40 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 25, 1985 NEWS Business Package Special 15% Discount Order any quantity of business cards, envelopes and letterhead, at the same time This coupon cannot be used in conjunction with another coupon or offer. Typesetting is not included. Copy for printing must be camera ready. Coupon expires February 2, 1985. Egypt, Greek Leaders Meet On Mideast TM Coupon must be presented with order. Oak Park - North 25218 Greenfield Just north of 10 Mile Oak Park, MI 48237 Oak Park-South 23081 Coolidge In the Oak Park Plaza Oak Park, MI 48237 968-3070 543-2368 gm FREE Pick-up • FREE Delivery on orders over $50. DISCOUNTS UP TO 70% ON ALL NAME BRANDS The Great Cover-Up 5665 W. MAPLE ROAD • Aluminum 1" WEST BLOOMFIELD, MICHIGAN 48033 Horizontal Blinds • Wood 1" & 2"Horizontal Blinds • Vertical Blinds SHOWROOM BY • Pleated Shades APPOINTMENT ONLY • Window Shades • Woven Woods • Window Quilts 851-1125 FREE Professional Measure at No Obligation FREE in-home Design Consulting COMMUNITY NETWORK FOR JEWISH SINGLES AND CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK Presents "THE VANISHING AMERICAN JEW" Friday Evening, January 25, 1985 8:00 P.M. at CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK Featuring: Gary Katz, Jeffrey Howard, Marsha Fishman and Harlene Appelman Moderator: Rabbi Kenneth L. Cohen, Associate Rabbi Congregation Shaarey Zedek ONEG SHABBAT TO FOLLOW I Athens (JTA) — President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt ended a two-day official visit to Greece over the weekend following a 90-minute meeting with Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou. During his stay he also met three times with President Constantine Karamanlis. The Egyptian leader and his Greek hosts appeared to be in general agreement on the urgent need to promote the peace process in the Middle East and the impor- tance of fresh initiatives by the European Economic Community (EEC), of which Greece is a member, toward that end. Karamanlis told Mubarak that Greece would do its utmost to con- tribute to a settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict by encourag- ing the EEC to take a stronger interest in that problem. He said the Middle East issue, with the Palestinian problem as its start- ing point, has become danger- ously complicated with the pas- sage of time because of ideologi- cal, economic and religious an- tagonisms. The president implied support for the Camp David agreements when he said he recognized the courage and realism with which Egypt tried in the past and is still trying to promote the peace proc- ess. Mubarak said he was convinced that Egypt and Greece held iden- tical views, including Egypt's support for the Palestine Libera- tion Organization as the sole representative of the Palestinian people and its right to be included in the peace process. According to Mubarak, the first step toward a comprehensive and just peace must be mutual recog- nition of and respect for the rights of the Palestinian people to self- determination and to establish a state on their own soil. The Egyptian leader stressed that a suitable climate was needed for the speedy resumption of peace negotiations between Is- rael and the Arab countries. He expressed deep regret over the Is- raeli government's decision to es- tablish new settlements on the West Bank maintaining that this was contrary to the positive ges- tures which were expected from Israel and which would have strengthened the moderate and constructive elements in the Arab world. As a first step in that direction, Mubarak called for radical meas- ures to improve living conditions for the inhabitants of the West Bank and Gaza Strip leading to the gradual return of sovereignty to the Palestinian people who, he said, own both the right and the land. Meanwhile, Mordechai Drori, director general of Israel's Foreign Ministry, arrived in Athens Monday on a one-day visit for talks with Theodoros Pan- galos, Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs in charge of relations with the EEC. Bond Gala Net $45 Million Jerusalem (JTA) — About 200 Israel Bonds leaders from the United States, Canada and Latin America pledged to purchase more than $45 million in Israel Bonds during the coming year at a banquet with Premier Shimon Peres at the Jerusalem Hilton Hotel Saturday night. The gala affair, attended by several Cabinet ministers, marked the end of a week-long tour of the country where the vis- itors were shown industrial de- velopment projects and military installations and had meetings with most government leaders. Peres spoke of his government's Rabbi Has Role At Inauguration Sabotage Unit Is Convicted Tel Aviv (JTA) — Six Israeli Druze from Galilee and a Lebanese member of a terrorist organization were found guilty of charges of espionage and at- tempted sabotage by a Haifa dis- trict court. The verdict on Sunday was the first public disclosure of the affair which began 18 months ago with the arrests of the suspects. Ac- cording to the charge sheets, one of their sabotage targets was the 36-story Shalom Tower in Tel Aviv, Israel's tallest building. Other targets included the Haifa oil refineries, Tel Aviv's Dizengoff Street, and bus stations in Jerusalem and northern Israel. The sabotage ring was un- covered in August, 1983, when a Lebanese citizen, identified as Farid el-Halik, was stopped at the Rosh Hanikra border checkpoint trying to drive his Mercedes from Lebanon into Israel. Some 121 pounds of high explosives was found in a reserve gasoline tank. Also found were detonators and electronic sabotage equipment. According to the charges, el- Halik's Mercedes was to have been abandoned in the parking garage under the Shalom Tower with the explosives set to go off by a timing device. , Washington (JTA) — Rabbi Alfred Gottschalk, president of the Hebrew Union College, the Reform seminary in Cincinnati, was one of the four clergymen who participated in the swearing in ceremony of President Reagan and Vice President George Bush on Monday which followed the of- ficial swearing in of Reagan and Bush at the White House Sunday to meet the Constitutional re- quirement that it be held at noon Jan. 20. In his prayer, Gottschalk urged that the leaders of the govern- ment be guided "in protecting the Constitution of our beloved com- monwealth founded in faith which ensures unity without uni- formity". and in advancing "the American way which gives to bigotry no sanction, to malevo- lence no hope." He also prayed that "this oppor- tunity for renewal will advance reconciliation in the family of na- tions, guarantee peace in our world and tranquility in the farthest reaches of our universe." At an ecumenical prayer serv- ice at the National Cathedral Sunday, Rabbi Lemard Cahan of Cong. Har Shalom of Potomac, Md., a Conservative congrega- tion, chanted a selection from the Torah and then translated it into English. Cantor Joseph Malovany of the Fifth Avenue Synagogue was scheduled to sing Monday af- ternoon at one of the official cocktail parties, this one given by New York lawyer Roy Cohen. decision to withdraw the Israel Defense Force from Lebanon and relations with Egypt. "We want Lebanon to remain independent and peaceful," Peres said. "We do not seek a part of her waters nor a part of her territories, and we do not want to play a part in her poli- tics. But at the same time we are determined that no katyusha (rockets) will be fired from her territories at the villages of Galilee." Peres stressed that "We do not ask Lebanon for permission to leave, nor do we charge Lebanon with the task of defending our vil- lages. We shall leave on our own, we shall defend our villages our- selves, with the strategy we deem fit." The Premier noted that talks with Egypt are to begin shortly in Beersheba to resolve the border dispute over the Taba region on the Gulf of Aqaba which both countries claim. "Israel will work uninterruptedly to make the peace with Egypt a real political success. We don't want the first peace agreement (with an Arab state) to be the last one," he said. At an economic panel held ear- lier in the day, the Bond leaders heard from Arye Sher, Account- ant General of the Finance Minis- try. He said Israel's average long-term-debt is at an advantage Over other countries whose debts are much shorter term. Israel's average rate of interest payments on long-term debts — 5.2 percent — is low by international standards, he said. Israelis, Soviets Split 2 Games Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel's champion Maccabi Tel Aviv bas- ketball team split two games with the Soviet Union's TSKA Moscow team, winning the second last Thursday 87-81 at the European Championships in Deurne, near Antwerp. The Israeli team lost to their Soviet rivals by 12 points the previous night. The Soviets have always re- fused to come to. Israel to play basketball games and have not allowed the Israelis to play inside the Soviet Union.