Egypt Continued from Page 1 president's leadership, observing that Mubarak is "so popular in his own coun- try and with the rest of the Arab world" that he could help guide the region to a peace settlement. Mubarak has said in the past that he would meet with Shamir only if there were "substantive progress in the peace process." Now he may be reversing the order, on the understanding that a meeting itself would advance the process. Shamir has good reason to want a summit with Muba- rak. From a public relations point of view it would give his right-wing government the appearance of ex- tricating Israel from the cur- rent stalemate. Diplomatically, a Shamir- Mubarak summit would shift attention from the Israeli-Palestinian dialogue sought by Washington. It might also divert the Ameri- cans from reviving the idea of an international peace conference, which Israel re- jects. Swedish Foreign Minister Sten Andersen told a visiting group of Israeli lef- tists in Stockholm last week that U.S. Secretary of State James Baker had told him the Bush administration is losing patience with Israel and would give it only lim- ited time to agree to Baker's formula for a dialogue with the Palestinians. Baker reportedly told Andersen that if Israel's re- sponse was not sufficiently affirmative, he would pro- pose an international con- ference. That report matched strong indications in Jerusalem that Washington is dissatisfied with Shamir's June 28 reply to a letter from Bush asking whether Israel was prepared to accept the Baker proposal for preliminary peace talks. The talks are aimed at hammering out the modalities of elections that Israel has proposed to hold in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Those elected would negotiate with Israel on lim- ited Palestinian self-rule and eventually the final sta- tus of the territories. Shamir's letter expressed Israel's continued support for the peace plan. But it re- jected the idea of holding preliminary talks with a delegation that would in- clude Arabs with residency in east Jerusalem or Pales- tinians deported from the JTA correspondent Howard Rosenberg in Washington con- tributed to this report. territories, as Baker has proposed. In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Margaret Tutwiler said Monday that the United States would be responding to the Shamir letter "in some shape, fashion or form," but she declined to say how or when. Meanwhile, Palestine Lib- eration Organization leader Yassir Arafat may have sensed that closer contacts between Egypt and Israel are imminent. The Kuwaiti newspaper A- Siassa reported last Sunday that Arafat will visit Cairo "within a few days" to brief Mubarak on the mood in the PLO after the U.S. suspen- sion of its dialogue with the PLO last month. Arafat also is to be briefed on Meguid's meetings in Washington. Take part in the world of underwater adventure without getting wet. Jewish Telegraphic Agency Kollek Proves City's Safety Jerusalem (JTA) — Mayor Teddy Kollek this week con- fronted the escalating violence in Jerusalem by holding a leisurely meeting with his aides at an Arab coffee shop near the Damascus Gate, in the heart of the Old City. The 79-year-old mayor in- vited the news media to help make his point that the security situation in the capital is not as grave as some outsiders seem to believe and that Jews should have no qualms about enter- ing Arab neighborhoods. "I want to set a personal example, so that people will once again visit here like before," Kollek said. Although the coffee shop is only a few hundred yards from City Hall, very few Jews now venture this far into the Old City. Some have been attacked in the narrow alleyways. Jewish-owned cars parked on Saladin Street, the main thoroughfare of east Jerusalem, have been set on fire. And for the first time in months, riots have broken out in Arab suburbs. The fact that reporters found it newsworthy for the mayor to be sitting in an Arab cafe was itself an in- dication of the tension in the city. Kollek admitted "there is reason to be afraid, but it is exaggerated. We don't run away every time there is a little fear." He observed that tension between Jews and Arabs in the city cannot be eradicated, but can be reduced. Choice of stainless steel (shown), steel and gold, or black and gold. Our Series 1000 diver's watch allows you to look like a professional athlete with a minimum of exertion. It's equipped with a unidirectional turning bezel and a screw-in crown that ensures water resistance to 660 feet. Keeping Detroiter~ right on time since 19'7 Southfield Southfield & 121 file 552.0080 Pontiac Telegraph & Voorheis 333.2263 Farmington Hills Mt. Clemens Orchard Lake &. 13 Mile 851.0440 Garfield & Canal 263-7700 Madison Heights Dequindre & 12 Mile 541.0808 ■ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 11