NEWS I GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES! DESIGNER EYEWEAR SALE! Israel Agrees To Let U.N. Envoy Visit For Talks 30% OFF OUR ENTIRE STOCK! FERRE MIRARI POLICE LUNmES GUCCI Beau monde NEOSTYLE® T A X 1 GIORGIO ARMANI WE GUARANTEE THE LOWEST PRICES ON EYEWEAR! WEST BLOOMFIELD 626-9590 OPTOMETRY 6667 Orchard Lake Road Bring in Your Prescription & Save! gri°617° SOUTHFIELD 647-9790 30800 Southfield Road Bring in Your Prescription & Save! Above prices and discount offers good of West Bloomfield and Southfield stores only. Limited time offer. EXAMINATIONS AVAILABLE! WALK-INS WELCOME! • Struts • • Domestics & Imports • Wheel Bearings • Shocks • Springs • CV Boots • U Joints MADISON HEIGHTS 140 E. 11 Mile Rd. HOURS: Mon-Fri 8am-6pm Saturday 8am-3pm Extra where Semi-Metallic Pads are required Must Present Coupon • Expires: 12-17-90 S20.00 J FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1990 FREE BRAKE INSPECTION MOST CARS SHOES • CHECK MASTER • LIFETIME WARRANTY CYLINDER ON PADS & SHOES • CHECK WHEEL • RESURFACE ROTORS OR CYLINDERS DRUMS • CHECK HARDWARE • REPACK NON-DRIVE • CHECK LINES, WHEEL BEARINGS HOSES & SEALS 541.1889 38 Front Or Rear Most Cars • INSTALL NEW PADS OR • CHECK CALIPERS (Southeast Corner of John R) I BRAKES 00 SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT 12% OFF Not valid with any other offers, discounts or coupons Must Present Coupon • Expires 12-17-90 ROTATE TIRES $9.5 Includes Free Brake Inspection Must Present Coupon • Exp. 12-17-90 I Jerusalem (JTA) — In a step to appease both the United Nations and the Bush administration, the Israeli government has an- nounced its willingness to allow a single U.N. envoy to visit Israel for general discussions on the Israeli- Arab conflict. But it is not clear whether the United Nations will agree to the idea, which Israel is proposing as an alternative to the U.N. mis- sion that was to investigate the Oct. 8 riots on the Tem- ple Mount in Jerusalem. U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, who was in Tokyo for the corona- tion of Japanese Emperor Akihito, met with Israeli President Chaim Herzog, and U.N. officials and said he was considering the pro- posal. One obstacle may be the conditions Israel has placed on the envoy's visit. The Foreign Ministry is insisting there be no discussion of the Temple Mount incident nor of proposed steps to "protect" Palestinians liv- ing in the administered ter- ritories. A U.N. spokeswoman in New York refused to com- ment about the specific con- ditions, but said, "As we have said before, we do not accept conditions." Israeli officials said they are now prepared to receive U.N. envoy Jean-Claude Aimee, who visited Israel in June after seven Palestinian laborers were shot to death by an Israeli Jew near the town of Rishon le-Zion. Mr. Aimee's visit would then be seen as a continua- tion of his earlier trip, rather than a direct response to U.N. Security Council calls for an investigative mission. • Israeli officials hope their decision will successfully end discussion of Israel in the Security Council, which has so far issued two resolu- tions sharply critical of Israeli actions during the Temple Mount riots, in which police fatally shot at least 17 Arabs. Both resolutions demand- ed Israel cooperate with a U.N. fact- finding mission. But Israel refused, conten- ding that doing so would compromise its claim to sovereignty over all of Jerusalem. Now the Security Council is considering stronger ac- tion. A resolution under discussion would convene the signatories of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which protects the rights of civilians in areas under military occupation. The purpose of such a meeting would be to discuss measures to protect Palesti- nians, including the dispat- ch of U.N. observers to the administered territories. While the United States is believed to oppose such a resolution, Israeli officials have not succeeded in per- suading Washington to guarantee a U.S. veto. President Bush would not give that commitment to a delegation of five American Jewish leaders he met with last week at the White House. Foreign Minister David Levy told the Knesset For- eign Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday that Israel had decided to accept a U.N. envoy after 10 days of behind-the-scenes discus- sions with U.S. officials. According to the plan, the secretary-general would depict the mission as an interim stage toward the implementation of the two Security Council resolutions adopted last month. But it would be understood that the issue would be dropped after Aimee's trip, and U.S.-Israeli cooperation' in the Security Council would be restored. Hanoi Seeks Trade Links Hanoi (JPFS) — Vietnam is interested in economic co- operation with Israel, albeit through third countries and companies. In an interview with the Jerusalem Post here, Le Dan Duan, the senior economic adviser to the secretary- general of the Vietnamese Communist Party, said that the two countries could fi- nesse the problem posed by an absence of diplomatic re- lations. Le Dan Duan, one of the architects of Vietnam's shift from a command economy to a mixed economy, said that Vietnam has mineral resources and manpower and Israel has high-tech in- dustry. But because of the Arab boycott, for the time being such cooperative ventures would have to be done in- directly.