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Call For Directions To Our Beautiful New Showroom Open Monday-Friday 9-5, Saturday 10-2 519-974-4477 • FAX 519-974-9776 'QUALITY FOR A LIFETIME" Jobs Include: ♦ envelope addressing ♦ placecards ♦ shower invitations ♦ birth announcements and much more! Please call Dana lshbia at: (810) 788-4142 or Fax (810) 788-0665 or your calligraphy and personalized printing needs the rules; I see this legislation as an attempt to do that." Even some supporters concede that the D'Amato bill is unlikely to get past the talking stage — especially since Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., the chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Corn- mittee, were busy this week ne- gotiating renewal of the original PLO aid bill with only minor changes, including provisions re- quiring the State Department to report on PLO compliance every four months instead of the cur- rent six-month interval. In fact, Helms and Rep. Ben Gilman, R-N.Y., chair of the House International Relations Committee, have apparently agreed on a 90-day extension of the current law. Capitol Hill sources predict that Congress will then renew the original PLO aid bill with only modest changes. JI/S Braces For Cuts FREE ADMISSION. Located on SAAB the PLO or the Palestinian au- thority. Instead, aid could flow only through U.S. agencies or pri- vate organizations. The bill was written by Rand Fishbein, a former top aide to Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D- Hawaii, representing the Amer- ican Coalition for Middle East Peace with Security. "We believe these conditions are very reasonable, considering Arafat's performance so far," Mr. Fishbein said. "It is not strident; it doesn't make any statement that is inconsistent with stand- ing American law." But mainstream pro-Israel groups suggest that the D'Ama- to bill goes too far. "To move the goalposts at this time is not productive to the peace process," said Abraham Foxman, executive director of the Anti-Defamation League. "The key is to hold the PLO to the rea- sonable standards we have al- ready set forward, not to change Because Of Your United Way Contribution, A Lot More People Can Read This. United Way As the Republican-led Congress continues to hack away at the federal deficit, Jewish social ser- vice agencies are bracing for cuts that will affect thousands of needy Jews. Vocational counseling and training funding is a major tar- get of the congressional budget- bashers, a fact that could devastate Jewish vocational ser- vice agencies across the country, according to Dr. Marvin Kivitz, director of the International As- sociation of Jewish Vocational Services. "The great preponderance of our resources come from govern- ment sources," he said. "These cuts are not just a matter of num- bers. They're going to have a real impact on people." About 70 percent of the fund- ing for these agencies comes from the government. The cuts now in the legislative pipeline could re- sult in a loss of some $200 mil- lion per year for the 26 biggest Jewish vocational agencies in the country. That would affect the services provided to some 180,000 clients, he said. And Jewish vocational services provide more than basic job train- ing and counseling. "What this means is a curtail- ment of services for a broad spec- trum of activities — in mental health and mental retardation services, in services for the home- less and for unemployed welfare recipients and for new Americans — including many Jews from the former Soviet Union." Many of these agencies also provide services under the Medicare and Medicaid pro- grams, also likely to be cut. "We are facing a potential emergency in our community — and so is the country, because these kinds of services prevent people from going on the welfare rolls," he said. He rejected Republican claims that the private sector can pick up the slack. "The private sector now provides only one dollar for every 12 in service," he said. "The rest comes from government sources. It is totally unrealistic to think that charities can make up the difference." ❑ Publicity Deadlines The normal deadline for local news and publicity items is noon Thursday, eight days prior to issue date. The deadline for birth announcements is 10 a.m. Monday, four days prior to issue date; out-Of-town obituaries, 10 a.m. Tuesday, three days prior to issue date. All material must be typewritten, double-spaced, on 872x 11 paper and include the name and daytime telephone number of sender.