Final Markdown. 1/2 off And More! Belgium (JTA) — Belgian Foreign Minister Willy Claes returned from his meeting with Yassir Arafat in Tunis and said the Pales- tinian leader warned him the Middle East peace negotiations "will be very difficult" to renew unless the deportation crisis is resolved. The chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization was referring to the 415 Palestinians activists deported by Israel to southern Lebanon last December. No doubt about it, Birmingham's most preferred men's clothier has reached an all-time low. Mr. Arafat told Mr. Claes he wanted the European Community to play a more active role in the Middle East peace negotiations, Belgian sources said. "These negotiations began more than one year ago and the result is null," the PLO leader added. Mr. Claes said he visited Mr. Arafat as part of an "information mission" in preparation for Belgium's chairing the European Community in the second half of this year. FINAL DAYS MAXWELL 116 North Woodward Avenue • Corner of Maple • 642-1965 M,T,W:10-6 Th:10.9 F:10-8 Belgian Leader Bringsi Message From Arafat S:10.6 Since the Persian Gulf War, E.C. countries, with the exception of France and Spain, have abstained from any high-level contact with the PLO leader, who was criticized during the war for YES "THERE REALLY IS A ROSLYN!" , who cares how you look and feel in your clothes all day long. Just because you wear that perfect on-the- job look, it doesn't mean you're strictly 9 to 5 underneath. Come in and be fitted by a staff of experts who will solve your necessities, be it a petticoat length or a special bra. We'll keep you feeling strictly feminine 9 to 5 or 5 to 9. Don't forget our lovely sleepwear, swimwear, robes and leisurewear. WE ENJOY SHOPPING WITH YOU! QC61 Intimatc Appard Applegate Square Northwestern Highway & Inkster Road Daily 10-6 Thursday 10-8 Saturday 10-5 353-5522 , M11111 ■ 111111MINEMINI ■ his support of Iraqi Presi- dent Saddam Hussein. Mr. Claes already visited Israel and Egypt last December as part of an effort to become more involved in the peace process. In the meeting with Mr. Arafat, Mr. Claes insisted on the need for Israel to imple- ment the U.N. Security Council resolutions regar- ding the Palestinians deported by Israel. "We must work to imple- ment the U.N. resolutions," Mr. Claes said, hinting that a "compromise acceptable for all the parties can be found." Mr. Claes told Belgian reporters that he would report on his visit to U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher in a meeting in Washington. Mr. Claes also used the op- portunity of his visit to Tunisia to meet with Tuni- sian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The Belgian foreign min- ister stressed that the devel- opment of relations between Europe and the Arab coun- tries of North Africa was be- ing impeded by Libya's refusal to cooperate in the inquiry on the explosion of the Pan Am plane over Lockerbie, Scotland, which caused the death of 170 peo- ple in 1989. Jerusalem Foundation Chapter In Austria Vienna (JTA) — Teddy Kollek, mayor of Jerusalem, announced here the forma- tion of the Jerusalem Foun- dation Austria, which will be the ninth chapter of the International Jerusalem Foundation abroad. Mr. Kollek, who grew up in Vienna and left for Palestine in 1937, along with Viennese Mayor Helmut Zilk, have taken several steps to break the ice between Austria and Israel. Relations between the two countries were strained dur- ing the six years that Kurt Waldheim, charged with Nazi activities during World War II, served as president of Austria. The city of Vienna has pledged $2 million to build a Jewish- Arab teachers' facility. And Austria has agreed to put up the same amount to renovate the Gymnasia Ivrit Rehavia in Jerusalem. Mr. Kollek and his Vien- nese friends have succeeded in recruiting a prominent group of citizens for the committee of the Jerusalem Foundation Austria. It includes Zilk, Austrian Minister of Culture and Ed- ucation Rudolf Scholten, former Austrian President Rudolf Kirchschlager and the cardinal of Vienna, Franz Knig. The renovation of the Rehavia Gymnasia in Jerusalem will take one year.