I NEWS I Just Marilyns Sportswear Boutique Clothing Sale Belgian Official Willing To Meet With Arafat FURTHER REDUCTIONS 50% • 75% OFF All Dresses 60% OFF Belts & Scarves $10 each All Sales Final No Charges or Layaways All previous sales excluded 20079 W. 12 Mile Rd., Country Village Mall Mon.-Sat. 10.5 • Sizes 4.18 356-0493 .... • W WE CAN'T RUN ON EMPTY. , OIL -Mk l' IIMM. - . 1 111._. VI\ 111 ■ 11 . ..'11 PIN11%,.. 111111111•S 11•11/ 11 A/ 111.40/11 IlLUVI/1, 10111111V WIII %..1/ 111111/./ WM/ UV AllrI NW, ORLD CLASS CAKES FINE PASTRIES Treat Your Sweetheart Special on Valentine's Day With A Custom Decorated Heart-Shaped Cake Priced At 5 11.00 and up 6588 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield, Michigan (south of Maple, next to Jaz Car Wash) - GIVE BLOOD tir Mon.-Sat. 7-7 Sun. 9-1 (313) 626-5551 STRATOLOUNGER® SPECIAL .. . $ 2 8900 Rocker Recliners and Wall Huggers in Fabric, Vinyl or Leather match. Assorted colors! (immediate delivery) 20-M PS OFF Sitting Pretty Evergreen Plaza 19747 W 12 Mile, Southfield 552-8850 HRS: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 • Thurs. 10.7 American Red Cross Begadim on the Boardwalk NEW STYLES FOR A NEW DECADE The Bright Idea: irr Give a Gift Suoscription 62 FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1990 THE JEWISH NEWS Excellence # n Fashion for The Young at Hear' 6919 Orchard Lake Rd • West Bloomfield, MI 855.5528 Brussels (JTA) — The for- eign minister of Belgium, Mark Eyskens, is ready and willing to receive Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yassir Arafat should he come to Brussels for polit- ical or social reasons, the Belgian press reported over the weekend. Local newspapers quoted an interview with Eyskens that appeared in the semi- official Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram. A Foreign Min- istry spokesman confirmed the story. Eyskens met Arafat in December during a visit to Tunis, where the PLO has its headquarters. He was quoted as telling Al-Ahram, "I confirm to you without hesitation that we would receive Arafat in Brussels if he comes here on the occasion of a political or social forum. "There is nothing in our politics that can prevent such a visit," he added. An official visit to Brussels would be a publicity coup for Arafat, who has been largely shunned in Western capi- tals. The PLO chief did make an official visit to France last year and made an ap- pearance at European Parliament in Strasbourg. The Foreign Ministry spokesman said Arafat would be welcome in Belgium "because of the concessions made these last years, such as the recogni- tion of Israel's right to ex- ist." He was referring to statements made by Arafat at the November 1988 meeting of the Palestine Na- tional Council in Algiers and at a special session of the U.N. General Assembly in Geneva the following month. The spokesman said there is no official invitation to Arafat from Belgium at the moment. But the foreign minister would meet him if the PLO leader happened to < attend "a colloquium or something else" here. No colloquium is planned at this time by Belgian or other European organiza- tions based here. The PLO representative in Belgium, Shawki Armali, said any invitation to Arafat to come to Brussels, where the European Community is headquartered, "must be at a high level." He explained it had to come from a government, not from sympathizers or an organization, because Arafat "is the president of the state of Palestine." Political sources said the government is studying the. possibility of raising the status of the PLO's repre- sentation here. U.S.: No Proof Israel Sold Bombs To Ethiopia Washington (JTA) — The State Department said last week that it has "no clear physical evidence" that Israel has sent cluster bombs to Ethiopia. The New York Times reported that U.S. officials "strongly suspect" such sales. In December, former President Jimmy Carter said Ethiopia had received cluster bombs "from one of our Middle East allies," but did not name which country. "The truth is that we have no clear physical evidence that Israel has provided such weapons to the government of Ethiopia," department spokeswoman Margaret Tutwiler said at her daily briefing. An Ethiopian Embassy of- ficial here said last week,"It's news to us. We don't know anything about this." The Ethiopian official complained about negative stories coming just a few months after the restoration of ties with Israel in October. "We would like to develop (relations with Israel) in an all-around manner, like any sovereign country," the offi- cial said. Israel currently supplies small arms to Ethiopia, said a State Department official, who requested anonymity. Middle East experts have speculated that in exchange, Israel has received promises that 10,000 to 15,000 Ethio- pian Jews seeking to make aliyah will receive favorable consideration from the Marxist government. The department official said that the United States has not received any com- plaints from rebel forces in Ethiopia that cluster bombs are being deployed against them. "They would have made a big stink about it if