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August 24, 1990 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-08-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

DESIGNER
EYEWEAR SALE!

EXAMINATIONS
AVAILABLE!

WALK-INS
WELCOME!

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CAGEY

6eneiton

Princeton

REGULAR $140 VALUE

10

/464466-ir•te 6

$89 95 MOD 56

99 5

HOT COLORS!

BRING IN YOUR PRESCRIPTION & SAVE!

REGULAR $100 VALUE

PORSCHE
DESIGN
by CARRERA

ROY TOWER $ 7995
Preppy 4

w/interchangeable lenses.

20% OFF EVERY DAY!

GUCCI

Beau Monde

WEST BLOOMFIELD
626-9590

6667 Orchard Lake Road

TAX I

OPTOMETRY

LIZ CLAIBORNE/POLO SHOW!

Saturday, Aug. 25, 9:00a.m. — 5:00 p.m.

gp

9

REGULAR $280 VALUE

$ 11

30800 Southfield Road

LIZ CLAIBORNE/POLO SHOW!

Friday, Aug. 24, 10:00a.m.— 7:00 p.m.

graDmingtails

Where the pet set goes.

The finest pet salon in town.

38

FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1990

Chrome &
Block Only

SOUTHFIELD
647-9790

Isn't it time your pet
had a pleasant
grooming tale to tell?

Ask Us About Our Boarding Assistance

95

GIORGIO ARYIANI

Above prices and discount offers good at West Bloomfield and Southfield stores only.

W. Bloomfield Plaza • Orchard Lake Road • 932-3800

remained in business. She
retired about five years
ago, spending the last two
years at a stand at the
Eastern Market.
There, her daughters,
Amy, Sandra and Bonnie,
worked weekends while
studying at the University
of Michigan. It was a way
for the young women to
earn spending money for
college.
"The markets were
places where people could
get jobs," Diane Tobin
says. "A lot of people
learned business here. If
you can sell a piece of fruit,
you can sell anything.
"You have to be smart
and you have to be lucky,"
she says. "The produce

business is a gamble. In the
winter, it can freeze.
"The hours are horren-
dous. It is hard, manual
labor. You start at 2:30
a.m. in the produce busi-
ness. But I highly recom-
mend it to this day. You
meet the nicest people."
As the City of Detroit
prepares for the 100th bir-
thday celebration of the
Eastern Market, some
businesses still are groom-
ing immigrants.
Through Jewish Voca-
tional Service, Mclnery
Miller, a Jewish-owned
wholesale food distributor,
recently hired a few Soviet
emigres to work as but-
chers at its Detroit facili-
ty.



I NEWS I

GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES
ON ALL DESIGNER EYEWEAR!

REGULAR $117 VALUE

Eastern Charm

Continued from preceding page

Corkie Nemzin

E. C. is Reconsidering
Approach To PLO

Rome (JTA) — The Euro-
pean Community may have
to revise its generally
favorable attitude toward
the Palestine Liberation
Organization because of
PLO support of Iraqi aggres-
sion in the Persian Gulf,
Italian Foreign Minister
Gianni de Michelis told the
visiting foreign minister of
Israel, David Levy, here last
week.
Mr. Levy arrived in Rome
from Bonn for brief talks
with de Michelis, who cur-
rently holds the rotating
chairmanship of the E.C.
Council of Ministers. Their
talks centered on the current
situation in the Persian Gulf
and the Middle East gen-
erally and on Israel's rela-
tions with the 12 nations of
the E.C.
The talks followed similar
dialogue between Levy and
his West German counter-
part, Hans-Dietrich
Genscher. The two, who met
at Mr. Genscher's vacation
home at Ban Reichenhall in
the Bavarian Alps, also
discussed economic coopera-
tion between the E.C. and
Israel. The issue of East
German reparations to
Israel was also briefly ad-
dressed.
Mr. Genscher praised
Israel for its restraint in the
Gulf crisis, thus making it
hard for President Saddam
Hussein of Iraq to draw the
Arab-Israeli conflict into the
fray, Ha'aretz reported.
Mr. Levy told Mr.
Genscher of Israel's need for

access to the E.C.'s internal
market. Follow-up talks on
this will be held on Sept. 18,
according to a spokesman for
Mr. Genscher.
Mr. de Michelis will lead
an E.C. mission to Egypt,
Jordan and Saudi Arabia in
connection with the Gulf
crisis.
"The mission is aimed at
unifying the Arab world
against Saddam Hussein, to
try to create an Arab coali-
tion against Saddam," the
Italian foreign minister said.
He admitted that Israel
had been right in its assess-
ment of Mr. Hussein as a
threat to the West.
Mr. de Michelis will be ac-
companied by the foreign
ministers of Ireland and
Luxembourg, who are
respectively the immediate
past chairman and the next
chairman of the council of
ministers.
The so-called "troika" is
the E.C.'s fact-finding body
that guides its policy in the
Middle East.
Until recently, the E.C.
has tilted toward the PLO as
an ostensible force for
moderation and negotia-
tions. But that could change
if PLO leader Yasir Arafat
continues to be out of step
with most Arab leaders with
respect to Iraq.
Mr. de Michelis told Mr.
Levy that "if the PLO goes
-on supporting Saddam Hus-
sein, the European Com-
munity will have to make a
reevaluation of its attitude"
toward the PLO.

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