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YOU'LL NEVER BUY ONE AT THIS PRICE AGAIN! ti6 48 8. 15 88 8 * 18 59 5* 5* GM EMPLOYEES WELCOME-OPTION I OUT OF STOCK*" 300 CARS 2 MIN.'S SOUTH AVAILABLE OF 1.696 ON WOODWARD • 'Sale prices inc GM rebate assigned to dealer. on any new 1990 Olds. Sale prices good through Dec 1, 1990. 'Excluding 1991 Olds 98s. 124 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1990 399•3200 Tel Aviv (JTA) — Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir risked a new altercation with the United States re- cently when he asserted for the second time this year that large-scale immigration required a "Greater Israel." It was in essence what he had told a Likud rally here on Jan. 14. When the Bush administration, at the time, called his remarks "unhelpful," Mr. Shamir denied the linkage. This time, he did so when reporters listening to an ad- dress he gave asked if he was harking back to the position that had annoyed Washing- ton 10 months ago. In his address at a memorial meeting for deceased members of Likud, Mr. Shamir declared that the commitment to the ter- ritorial integrity of the Land of Israel is significant "for future generations and for mass aliyah." "The past leaders of our movement left us with a clear message to keep the Land of Israel from the sea to the River Jordan for ge- nerations to come, for the mass immigration and for the Jewish people, most of whom will be gathered into this country." His remarks were quickly broadcast and commented on abroad. He was denounced by the opposition Labor Par- ty and leftist factions at home for imperiling aliyah. The chairman of the Labor Party's Knesset faction, Haim Ramon, charged that Mr. Shamir was continuing to endanger immigration by his unwise remarks. "Coalition ministers, led by the premier himself, ap- pear intent on vying with one another to sabotage aliyah by their wild and dai- ly verbal statements in an apparent effort to see who can cause the most harm to immigration from the Soviet Union," he said. But Mr. Shamir told reporters he had no inten- tion of making a direct con- nection between territory and immigration. "There is no connection whatever between our main- taining the territorial integ- rity of Eretz Yisrael between the sea and the Jordan River — which is a vital security necessity for the State of Israel — and the mass aliyah which is the fulfillment of the great Zionist dream," the prime minister said. Earlier this year, Mr. Shamir was criticized by the Bush administration after he told Likud members that increasing Soviet aliyah would lead to a "bigger Israel, a strong Israel, Eretz Yisrael." Washington interpreted those remarks as ra- tionalization for needing the administered territories to absorb new immigrants. Challenged then on the remark, Mr. Shamir had clarified his statement, say- ing he had only meant that immigration required a "strong, united Israel." But his remarks had many repercussions, among them discussions with the United States about U.S. aid for the resettlement of Soviet Jews in Israel. The Bush ad- ministration has reiterated it will not assist Israel to set- tle Soviet Jews if they are housed beyond Israel's pre- 1967 borders. Another probable fallout from Mr. Shamir's remark about a "bigger Israel" has been Moscow's failure to implement an agreement for direct flights for immigrants from the Soviet capital to Tel Aviv. Following his remarks, there has been no immediate reaction in Washington. President Bush and Secre- tary of State James Baker were in Europe for the sign- ing of a treaty between the NATO and Warsaw Pact countries to reduce conven- tional weapons. Fewer Soviets In Jerusalem Jerusalem (JPFS) — The percentage of Soviet immi- grants settling in Jerusalem is dropping, with only 1,051 (five percent) of the 21,163 who arrived last month choosing to live here. This proportion is down from the six per cent that arrived in September and is far from the 30 percent goal that government officials hoped would strengthen the Jewish demographic posi- tion in the capital. Absorption officials and local Soviet activists say the immigrants are bypassing Jerusalem because of its ex- pensive housing, shortage of jobs, and a lack — among the predominantly secular im- migrants — of any religious pull to the city.