22 Friday, September 21, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A.+•••••••••••••••••41 1 • V "HERB'S HEIMISH DEAL" . • AUTO RUST REPAIRS • SAVE 30-50% • eel 546-6200 ERADICO PEST CONTROL 1030 WOODWARD HGTS. FREE ESTIMATE AT YOUR HOME OR OFFICE • • FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY • A 493-0212 v • Loaners Available CAPITOL REPORT Specialists In Housing Pest Control • • 356-3677 • Mideast FERNDALE, MICH. 48220 • PROFESSIONAL, QUALITY SERVICE FOR HOME, APARTMENT AND INDUSTRY • SERVICING SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN FOR 50 YEARS IN ALL PHASES OF PEST CONTPOL FREE ESTIMATES REASONABLE RATES office Same Location Since 1972 home • Herb Silver - Owner • ♦ •••••••••••••••••••• VPS PET SERVICES $4 • BOARDING • GROOMING • TRAINING BOARD PET, PARK FREE If you are one of those who must take a trip to the kennel before you make your drive to Metro Airport, then you will appreciate the 24-hour service offered by the VPS Pet Services at 17840 Inkster Rd. When you board your dog or cat with them, says owner Henry Van Der Werken, they will drive you to the airport and pick you up when you return and park your car free at their 10 acre kennel where a trained dog polices the area. To board a pet for a week would cost $49.50 — $5/day boarding fee, $5 dip fee (parasite protection) and a $9.50 driving fee ($4.75 driving fee each way), plus free parking. It's a good deal when you consider a week's parking costs at least $25 at the airport. And how convenient to leave your-pet just seven minutes from the airport. Cats are also boarded in a separate building. A Diamond... The gift that outshines all the rest Whatever the occasion...maybe no occasion at all. There s no other way to say so much, so completely. A diamond dazzles her with Iove...and fires up the special feelings that brought you together. Whether you choose a marquise, brilliant, pear shape or emerald cut, in one of our many stylized mountings, you re sure to find one just for her. All specially priced below retail. The Diamond People For Over 50 Years SEPAOUZ 645-9200 114PIAW 30555 SOUTHFIELD RD CONGRESS BLDG SUITE IONF BLOCK SOUTH OF 13 MIL F ROAM 100 The kennels are first rate, with individual indoor/outdoor covered pens for all breeds. Call 941-4811 for information and reservations. WEST: 17840 INKSTER ROAD ROMULUS, MI 48114 941-4011 EAST: 22931 EAST 14 MILE ROAD ST. CLAIR SHORES, MI 48082 293-3966 HOUSE of SHUTTERS SINCE 1959 36% to 80% OFF ALL WINDOW TREATMENTS DON'T LET THE CANDLES GO OUT FOREVER You Can't Afford Cataracts, the Gift of Vision Should Be Free If you or someone you know are covered by Medicare and have cataract surgery done in a hospital it can cost you over $400.00 out of your pocket. Cataracts can prevent you from enjoying life's most pre- cious moment. 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LOEHMAN'S HUNTERS SQ. 33710 PYLMOUTH RD. 855-6972 261-6530 DEARBORN ANN ARBOR 562-6972 665-8881 FLINT 234-7760 Continued from Page 2 "We don't want to bring the Russians back into the picture," one American specialist com- mented. He recalled the Carter Administration's ill-fated Oct. 1, 1977 joint communique on the Middle East signed with the Soviet Union. That document, which called for a reconvened Geneva peace conference where the United States and the Soviet Union would serve as equal co- chairmen, was bitterly denounced by Israel and its many friends on Capitol Hill, especially by the more anti-Soviet Republicans. Reagan and his political allies do not want to reverse themselves now. The Reagan Administration wants the United States to re- main the only superpower with enough credibility among both Is- rael and the more moderate Arab states to mediate additional steps toward peace. That helps to ex- plain why the concept of a Geneva peace conference — still promoted by Moscow and some of the Arab states — is a non-starter, as far as Washington is concerned. Still, U.S. officials conceded, Moscow has scored some impor- tant points in the region over the past year with the rise of Syrian power in Lebanon and elsewhere. Syria has become the Soviet Union's main ally in the Middle East. The Kremlin leadership has made a tremendous investment in strengthening Syria's military capability since the humiliating setbacks suffered during the war with Israel in the summer of 1982. Moscow has more than made up for Syria's losses in fighter air- craft, tanks, advanced missiles and other hardware. It has pro- vided state-of-the-art weaponry, especially in ground to gound and anti-aircraft missiles. Some of this equipment had never before been supplied to countries outside the Soviet bloc in Eastern Europe. Renewed fighting between Is- rael and Syria could result in Soviet involvement — a fact of life recognized by U.S. and Israeli of- ficials. While this would not be the first time Israeli and Soviet forces have met each other in combat, there is greater fear now that the next time it could trigger a superpower confrontation. The level and degree of explosiveness have increased — as have the Soviet stakes in Syria. In short, the forced abrogation of last year's Israeli-Lebanese peace accord, the rise in Syrian military might and its enhanced influence in Lebanon have com- bined to strengthen the Soviet stance in the Middle East. But the Reagan Administration clearly has hopes of reversing this trend. U.S. officials sense that any elevated stature given to the Soviet role in the region by exten- sive discussions with the United States would prove counter- productive to this objective. The Administration is determined to avoid putting the Soviets on the same footing as the Americans in the diplomatic arena. That helps to explain why the Middle East is not going to be high on the agenda of Gromyko's meet- ings with Shultz and Reagan. U.S.