ANALYSIS The Last Thing a Burglar Wants to See! Why Gamble with Safety? ADT Security Systems, North America's leading security com- pany for over 110 years, offers you—at a small additional monthly charge—the same reliable, 24 hour monitoring service trusted by leading banks, businesses and the U.S. Government. It's your #1 choice. U.N. Signal Continued from preceding page issues, including the set- tlements question and the Baker peace plan. These sources also point to a deliberate ambiguity in the U.N. negotiations — ambiguity intended to pro- vide the administration with a degree of maneuvering room in the talks, while get- ting the underlying message across in unambiguous terms to political leaders in Jerusalem. And with the prospect now fairly certain of a Likud-led coalition, State Department sources indicate that the pressure from Washington is only beginning. "It will be an inherently unstable coalition," said an official who insisted that his name not be used. "It's im- portant that we act not out of frustration, but out of a clear formulation of long-term goals. 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Rosner, Optometrist Bloomfield Plaza • Orchard Lake south of Maple • 626-0200 that now is the time for the United States to express its strong concern that a Likud- led coalition that concedes to the Israeli right on the set- tlements issue will not find favor in Washington." On Capitol Hill, the re- sponse was muted as pro- Israel legislators waited for the final draft of the resolu- tion, and as they probe to uncover the administra- tion's motives. "Generally, there is a mood of disappointment in Congress," said a top aide to a Jewish congressman. "There's disappointment that the administration did not go directly to Israel with its concerns — and that they apparently felt they had to rely on the United Nations, with all that connotes, to make its point. They may have made more of a point than they intended." ❑ assir Arafat may be given the freedom of the city of Glasgow, an honor normally conferred on someone who has rendered special service to the city. Talks have been taking place between councilors of Scotland's largest city and pro-Palestinian groups. The move is spearheaded by Councilor Alex Mosson of the Labor Party, who met the PLO chairman at his Tunisian headquarters less than a month ago. He was accompanied by Labor member of Parliament George Galloway, who is well-known for his anti- Israel stance. "Yassir Arafat has done more than anyone else to promote peace in the Middle East," Mosson said. "I don't accept he is a ter- rorist. He has held the Pa- lestinian people together in their fight for self- deter- mination. He is now regard- ed as an international statesman," he added. Mosson claimed that the support of the Glasgow district Labor Party is "already there." But sources close to the City Council, on which Labor has a large majority, say that there is little sup- port for declaring Arafat a freeman. y Judith Tankel, president of the Glasgow Jewish Representative Council, said the move is politically motivated and totally inap- propriate. "We should be appalled if this went ahead," she said. "It is difficult to see what Yassir Arafat has con- tributed to the well-being of the city of Glasgow." She thought it a strange move to initiate during a year in which Glasgow is supposed to be celebrating its choice as European City of Culture. Amy Ferguson, a com- mittee member of the West of Scotland Friends of Israel and a member of the Church of Scotland, said: "I deplore it utterly. I think it is im- moral and a very wrong move. I do not think it is in the interests of peace in the Middle East. I find it in- sulting, inappropriate and very disturbing." The Evening Times, Glasgow's evening news- paper, called the idea "crazy" and deeply offensive to some citizens. "Of what relevance is it to Glasgow?" it asked in an recent edito- rial. A year ago there was a move to appoint Arafat Lord Rector (students' represent- ative) of Glasgow Univer- sity, but nothing further was heard after the initial an- nouncement. ❑