Five Easy Pieces, One Easy Price Enjoy the beauty and comfort of quality rattan furniture with this incredibly low priced five-piece set. Sofa, love seat, chair with swivel base (not shown), end table and cocktail table. Five piece set Mfg. List $3309 Sale $1899 Novi - Between Beck & Wixom Rd. 348 0090 • 48700 Grand River - Livonia Just West of Middlebelt 522-9200 • 29500 W. 6 Mile Rd. Birmingham • Across from 555 Building 644-1919 • 690 S. Woodward Completely Casual for Over 48 Years WORLD'S BEST / cARF3ET LEANING Exclusive Dry Cleaning System Recommended By NEW YORK CARPET WORLD ffzczrzciz Call For Your Appointment zLizir&,E5 352-5525 U.S. Accuses Israel Of Weapons Sales Washington (JTA) — In a move with the potential to harm U.S.-Israeli relations at a sensitive moment in the Middle East peace process, the United States has accus- ed Israel of selling advanced military technology to China. CIA Director James Woolsey said Israel has been selling possibly several billion dollars in defense technologies to Beijing for more than 10 years. The CIA assessment ap- peared in a report released recently by the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee. "We believe the Chinese seek from Israel advanced military technologies that U.S. and Western firms are unwilling to provide," the CIA said in written re- sponses to senators' ques- tions. "The Chinese probably also hope that formalizing such ties will foster an envi- ronment in which they can recoup some of the cost they have incurred in more than a decade of acquiring defense technologies from Israel — a cost that may be several billion dollars," the CIA said. Israel has denied harming U.S. interests. "Israel adheres to all of its commitments to the United States with regard to its re- lationship with China," Ruth Yaron, the Israeli Em- bassy spokeswoman, said. Israeli officials here were playing down the significance of the report and its timing. They said they were not concerned that the issue could lead to a worsening of relations with the United States because the two coun- tries talked regularly about such issues and the United States was aware of what Israel was and was not do- ing. State Department spokesman Mike McCurry said that the United States was in touch with Israel about technology transfer issues. He would not com- ment specifically on the latest reports. Allegations about Israel selling sensitive weapons technology to China have been floating around for some time now. but the tim- ing of this latest flare-up could raise questions here. This controversy is rearing its head while Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin is visiting China, the first Israeli prime minister to travel to Beijing since the two countries established diplomatic relations in 1992. In addition, the U.S. ac- cusations are being made public as the United States has been trying to bolster both Israel and the Palestin- ians while they try to implement their historic agreement for limited Pales- tinian self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza. Sources here seemed relatively unconcerned about the controversy perhaps because the major newspapers in Washington did not carry reports on the issue. Some in the pro-Israel community were taking a wait-and-see attitude about whether the issue would Officials stressed there were no specific allegations in what Mr. Woolsey said, and the U.S. had been wrong before in accusing Israel of transferring sensitive technology. blossom into a full- fledged controversy. Pro-Israel sources on the Hill said that they were un- aware of any action or con- cern about the report, so far. The Israeli officials stress- ed that there were no specific allegations in what Mr. Woolsey and the CIA said, and that the U.S. government had been wrong before in accusing Israel of transferring sensitive technology. During the Bush ad- ministration, the United States accused Israel of transferring Patriot missile technology to China. Israel was later exonerated by the State Department. Israeli officials said the report was a recycling of old news that had been cir- culating for a while.