20 Friday, December 20, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ALEXAN 9E A Cootie fling Core Ceoter El-- • LOCAL NEWS Providing skilled nursing care in a quiet, residential setting for over thirty years, our professional staff is dedicated to serving the special short-term, convalescent and long- term needs of our patient-guests and their families. George Will Continued from Page 1 718 W. Fourth Street, Royal Oak 545-0571 111•111111.1 ■1 1 1 .00k , ,7111011W SPRUCE UP YOUR HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS AND FIND SOME GREAT GIFT IDEAS, AT SEVENTH HEAVEN FAMOUS NAME & DESIGNER SHEETS by Springmaid, Cannon, Martex, & Fieldcrest Reg. $22-$25 TWINS FULLS $25429 QUEENS $35442 KINGS • $45450 STD. CASES • *20-825 $22426 'CENG CASES FIELDCREST "POPULARITY" TOWELS - 10 Colors NOW Reg. $ 6.59 $14.00 BATH TOWEL 8 4.79 9.75 HAND TOWEL I 2.39 $ 3.75 WASH CLOTH $12.99 $26.00 BATH SHEET FIELDCREST BLANKETS in 6 Colors Selected Group Savings - FAMOUS NAME COMFORTERS Fieldcrest 20-70% Martex 50% OFF Cannon Springmaid OFF CUSTOM FORMICA MIRRORS Single & Double Frames WE DISCOUNT HORIZONTAL es?. VERTICAL BLINDS 20% OFF MAGNIFICENT SHAG RUGS by FIELDCREST Small Oval 50% OFF Large Oval Speaker George Will is flanked by Allied Jewish Campaign chairmen Stanley Frankel and Paul D. Borman. Contour & Lid 9 Colors SEVENTH HEAVEN, Holiday Hours: 10-9 Mon.-Fri, 10-6 Saturday 12-5 Sunday Hunters Square. Orchard Lake Rd. & 14 Mile VIS( ID NOW *7.99-8.99 89.99-12.99 *12.99-18.99 815.99-21.99 *9.99-10.99 88.99-11.99 855-3777 ■ ALBERT EINSTEIN LODGE ggi!li. B'NAI V B'RITH Is Having Their Annual TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1985 at 9:00 P.M. B'NAI DAVID SYNAGOGUE 24350 Southfield Road • Southfield, Michigan We have an opportunity for a great Einstein Lodge Affair this New Years at a price we can all afford Assorted deli meats, soft drinks and one bottle of cheer at each table. Pastries, coffee and tea will be served followed with a continental breakfast MAKE RESERVATIONS EARLY First come, first served basis! MUSIC BY: ERIC ROSENOW AND HIS CONTINENTALS Donation $20.00 per person For Tickets and Further Information Call: Jack Seiderman, President — 548-7252 Sigmunt Rubin — 626-8594 / / / / / Sam Freedman — 352-7418 Eric Rosenow — 398-3664 / ••• / / / / Max Pines — 352-5035 Sam Seltzer — 546-3645 / / / / / ply by beginning all over again, said Will, a strong supporter of Reagan. Our simplified views of world "problems" are the major stumbling block of our foreign policy. "Problems in Ireland, problems in Lebanon are not problems," he declared. "They are messes." Turning to Israel, Will said the Jewish state has just been through the hardest two years of its existence, but also the four easiest decades of its existence. Israel's problems will only be more difficult to solve in the fu- ture, he said, but "Israel .re- mains the soul defender of all that was best in the European world." The 1967 and 1973 wars pro- ved that Israel cannot afford to lose a single war, yet "Israel gave up something tangible — the Sinai — for something in- tangible and repudiatable — peace with Egypt. There is more peace between Israel and Jordan right now than there is between Israel and Egypt," Will said, adding that Israel suffers from "constant fiddling" by the inter- national community in the Mid- dle East. "The Middle East is carnivor- ous," he explained, "but not even our State Separtment has contrived to blame the Iran-Iraq War on Israel and the Palesti- nian problem ... Twenty-three percent of Israelis are Jews dis- placed by Arab governments" but the world continues to see Arab refugee camps. Will believes the greatest test- ing for Israel and its friends is yet to come, based on the Pol- lard spy case and U.S. efforts to balance the Federal budget. He described Israeli spying on the U.S. as "foolish to risk so much to gain so little" and said it could not be justified. He spent a considerable amount of time chastizing the Gramm-Rudman budget- balancing bill, saying its cuts will equally affect babies with Spina Bifida and soybean sub- sidies for farmers. "The country is now committed to five percent negative growth" yearly because Congress will oppose the President's budgets and cuts will be automatically across the board "with lots of exceptions." "You can't cut weapons sys- tems, you can't cut military pay, so they'll cut the number of men in uniform," Will said. "Gramm-Rudman is an attack on the U.S. and on the strength of the West, and that directly af- fects Israel." Budget cutting will also affect Israel's annual sub- sidy from the U.S. "With all these cuts, aid to Israel will not be considered the same way it was in the past." He deplored the number of special interest groups that con- trol the U.S. government, saying that democracy has lost its moral bearings because of its at- tention to special interests. One of the most powerful lists in Washington, he said, was the lists of "National Association of ..." in the Washington tele- phone book. Can anything pull the U.S. from the doldrums? Will lauded meetings such as Tuesday night's, which work for the common good. "There is a dawn- ing realization in domestic pol- icy, but it must be matched soon by a realization in foreign pol- icy, such as is recognized in this room ... We must be capable of being drawn out of ourselves." "Israel," he said, ending his prepared remarks, "draws us out of our mere `interestedness'." He reminded the audience of Is- rael's hostage rescue mission at Entebbe on July 4, 1976, saying the action made all Americans, and 'especially Jewish Ameri- cans, stand taller. During a brief question-and- answer session, Will acknowl- edged that world media cover- age of Israel's actions in Leba- non were one-sided "in part be- cause the cameras were only on one side." The same thing hap- Continued on Page 22