This High Holiday Season, the best way to wish friends and family a good year is to give them a GREAT year. A one year subscription to The Jewish News. The High Holidays are a time of reflection and renewal, of families and friends coming together to share past traditions and future dreams. It is a time to wish those nearest and dearest to you sweetness, health and happiness. And what better way to express your thoughts than with a gift that chronicles Jewish life. This High Holiday season, share your family tradition. Give a friend or family member a gift they'll enjoy receiving every week of the year. A Jewish News gift subscription. THE JEWISH NEWS, THE ONE GIFT THAT SAYS IT ALL. Order one gift subscription for $37. Additional gifts only $29.60 each, a 20% savings! IN STATE ONLY. OUT OF STATE ADD 5 12.00. NEW SUBSCRIBERS ONLY. Call 313- -0620 to order your subscriptionn TODAY MONDAY - FRIDAY 8:30AM - 5:00PM THE JE ✓ SH NEWS Jews And Arabs Exchange Cards New York (JTA) — Only hours after the historic Israeli-Palestinian peace ac- cord was signed at the White House, Jewish and Arab American leaders were breaking bread together and warmly chatting about economic development pro- jects for the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In a scene no less revolu- tionary than the handshake between Israeli Prime Min- ister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestine Liberation Organ- ization Chairman Yassir Arafat, Jaweed al-Ghusin, treasurer of the PLO, could be seen night chatting and exchanging business cards with Steven Grossman, pres- ident of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. The two were among 700 people at a Washington re- ception sponsored by the American Jewish Congress, the National Association of Arab Americans and Project Nishma. The reception culminated a day in which leaders of both the Jewish and Arab communities shared a num- bing mixture of euphoria and caution at events both would have viewed as un- thinkable and perhaps undesirable only weeks ago. It was a day which-also began the possibility of a shared agenda, as both groups can now be expected to push for American sup- port for the nascent peace and the Palestinian econ- omic development necessary to maintain it. They also shared their first day of joint public ap- pearances, beginning at the signing on the White House lawn, concluding with the reception, and featuring in the middle a special briefing for the two communities by President Clinton, Vice President Al Gore and Sec- retary of State Warren Christopher. At the briefing, Mr. Clin- ton was said by participants to have set a tone of recon- ciliation and, in effect, an agenda of joint American Jewish-Arab action. He asked that Congress be pressed to maintain its engagement with foreign af- fairs; suggested individual and collective support for projects aiding autonomy; and asked that those with contacts in the Middle East use them to be supportive of the peace process. The president's remarks, said Henry Siegman, presi- dent of the AJCongress, showed "that he under- stands above all that America must worry about the security risks Israel is taking. "To that extent, his ap- proach was not a balanced one, but tilted very much to Israel, for good and necessary reasons. Because only Israelis have something tangible to give up. I think he showed extraordinary sensitivity and insight," said Mr. Siegman. Mr. Clinton was said to have set a tone of reconciliation and an agenda of joint action. If the American Jews felt comforted by Mr. Clinton's approach, so did the Pales- tinian Americans, for whom the public recognition of Arafat was a vindication of their identity. One stood up and told Mr. Clinton, "I noticed that when I used to be introduced to people, and would say 'I'm a Palestinian,' people would take two steps backward. So I would say I was Lebanese. After today, I don't have to do that. Thank you." Another man, standing up and introducing himself as a Palestinian from Gaza via Los Angeles, turned away from the president and toward the other people in the room, and said, "To my Jewish friends, shalom," to loud applause. Jews and Arabs sat interspersed during the briefing. Sitting next to Lester Pollack, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, was Najat Arafat Khelil, president of the Arab Women's Council. Ms. Khelil's description of her emotions of - reserved happiness" echoed those of many American Jews. "Things have developed too fast for me to digest and