I CAPITOL REPORT I ANNIVERSARY SALE UP TO 50 % (SELECTED OFF REG. PRICE ITEMS) Israel-S. Africa Report Stirs American Reaction WOLF BLITZER Washington Correspondent FINE QUALITY LEATHER FOR MEN & WOMEN LADIES' FULL LENGTH LONG HAIR BEAVER COAT SALE $1499 96 REG. $2999.96 LAKESIDE MALL STERLING HEIGHTS 271 W. MAPLE BIRMINGHAM TWELVE OAKS MALL NOVI CROSSWINDS MALL WEST BLOOMFIELD PHOTO BY LISA SPINDLER FAIRLANE TOWN CENTER DEARBORN GORNBEIN'S ISRAEL $689 from Detroit • Roundtrip Scheduled Departures Superior Hotels $30 • ISRAEL TRAVEL WHOLESALERS GORNBEINO 1 JEWELERS . Fidelity Bank Building 24901 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield 357-1056 • MOM SO6 MOM • Registered Electrologists •° [Come and let us remove your unwanted hair problem and improve your appearance. Near 12 Mile Rd. bet. Evergreen & Southfield 5 59-1969 Appt. Only. Ask For Shirlee or Debby 4 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1989 23 Tent Mill Lane, Suite E Baltimore, MD 21208 Baltimore 1-301,655-7679 Nationwide 1.800-346, 7074 Barry's Let's Rent It PARTIES EXCLUSIVELY • Tents • Tables • Chairs , • China • Paper Goods 4393 ORCHARD LAKE RD. N. OF LONE PINE IN CROSSWINDS 855-0480 T he State Department's ranking military af- fairs expert says the United States again will raise with the Israeli government reports that South Africa was receiving Israeli assistance in the de- velopment of a new medium- range missile capable of car- rying nuclear warheads. Assistant Secretary for Politico-Military Affairs Richard Clarke told reporters following a con- gressional hearing Monday that a new round of U.S.-Israel talks on the sen- sitive subject would take place soon. Henry Sokolski, deputy secretary of defense for non- proliferation policy, told a House Foreign Affairs Sub- committee earlier in the day that the issue already has been raised at the highest levels of the Pentagon and the Israel Defense Ministry — an apparent reference to Defense Secretary Richard Cheney and Defense Min- ister Yitzhak Rabin. Sokolski said that reports of Israeli-South African military cooperation "have been and continue to be a matter of serious concern at the highest levels of DOD [Department of Defense]." He added that "such col- laboration is in no one's security. interest." Clarke warned that a pro- posed bill by Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., man- dating U.S. sanctions against countries transferr- i ng ballistic missile technology to Third World nations, could force the United States to curtail several aid programs with Israel if the legislation became law. "In the case of Israel and South Africa," Clarke said, "if there is a corporate rela- tionship, a government rela- tionship, then this legisla- tion or other versions of it might mandate that we ter- minate a variety of pro- grams with Israel." Clarke, who did not detail what programs might be af- fected, also stopped short of confirming the news reports that Israel had helped South Africa launch a 900-mile- range missile on July 5 in exchange for South African supplies of enriched ura- nium. Berman and other pro- Israeli lawmakers, in originally pushing for such legislation, had been con- cerned primarily about West European, Soviet, South American and North Korean missile technology being ex- ported to Arab countries, in- cluding Syria, Saudi Arabia, Libya and Iraq. Israeli officials and other pro-Israeli activists in Washington agreed that the Rep. Berman: Bill could backfire. Berman legislation could backfire against Israel if the reports of Israeli-South African missile cooperation are verified. Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, meanwhile, has publicly urged the Bush administra- tion to reject pending re- quests by Israel, Brazil and India to purchase the latest U.S.-made supercomputers. Glenn, chairman of the Governmental Affairs Committee and author of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act, said in a statement on the Senate floor Monday that the United States should not sell supercom- puters to nations "building nuclear weapons or long- range missiles." Glenn said that selling these computers to the three countries could lead to the further spread of nuclear weapons and ballistic mis- siles. , Glenn's statement repre- sented another blow to Israel's hopes to purchase two supercomputers from the United States — one for the Technion in Haifa and a second for Israel Military Industries. Last week's widely- publicized news reports of an alleged Israeli-South