DESIGNER EYEWEAR SALE! I CLOSE-UP Middle East Continued from preceding page spect that the Jewish dele- gation from that state will be pared down. So much of the political ac- tivity in 1990 is really geared toward shoring up positions for 1992. The same holds true in New York, where none of the Jewish members of Congress is seriously threatened in this year's contests. But most are waging energetic campaigns and building up big war chests. In 1992, it is expected that the New York City area will lose several seats, and that redrawn boundaries may force head- to-head battles between Jew- ish incumbents. Rep. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Stephen Solarz, both popular Democrats who will win easily this November, are raising money against the possibility of a forced showdown in 1992. ❑ Italian Leaders Issue Anti-Semitism Warning GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES ON ALL DESIGNER EYEWEAR! REGULAR $70 VALUE WAYFARER REGULAR $120 VALUE Laura Biagiotti 995 $ 49 95 Style P-32 BRING IN YOUR PRESCRIPTION & SAVE! PoLO 111 REGULAR $120 VALUE $8995 by Classic V, VI & X REGULAR $280 VALUE PORSCHE DESIGN CAROM w/interchangeable lenses. 1 995 20% OFF EVERY DAY! GUCCI KE.SAINfibuRFf\rr Christian Dior WEST BLOOMFIELD 626-9590 6667 Orchard Lake Road GIORGIO ARMANI SOUTHFIELD 647-9790 30800 Southfield Road Above prices and discount offers good al West Bloomfield and Southfield stores only. graDmingtails where the pet set goes The finest pet salon in town 932-3800 W. Bloomfield Plaza • Orchard Lake Road Where quality doesn't necessarily mean expensive 32 FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1990 Rome (JTA) — Italy's highest political leaders have issued a stern warning against the rise of anti- Semitism and have voiced strong support for measures aimed at combatting it. "A black thread runs through Europe," Nilde Jotti, the president of the Chamber of Deputies, told a conference on anti- Semitism in Italy and Europe last week. "It is the trace of racial hatred against the Jews, which we believed was ex- tinct but which instead we once again find has come to the fore," she said. Jotti was among a panel of senior government officials and Christian and Jewish leaders who took part in the conference, which was organized by the Italian chapter of the International Association of Jewish Lawyers and held in a meeting hall of the Parlia- ment building. Other speakers included Giovanni Spadolini, presi- dent of the Senate; Justice Minister Giuliano Vassalli; Elio Toaff, the chief rabbi of Rome; and Monsignor Pietro Rosano, rector of Lateran Pontifical University. President Francesco Cossiga, who lent his per- sonal support to the con- ference, was among the nu- merous other politicians, jurists and representatives of other fields who attended. "It was an extremely suc- cessful initiative. I didn't imagine the response would be so great," Rome lawyer Oreste Bisazza Terracini, the meeting's organizer, said in a subsequent interview. Terracini, president of. the Rome branch of the Interna- tional Association of Jewish Lawyers, said he began working on such a meeting in the wake of the desecra- tion May 10 of the Jewish cemetery in Carpentras, France. He said he found immediate support from Cossiga and others. "The response to our in- itiative by the highest leaders of the state comforts us and prompts us to believe" that attention will be paid to "carrying out con- crete measures in the sphere of information and educa- tion" to combat anti- Semitism, Terracini said in his opening address to the meeting. He then enumerated the roots of anti-Semitism in three sources: Catholic teachings up until the con- vening of Vatican Council II some 25 years ago and the promulgation of the Nostra Aetate decree, followed a score of years later by the historic visit in 1986 of Pope John Paul II to the Rome synagogue; secular racist laws throughout Europe and the enforced segregation of Jews from the rest of society, which gave rise to pogroms; and, ultimately, the Nazi Holocaust. Terracini also spoke of more recent causes coming from the Middle East, in which anti-Zionism has become synonymous with anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitic graffiti and remarks became rather common following the outbreak of the intifada in December 1987. This last development, he said, has impinged on parts of Italy's political left, "which until not long ago was almost totally free of an- ti-Jewish prejudice." Vassalli, the minister of justice, emphasized that the Jewish community "formed part of the Italian nation," noting that Israel's policy toward the Palestinian uprising "and the harshness of military occupation" con-