• 14 Friday, December 10, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Hanuka Greetings Happy Hanuka from BESSENGER'S BLUESTEIN BROS. Dealers in Scrap Materials 23535 Woodward, Ferndale 3195 BELLEVUE WA 2-2720 designs WASHINGTON (JTA) HAPPY HANUKA ASA front Builders Supply Co. CABINET CORP. 6247400 2040 Easy St., Walled Lake Happy Holiday BLUE FLASH CHEMICAL CO. Happy Hanuka to Our Friends and Patrons COHEN & SON Kosher Meat & Poultry Market LI 7-4121 26035 Coolidge A Happy Healthy Hanuka To All From = Drake Printing Co. 2000 West 8 Mile Rd. Ferndale, Mich 48220 A Very Happy Hanuka to the Jewish Community FIELD'S EMPLOYMENT TR 3-7770 1 Sincerest Hanuka Greetings HOA KOW INN Chinese and American Restaurant Specializing in Cantonese Foods 13715 West 9 Mile. West of Coolidge, Oak Park LI 7-4663 LINCOLN BARBER SHOP Wishes Their Customers A Happy & Healthy HOLIDAY 26090 Greenfield, Oak Park Hanuka Greetings MANHATTAN CONTAINER CORP. CORRUGATED CARTONS 23823 Dequindre, Hazel Park 566-8640 Wishing All Our Friends and Customers Greetings On Hanuka SUSSMAN'S PRINT SHOP Quality Printing Since 1919 11826 Dexter TO 8-2909 UNITED GOOD HOUSEKEEPER VACUUM CLEANER • SPECIALISTS wishes its customers a healthy, and joyous Hanuka OAK PARK 26011 COOLIDGE 546-0088 • BIRMINGHAM TELEGRAPH at MAPLE 851-6222 . Lenore, Jerry & Kim Gurwin Wish All Their Friends & Customers A HAPPY HANUKA GLIRIN1N'S ALITO8ODY KLINIC COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE INSURANCE CLAIMS Hanuka Greetings AIPAC: Israel Strategically Important to U.S. Security — The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) believes that most Ameri- cans, including Jews, do not realize the strategic impor- tance of Israel to the na- tional security of the United States. - To remedy this, AIPAC is issuing a series of mono- graphs that will deal with the strategic issue as well as with political and economic topics involved in U.S.- Israel relations. Steven Rosen, who is editor of the monographs, said that Thomas Dine, AIPAC's executive director wants to bring the organiza- tion into the "vanguard" of the policy issues concerning U.S.-Israel relations. Rosen, who recently joined AIPAC as director of research and informa- tion after four years as a senior analyst at the Rand Corp., wrote the first monograph, re- cently published, "The Strategic Value of Is- rael." In it, he argues for the "prepositioning" of U.S. weapons in Israel in order to protect the Per- sian Gulf. If the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on strategic cooperation signed by Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon and Defense Secretary Caspar Wein- berger Nov. 30, 1981, had gone into effect, it would have marked a "watershed" in U.S.-Israeli relations, Rosen said. The U.S. suspended the treaty after Israel extended its law into the Golan Heights. Rosen believes the Reagan Administration was ready to restore the MOU last May but was stopped by Israel's invasion of Lebanon. The Administration is now considering the estab- lishment of bases for its Rapid Deployment Force and Rosen argues it is necessary to begin pressing the idea of Israel as the only realistic site. He warns that it takes several years to build a base and once it is estab- lished it changes the rela- tionship between the U.S. and the host country. If the base is not built in Is- rael it will also effect the U.S. relationship with Is- rael "for years to come," he said. In the AIPAC mono- graph, Rosen makes a logi- cal case based on cost and time. He stresses that Israel is located midway between the Persian Gulf and Europe. He points out that it would take 77 days to transport a mechanical di- vision from the U.S. to the Persian Gulf at a cost of $391 million; 27 days from the U.S. base at Diego Gar= cia in the Indian Ocean at a cost of $138 million; 22 days from the base the U.S. is seeking in Kenya at a cost of $124 million, and 14 days from the base being sought in Somalia at a cost of $76 million. From Israel it would be 11 days at a cost of $63 million. The monograph stresses that Israel has three other advantages — political sta- bility, political reliability since it is part of the free world and that it is an ad- vanced society. Rosen notes that Oman, where the U.S. does have access is in the Persian Gulf, but it is under pressure from the Arab states, particularly Saudi Arabia, not to allow U.S. bases on its territory. Somalia is politically un- stable and faces a threat from neighboring Ethiopia. Rosen points out that Egypt has some of the advantages of Israel. But he says that since Egypt invited the Soviets out, it may do the same for the U.S. Rosen said that there are many in the Administraton who favor such a move. The MOU provided only for medical supplies to be stationed in Israel, but this was considered a first step on an issue that all could agree. Most important of all, Rosen believes President Reagan favors a close alliance with Israel even if he has lost some per- sonal regard for Premier Menahem Begin. With 10,650 students opening the 1982-1983 school year at Bar-Ilan, Re- ctor M _ichael Albeck be- lieves Bar-Ilan is reaching its potential in serving Is- raeli students. Emphasis on future growth, he states, will be on providing a reli- gious atmosphere in an aca- demic setting for many hundres of Jewish students from the Diaspora. Additional dormitory facilities are required in order to achieve this goal, he said, and he counts on the help of Diaspora Jewry to provide the opportunity for more Jewish youngsters to spend their- university career = or portions of it — living and studying at Bar-Ilan. During the current semester the number of overseas students doubled, from 52 in 1981 to almost 100, but Prof. Albeck says there would easily be 10 times this number with the availability of more dormit- ory facilities. Southfield • 352.7030 HOLIDAY GREETINGS Happy Hanuka Lastar • :ELECTRIC CO.: • • Electrical Contractors 3 1 681 Dequindre Madison Heights, Mich. • • Edith Eckstat, R.E. Albert Wolgin, R.E. Hair Removed Forever WO 3-3047 WO 3-0922 Woodward Tower at the Park Formerly Broderick Towers HAPPY HANUKA Holiday Good Cheer OAKLAND WASTE MATERIAL CO. GLOBE PARCEL SERVICE INC. Gift Parcels For Buyers of Non-Ferrous Metals 1534 Gillet TR 3-2575 Overseas Countries , 6720 Michigan 894-5350 INV make the mess less. GREETINGS PASTOR COMPANY "Michigan's Most Complete Cleaners" - Free Estimate 19971 JAS. COUZENS 342-4300 Best Wishes For A Happy, Healthy - HANUKA Robinson's Shell 15450 W. 9 Mile, comer of Greenfield Oak Park 968-5468 ' Holiday Good Cheer I SERWER'S ! WHOLESALERS I 4646 Michigan Ave. L IN-SINK-ERATOR DISPOSERS DO MORE. FLO•.Lap. 190' EWER instantly 894-3444 Happy Hanuka Holiday IN-SINK-ERATOR SKY DIRT Food Waste Disposer Manufacturing Co. 321 S. DOBSON, Westland, Mich. 342-3252 SOIL For Every Need 15450 Schaefer, N. of Fenkell Meek M. Walker, District Sales Manager VE 7-9380 Hanuka Greetings- to All Amsterdam Press Millard Press and White Color Card Co. 120 Mt. Elliott Established 1890 259-2309 — 259-3910 Holiday Greetings BERRY & SEYBURN Property Management 28th Floor, Fisher Bldg., Detroit 48202 871-6700 VW/ Wishing You a HAPPY HANUKA HAIR FASHIONS by RONALD Men's & Women's Hair Styling OPEN SUNDAY and MONDAY 23720 Southfield Road • Southfield, Mich. 557-0680 r A Happy and Joyous Hanuka To All HANDLEMAN COMPANY 1055 W. Maple Rd. Clawson, Mi. 48017 L J • J. l-s DAVIS IRON • WORKS, Inc. • Weddings • Bar Mitzvas • MoVies • Portraits 26571 W. 12 Mile Rd. Overseas Students May Be Next Challenge for Bar-Ilan RAMAT GAN — The need to accommodate an in- creased influx of overseas Jewish students is consid- ered by the new rector of Bar-Ilan University one of the greatest challenges fac- ing the school. Best Wishes for a Happy Hanuka Leo Knight Photography 1. J. -2. I. 2- L 1. . Z, - '..14