26 Friday, October 5, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEWS AL'S SAVES YOU MONEY! HELP CUT YOUR HEATING BILLS! Al's Stocks It All STORM DOORS • Outside or inside • Picture window storms • Custom Storms made • Mill white or brown • Insulated & single glazed \(4 From $ 8995 • EXPERT INSTALLATION AVAILABLE STORM WINDOWS PATIO DOOR WALL STORMS • Many styles & colors • Self storing 14988 From $1 • PATIO DOOR WALL GLASS REPLACED • INSULATED GLASS REPLACEMENT SPECIALISTS • PRIME DOORWALLS most sizes • STORMS REPAIRED GLASS & AUTO TRIM OP IN CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS TIRES & ACCESSORIES Es 7 Aet.1,.1 r z;IS SEPvINC. METRO SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph E I c ■ ;:: , 7 353-2500 Miter !orations: Warne and Lincoln Park Morrie, Eleanor & Gary Schwartz and the staff of MORRIE'S Service Centers, Inc. 24848 Southfield Rd., Southfield corner 10 Mile 557-9751 557-1747 31600 Northwestern Hwy. corner Middlebelt Rd. 855-0277 Wish All Their Relatives, Friends & Customers • A Happy, Healthy NEW YEAR FACTORY AUTHORIZED HEARING AID SPECIAL ALL IN THE EAR AID NO WIRES NO TUBES--NO CORDS If You're NOT Hearing From Us, You Should Be! Will Compensate Hearing Loss Up to 75 Decibles 90-DAY TRIAL Daily Hours 9:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. BY APPOINTMENT ONLY GEORGE M. IWANOW HEARING AID CENTERS THIS IS ALL YOU WEAR. IT PAYS TO DRIVE 10-40-100 MILES TO SAVE $. $59500 Reg. Price SPECIAL $249" BOTH EARS $39900 WITH THIS ADVT. ONLY WEST SIDE EAST SIDE Greenfield Plaza Shopping Center Eastside Center Prof. Building 22883 Greenfield Rd. 17800 E. 8 Mile Rd. Southfield — Ground Floor Harper Woods — Ground Floor 559-9130 371-9200 OFFER EXPIRES 10-31-84 Peres lashes Hussein rejection of Middle East peace overture Jerusalem (JTA) — Israeli Premier Shimon Peres responded swiftly and sharply Monday to a speech by King Hussein to the Jordanian Parliament rejecting Israeli peace overtures as "ma- neuver" and "deception" and vow- ing that Jordan would not forgo a single grain of soil in Arab lands occupied by Israel." "All who reject peace will even- tually have to pay the price for their rejection," Peres declared in a statement issued shortly after the Jordanian King spoke in Amman where parliament re- opened after its summer recess. He stressed, however, that Israel would "continue to believe in peace and strive for peace" despite Hussein's negative statements. Peres has invited Hussein sev- eral times to enter into peace talks with Israel without precon- ditions. Jordan's decision last week to resume full diplomatic ties with Egypt, broken when Is- rael and Egypt signed their peace treaty in 1979, was widely viewed as a possible prelude to Jordan joining the peace process. But those hopes seemed to be dashed by Hussein's attack on Is- rael and the United States. He ac- cused the latter of contributing to Israel's obstinacy by procrastina- tion and hesitation, and its rever- sal of an earlier decision to sell Jordan modern weaponry. Peres declared that contrary to Hussein's charge, Israel's pro- posed .peace talks with all of its neighbors are not a tactical ruse" because peace is a real and urgent need for all Mideast nations. Referring to Hussein's asser- tion that Joran would not give up "one grain of our soil" on the West Bank, not a stone in our mos- ques, churches and holy places," Peres said it was "inconceivable" that Jordan's conditions for peace talks are that all of its demands ire accepted before the talks begin. Peres reminded Hussein that Jordan was the aggressor in 1967 "out of the mistaken assumption that it could force Israel into de- feat." He observed that there are no prices for mistakes and no compensation for aggression. Peace is not an act of charity. Either both sides need it or it can- not be attained." There was disappointment in some Israeli government circles over the harsh, uncompromising tenor of Hussein's speech, particu- larly after Israel's new unity gov- ernment offered peace talks with- out preconditions. Only Sunday, Peres expressed "hope" that the renewed ties between Jordan and Egypt "will contribute toward the renewal of the peace process." But some observers seemed re- lieved that Hussein's adamancy has ended, at least for the time being, a confrontation between the Labor and Likud components of the unity government over the framework of peace talks with Jordan. Likud insists they must be based exclusively on the Camp David accords; the Labor position is that negotiations with Jordan need not necessarily be limited by Camp David. Last week at the United Na- tions, President Reagan told the General Assembly that he is as committed today to his Sept. 1, 1982 peace initiative as he was on the day he issued it. "That initiative remains a realistic and workable approach. He said that the foundation of this pla4 remains Security Council Resolution 242. Stressing the importance of negotiations, Reagan, whose speech lasted 25 minutes and who referred to the Middle East only briefly, said, "The lesson of ex- perience is that negotiations work. The peace treaty between Israel and Egypt brought about the peaceful return of the Sinai, clearly showing that the negotiat- ing process brings results when the parties commit themselves te,-: it. The time is bound to come when the same wisdom and cour- age will be applied, with success, to reach peace between Israel and, all of its Arab neighbors, in a manner that assures security f(7 all in the region, the recognition -, of Israel, and a solution to the Palestinian problem," he said. Report Muslim extremist faction holds Detroit native Beirut — Former Detroiter Jeremy Levin, who was abducted in Beirut last March, is being held captive along with a pair of dip- lomats from the United States and Saudi Arabia by an under-- ground group, Syrian officials re- ported this week. According to Beirut's Al Sharq newspaper, which has close ties to the Syrian government, the Saudi diplomat may be released soon but there has been no progress in efforts to release the U.S. dip- lomat, William Buckley, and Le- vin, 52, who is the Beirut bureau chief for the Atlanta-based Cable News Network. The Muslim extremist group Is- lamic Jihad, which said it carried out the Sept. 20 suicide bombing of the U.S. Embassy annex in Be- ' irut, has claimed responsibility for the three kidnappings. , Samuel Greenberg heads national JWV Washington, D.C. (JTA) — Samuel Greenberg of Kingston, Pa., was unanimously elected na- tional commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. at the organization's 89th national con- vention. Greenberg, a veteran of WWII, has been a member of JWV for 38 years. He has served as national editor of The Jewish Veteran, the organization's national publica- tion, for the past five years and as I a member of the national execu- tive committee. Correction The names of guest speaker Harry Gunsberg and dinner committee member Rose Katz were inadvertantly misspelled in last week's advertisement for the Nov. 11 dinner of the Friends of Israel Cancer Foundation.