30 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, March 30, 1984 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ROCKLE IMBER'S • • Yarns • • Instructions • • Original • • Designs • • • Finishing • e • • Handcrafted • • Sweaters • • •• POOL NEED A FACELIFT? Remarcites Coping & Tile Replumbing • Orchard Mall, 6335B Orchard Lake Road • 855-2114 • Mon. thru Sat. 10-5 • West Bloomfield •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 The following 4 questions WHY SEDERAMA 84? WHEN SEDERAMA 84? WHAT SEDERAMA 84? WHO SEDERAMA 84? Free Estimates will be answered on pag6 32 . .,,,,,i.-,iiic . . * **** **.**** ****** PINK OR BLUE? . . . * . . really doesn't matter! THE BRAND NEW BABY * * * It BASKET doesn't come in the wrong color. And it's * . Robertson Brothers Service Co. "Swimming Pool Specialist" (313) 626-6181 Division of Paddock Pools 32749 NORTHWESTERN HWY. FARMINGTON HILLS, MI 48018 * always the right size. 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(north) U of M $1.00 Parking on Ferry Field $2.00 Admission (Children under 10 free with adult) 250 Artists and Craftsmen Your next party can be your best when you rent. Whether it's a. dinner party for eight or a garden party for eighty we can -help make it easier and more economical too. We have decorations, chairs, tables, party tents, cups, glasses, silverware, china, linens ... and much more! Call on us for your next party. WIN A S50 00 GIFT CERT If ICATE EVERY HOUR Hourly Drawings You do not have to attend or be present to win • t. a- .1•- ► is * it We 'fp • • .11 * • rrrr Hart, Mondale square off for New York Jewish vote New York (JTA) — Former Vice President Wal- ter Mondale and Sen. Gary Hart traded verbal jabs over the weekend regarding their position on Israel and the Mideast as they wooed New York's Jewish voters. The two democratic Presidential hopefuls were campaigning for New York's 285 delegates in next Tuesday's Presidential primary in which an esti- mated one-third of the Democratic voters are Jewish. Mondale accused Hart of changing his position on the moving of the American Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and of speaking on both sides of the sale of F-15 jet fighters to Saudi Arabia. Mondale, however, re- ceived a mixed reception of boos and cheers when he addressed a meeting of more than 1,000 members of the National Council of Young Israel at the Sheraton Centre Hotel on Sunday. His speech was interrupted by a small group of men and women shouting No F-15s," a reference to the sale of the fighter planes to Saudi Arabia by the Carter Administration, which Mondale, then then Vice President, supported. At the beginning of his speech, a young man lifted a large banner reading, "We will never forget the F-15s to Saudi Arabia." Mondale, howe,ver, ignored the com- Mondale, then Vice President, supported. Mondale's spokesman distributed to reporters a copy of a Hart statement from the Congressional Re- cord on May 15, 1978, in which Hart asked that his vote against the sale of F-15s not be "misread." In his statement, Hart said, "Had each sale proposal been presented separately, and had peace negotiations not been at such a crucial point, I could have given each proposed aircraft sale strong support." Hart appeared before the Young Israel later in the day and was .received cor- dially by the audience. He reiterated his strong sup- port of Israel, pointed to his pro-Israel record in the Se- nate and criticized Mondale for supporting the sale of F-15s to Saudi Arabia. He also reiterated his vow that he will move the American Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem if elected President:He said that his position on Jerusalem as Is- rael's capital has been con- sistent, noting that a state- ment by AIPAC last week also said that his position on the relocation of the em- bassy to Jerusalem was con- sistent. But Hart himself admit- ted last week, in an address to the Conference of Presidents of Major Ameri- can Jewish Organizations, that there was misun- derstanding regarding his position on Jerusalem. He apologized for a letter con- flicting with hiS position on Jerusalem. In response to a question about a Feb. 1 letter to Ar- nold Spicehandler, president of the Zionist Organization of America, in which Hart wrote that the status of Jerusalem was open to "negotiations," the Senator said that the letter does not reflect his position accurately. "I apologize for the ambiguity. It is unfor- tunate," Hart said. Walid Jumblatt criticizes Israel BY EDWIN EYTAN Lausanne (JTA) — Walid Jumblatt, the 35-year-old Druze leader, once knOwn for his ambivalent attitude towards Israel, now de- scribes Israel's policy in Lebanon as a complete fiasco and says that Israel's own political and military establishments are respon- sible for this situation. Jumblatt has emerged as one of Lebanon's main polit- ical forces after his victory last month over • President Amin Gemayel's army. He is Syria's ally but, paradoxi- cally, is not hostile to Israel. Israeli sources say that Jumblatt and his men scrupulously honor their promises and have gener- ally managed to keep the areas under their control free from Palestinian infilt- rations. Once Israel carried a great deal of weight in Lebanon. Now it only wields a relatively minor influence outside south Lebanon where the Israelis are in control. The fault, according to Jumblatt, is Israel's and Israel's alone. Former Pre- mier Menachem Begin and former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon bear most of the responsibility, but Sha- ron is mainly to blame for the reversal of Israel's influence in Lebanon, he stated. Israel's political and mili- tary establishments are also to blame, Jumblatt as- serted in an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. "When I look at Is- rael's leaders I seem to see a reflection of our own living mummies, men like (Pierre) Gemayel and (Camille) Chamoun, relics of another era with their fixed ideas and vesfed interests. It is not a question of age but of mentality and when I look at Israel's leaders I seem to see our own." After having berated some of his opponents, whom he referred to as "god- fathers" interested mainly in sharing the spoils, he was leaving the failed Lebanon reconciliation talks, pes- simistic about the future. Regarding Israel, the Druze leader stressed that its main mistake was its re- liance on force, and practi- cally on force alone. Force is simply not effective any longer. Israel has failed to try something else."