CAPITOL REPORT 3 DAYS ONLY SALE!! Friday, Saturday & Sunday November 10th, 11th & 12th 2 5 % OFF PI ALL LEATHERS AND ALL. COCKTAIL WEAR 30-50% OFF SELECTED FALL MERCHANDISE All Sales Final • Previous Sales Excluded Special Sunday Opening 12-5 pm Sizes 14 to 26 Applegate Square Northwestern Hwy at Inkster Rd. 354.4560 Israel Accepts Plan, But Troubles Remain WOLF BLITZER Washington Correspondent T he Israel Cabinet's qualified acceptance of Secretary of State James Baker's five-point framework proposal may pave the way for a White House meeting later this month between President George Bush and Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. But U.S. officials, while seeing the Cabinet decision as an important initial step forward in the peace process, still insisted that very seri- ous problems stand in the way of an Israeli-Palestinian dialogue. Privately, U.S. officials said that the Israeli in- sistence that only Palesti- nian Arabs, "residents of Judea, Samaria and Gaza," will be eligible to participate in a proposed Palestinian delegation still represents the most serious diplomatic stumbling block. Baker, in his revised five- point draft, deliberately refused to use such lan- guage, despite repeated re- quests by Shamir and For- eign Minister Moshe Arens. It was problematic whether Baker now will be able to provide Israel with private side assurances on this sen- sitive point. The Americans were pleased that the Israel Cabinet had agreed to the Egyptian proposal that the first Israeli-Palestinian meeting take place in Cairo. They saw this as an Israeli concession of sorts since Shamir last month had rais- ed questions about the need to meet in Cairo. Israel's embassy in Washington is working under the assumption that Shamir will come to the United States to address the General Assembly of the Council of Jewish Federa- tions in Cincinnati and visit Washington, probably on Nov. 14-15. Bush administration offi- cials, meanwhile, have ex- pressed irritation over Egyp- tian President Hosni Mubarak's latest an- nouncement that he was now deferring all decisions on Baker's five-point framework proposal directly to the Palestine Liberation Organization in Tunis. In a series of strained dip- lomatic exchanges between Washington and Cairo in re- cent days, the Americans noted that such public pro- nouncements by Egypt would further complicate the U.S. effort to get an Israeli- Palestinian dialogue off the ground. Shamir and other Likud ministers have repeatedly made clear that Israel would not participate in any discussions with the PLO, even indirectly. At the State Department last week, spokesman Richard Boucher, clearly aware of Israeli sensitivities, sought to differentiate bet- ween "Palestinians" and "the PLO." He denied that the main purpose of the U.S. diplomacy was "to bring Israel into a dialogue or negotiation with the PLO." But he again noted that the U.S. was attempting to es- tablish a Israeli-Palestinian dialogue "to discuss elec- tions and the negotiating process." That last phrase now has been incorporated into Baker's latest draft five- point framework. ❑ U.S. Moving Swiftly To Shut Emigre Pipeline 805 EAST MAPLE ROAD • BIRMINGHAM, MI 48009 TWO BLOCKS EAST OF WOODWARD 32 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1989 Washington (JTA) — The State Department has mov- ed a step closer toward shut- ting down the "Vienna- Rome pipeline" used by tens of thousands of Soviet Jews to seek entry to the United States as refugees. The department surprised many by announcing in Moscow last week that the United States would no longer process refugee ap- plications in Rome for Soviet Jews and others who did not obtain their Israeli entry visas by Nov. 5. That deadline placed a new but apparently small constraint on Soviet Jews and Evangelical Christians seeking to enter the United States with Israeli papers. On Oct. 1, the United States shifted its processing of Soviet refugees from Rome to Moscow and said that from that point on, those wishing to enter the United States as refugees would have to apply for U.S. visas in Moscow. •