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MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. • 851.9666 EAT SMOKED FISH-LIVE BETTER SUNDAY 8-3 OPEN MON THRU SAT 9.6 FRESH SMOKED WHOLE LAKE SUPERIOR WHITEFISH $3 99. SMOKED SABLE NOSH TAILS $2.99 2 Pound Limit « RUSSIAN SCHMALTZ HERRING $1.25 EA. Limit 4 SPECIALS - JUNE 14-15-16 - 3 DAYS ONLY FINEST SMOKED FISH & DELI TRAYS WE SPECIALIZE IN HANDCUT NOVA LOX Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 88 FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1991 VIP Visits Rise In Israel Jerusalem (JTA) — While Israeli tourism has not fully recovered from the Persian Gulf war and business travel lags behind economists' hopes, the Jewish state is experiencing an un- precedented boom in official visitors. They range from U.S. Sec- retary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmertnykh through junior diplomats from African and Eastern European countries. Most fly into Ben-Gurion Airport, though some cross the Allenby Bridge from Jordan. For the most part, they are guests of the For- eign Ministry, though other ministries and government departments are also in- volved in extending hospitality. Whatever their rank or purpose, the influx reflects a marked improvement in Israel's international stan- ding, which the Foreign Ministry attributes in no small measure to the respect Israel gained by its policy of restraint in the Gulf war. It also reflects a renewed global interest in Middle East diplomacy and econ- omic developments, spearheaded by Washing- ton's desire to cap its recent military triumph by suc- cessfully resolving the 43- year-old Arab-Israeli con- flict. Other countries, including the Soviet Union and the European Community nations are following the American lead in that regard. "A minister can hardly visit two Arab states in the region without calling on Israel, too," said Reuven Merhav, director general of the Foreign Ministry. There are new standards of balance and diplomatic pro- prieties, which signify Israel's strengthened posi- tion in the region and in the international community, he explained. A fertile source of official visits this year has been Israel's rapidly improving relations with nations of what formerly was the Com- munist bloc. Polish President Lech Walesa's recent high-profile state visit capped a series of trips by other Eastern Euro- pean leaders, including the prime minister of Hungary and ministers of the Czechoslovak and Romanian Governments. Some of the visitors who have come since March in- clude the foreign ministers of Luxembourg, Holland and Italy, who currently make up the European Commun- ity's so-called "troika," which deals with Middle Eastern affairs. Among others were the foreign ministers of Canada, Denmark, Greece, Japan, Portugal and Spain; the British minister of state at the Foreign Office; the Czechoslovak minister of transportation; the Romanian minister of health; the German minister for women's affairs and youth; and the president of the French National Assembly. Ex-Vichy Official To Be Tried In France Paris (JTA) — A judge ap- pointed by the Paris Court of Appeal has ruled that Rene Bousquet, former head of the Vichy police, will not be put in double jeopardy if he is tried for crimes against hu- manity for rounding up and ordering the mass deporta- tion of Jews during World War II. The 81-year-old retired in- dustrialist was formally charged in April. Judge Jean-Pierre Getti announced that documents unearthed by Nazi-hunter Serge Klarsfeld represent "new elements" that did not appear when Bousquet was tried and convicted of war crimes and collaboration in 1949. When the charges were brought against Mr. Bous- quet, sources close to Presi- dent Francois Mitterrand indicated the president thought a trial would be in- appropriate because it might "disturb the civil peace." According to the French media, Mitterrand and Bous- quet are old friends. If charges are pressed, the Justice Ministry would have to set a trial date. The media believes that given the at- titude of Mr. Bousquet's po- litical friends, he could well live out his years before go- ing to court.