NEWS I THE CULTURAL COMMISSION OF CONGREGATION IYNAI DAVID Cordially Invites You to Hear MOSHE FOX Consul for Press and Information, Consulate General of Israel, Chicago, Illinois ON "Prospects for Peace in the Middle East" 11:00 A.M. Sunday, April 29, 1990 AT CONGREGATION 13 1NAI DAVID 24350 Southfield Road Southfield, Michigan 48075 557-8210 Question and Answer Period • No Charge • The Community Is Invited A BIG SECRET!!! The Honey Wendy Just Hit THE BIG FIVE OHH!!! Happy Birthday — Much Love YOUR FAMILY!!! THE FAY, DEE DEE & JEP, WE LOVE YOU!!! TROY MOTOR MALL • 643-0900 We Service Acuras and Hondas Call Us For An Appointment r- ACURA -1 ) of Troy k WNW PAYING TOO MUCH FOR INSURANCE??? i AUTO t---- i HOM0 multi-car save 15% AARP member save 18% • safety save 9% over 55 years old save 10% • non-smoker save 10% • Over 50 (AARP) save 39% clean record save 20% (last 3 years) you save 63% DYSAUTONOMIA you save 58% FOR MORE INFO — OR A FREE QUOTE Michael Mostyn Marc Tamassi Call 471 0970 - Griffin-Smalley, Inc. INSURANCE AND BONDS 74 FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1990 Dysautonomia is organized and operated for educational research purposes to maintain evaluation and treatment of afflected children. Dysautonomia Foundation Inc. 3000 Town Center, Suite 1500, Southfield, MI 48075 (313) 444-4848 Arafat Invites Peres To Paris Rendezvous Paris (JTA) — Yassir Arafat, considerably buoyed by his meetings with former President Jimmy Carter, has invited Israel's Prime Minister-designate Shimon Peres to meet with him in Paris "at the earliest" possi- ble moment, to prepare the ground for an Israeli- Palestinian peace agree- ment. The Palestine Liberation Organization chairman, whom Carter praised for his efforts toward Mideast peace, said he was ready to meet at any time with Peres or any other Israeli govern- ment leader. Carter and Arafat met with French President Fran- cois Mitterrand for 45 minutes at the Elysee Palace. They had a two-hour bilateral session later at the Crillon Hotel, where Arafat was staying. President Carter, though ex-officio, is the highest- ranking American per- sonality to meet with Arafat. Palestinian officials here said jubilantly that Arafat's meeting with the architect of the Camp David accords gave the PLO and its leader a "new international stature and prestige." It also came "at an hour of need," because Palestinian extremists charge that Arafat "sold out" to America without getting tangible results, the officials told the French media. On the other hand, the relative weakness of the Jewish community's reac- tion to Arafat's high-level meetings was viewed by the Palestinians as a sign the Jews are, to a degree, re- signed to the situation. Arafat indicated at a news conference April 4, that the Palestinians are deeply con- cerned with what he called the massive immigration by Soviet Jews to Israel. He said Palestinians did not oppose free emigration from the Soviet Union, but claimed Soviet Jews were forced to go to Israel. He said that, according to official Israeli figures, 300,000 Soviet Jews per year are ex- pected. "By the end of the century, in 10 years from now, there will be another three million Jews in Israel. There will be a second Israel with which we shall have to cope," Arafat said. He appealed to the nations of the world to open their gates to Soviet Jewish emigration. "Let Russian Jews freely choose where they want to go and let them enjoy the right to return to the Soviet Union if they so desire," the PLO chief said. No Government Hurts Israel's Foreign Policy Tel Aviv (JTA) — The uncertainty surrounding the formation of a government has completely paralyzed the workings of the Foreign Ministry and has harmed Israel's ties with many coun- tries, according to a recent report in Yediot Aharonot. The government crisis has held up the appointment of 17 heads of legations, among them ambassadors to the United States, Canada, the United Nations and France, as well as to countries which have only recently restored relations with Israel. A senior Foreign Ministry source is quoted as saying that "many countries have suspended dialogue with Israel, while waiting for a government to be formed. Agreements which were supposed to be signed with some countries have not been signed." Diplomatic contacts with the United States and the Soviet Union have been halted completely, Foreign Ministry sources say. The U.S. administration, con- cerned about appearing to interfere in Israel's internal affairs, has refrained from initiating new ideas for ad- vancing the peace process. Soviet authorities are holding up discussions regarding the possibility of direct flights from Moscow to Israel in return for guar- antees that the immigrants will not settle in the ter- ritories. Foreign Minister Moshe Arens, who was scheduled to sign an agreement for the renewal of diplomatic rela- tions with Bulgaria, has postponed his visit there as a result of the political crisis.