settle- ment activity. "These an- nouncements of new set- tlements are politically pro- blematic even if the Israelis don't go through with it," he said. The vice president's aides later said that he had issued several similar appeals against more settlements during private meetings with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and other visiting Israeli officials. Quayle said Israeli leaders had explained to him that an- nouncements of new set- tlements do not necessarily mean the settlements will be funded or approved by the Knesset. Asked whether he an- ticipated an imminent an- nouncement on more set- tlements, he replied firmly: "I hope not." Despite the administra- tion's disapproval of con- tinued settlements, Quayle said the Bush administration was actively trying to ad- vance the Arab-Israeli Peace process. Sitting in his office in the West Wing of the White House, the vice president ex- pressed strong support for Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's four-point peace initiative. "I view Shamir as being sincere," he said. "I think it was an offer he made in great sincerity; there were a lot of deliberations. It was a thing that I know they wrestled with in their coalition govern- ment." Although Quayle said he was confident that the issue "Israel is .a friend in an area where we need to have more friends." of supervising Palestinian elections could be worked out, he would not comment on the matter of East Jerusalem Palestinians voting in the elections. "The whole issue of Jerusalem — I don't think we have to right now get back in- to it and start visiting it," he said. "Let's leave Jerusalem for the time being." The 42-year-old Vice Presi- dent, who visited Israel while he was senator in 1983 and 1987, said that Shamir's call for Palestinian elections has promise. "It will be in- teresting to see how Egypt [responds] and what [Presi- dent Hosni] Mubarak is able to do and not do now that they are full partners back with the Arab world." Quayle called on the Arabs to recognize Israel's legitimacy and to accept that it will "always be there .. . That would be good starters and you could build from there. I hope that eventually happens." But first, he said the