4 Jo All Our Friends and their Families Our Wish for Healthy and Happy Passover JULES R. SCHUBOT jewellers— gemologists 3001 West Big Beaver Road • Suite 112 • Troy, Michigan 48084 313-649-1122 ,rAZ-8 LJ LJ P ETROIT J EWISH NEWS SOUTHFIELD A FAMILY AFFAIR ❑ a variety of homes in every style and price range acentral location with easy access to all major freeways ❑ rich community life ❑ warm, friendly neighborhoods ❑ award-winning City services and recreational facilities ❑ a school system nationally- recognized for excellence City of Southfield Housing and Neighborhood Center, 354-4400 Open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to S p.m. SOUTHFIELD The Center of It All Israel Lodges Protest On Britain-PLO Talks Jerusalem (JTA) — Deputy Foreign Minister Yossi Beilin summoned Britain's ambassador to Israel this week and formally protested his country's decision to resume ministerial- level meetings with the Palestine Liberation Organization. British Foreign Office Minister Douglas Hogg met with two PLO officials and Faisal Husseini, the unof- ficial chief of the Palestinian delegation to the peace talks. The meeting marked a re- versal of policy for London, which suspended high-level contacts with the PLO dur- ing the Persian Gulf War, when the PLO leadership proclaimed its allegiance to Saddam Hussein. Mr. Beilin issued a state- ment that said the decision came at "a critical juncture" and could hurt the prospects for reconvening the peace talks. "It constitutes a prize for Palestinians who have yet to announce their willingness to return to the process," Mr. Beilin said. But the British said the purpose of the meeting was precisely to urge the Pales- tinians to return to the peace talks. Mr. Hogg met with Hael Fahoun, the head of the PLO's European section; Afif Safieh, the PLO's -Lon- don representative; and Mr. Husseini. Mr. Hogg reported after the meeting that he had stressed the importance of restarting the bilateral talks. The Palestinians said they had expressed to Mr. Hogg their eagerness to return to the talks but emphasized that the deportee crisis had to be resolved first. Follow- ing the meeting, Mr. Hus- seini reported he was op- timistic that a solution would be found. The meeting apparently was more of symbolic than substantive value. Israeli officials, mean- while, speculated on Israel Radio that Britain is looking for a role to play in the peace process and, after defending Israel during the deporta- tion crisis, wanted to make this gesture to the PLO to appear "evenhanded." Sinai Artifacts Returned To Egypt Tel Aviv (JTA) — The first of three shipments of ancient artifacts dug up in the Sinai desert by Israeli archae- ologists and slated to be returned to Egypt will be sent to Cairo this week. The artifacts, collected during the time Israel held the Sinai from 1967 to 1982, are to go on display at the Cairo Museum. Agreement on returning the archaeological finds unearthed in the Sinai, in- cluding some artifacts pri- vately purchased by Israelis from antiquities dealers, was reached last January in accordance with interna- tional treaties. The accords stipulate that in certain cases ancient ar- tifacts must be returned to the country in which they were found. At a handing-over ceremony in Jerusalem, Egyptian Antiquities Department officials ex- plained the decision to mount an exhibition at the Cairo Museum: "We want to show the Egyptian public that Israel is returning these finds that are part of the Egyptian heritage." But Israeli archaeologists said the exhibition decision appears to be more of a polit- ical issue rather than a scientific, cultural or artistic matter. The artifacts themselves are of relatively minor value and would not warrant a special exhibit in as prestigious an institution as the Cairo Museum, the foremost world museum housing ancient Egyptian and Pharaonic relics. The Egyptians are to build a special museum for the Sinai exhibits at El Arish within two years. The artifacts include 10 tombstones from a Byzan- tine fishing village on the Bardiwill Lagoon. I 4