i64. Friday, April 18, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEWS A Big Reason for Sencling Small Packages with The Packaging Store. A Small Price Packaging Store 10 lbs. W. Bloomfield to Miami • $9.44 25 lbs. W. Bloomfield to New York $9.24 $16.06 50 lbs. W. Bloomfield to L.A. $34.18 $52.06 We Handle Over the Limit Weekday Hours 'til 6:00 pm Mon. thru Fri. None Saturday Hours Full Service 10 am - 2 pm Some do Some don't Insurance - $100 $500 $.50 $2.50 $1.40 $4.40 Professional Packing Service Yes No Yes No Almost Never Almost Always 71 lbs. or more .; I 1.1 Complete Packaging • Supply Center Long Lines Continued from preceding page U.S. Post Office First Class Mail $7.14 $16.0 6 $9.24 Costs as of 4-14-86 HAND " cARE U.S. Post Office First Class Mail Packaging Store ihig Pat -LioTh 6453 Farmington Rd. (at Maple Rd.) West Bloomfield 855-5822 BE A WINNER, PLAY Tougher On Terrorism THE CLASSIFIEDS Call The Jewish News Today 354-6060 Sale of the Month mentality in the Administration. President Reagan should have sent Vice President Bush to Saudi Arabia to raise the possibility of peace with Israel, not to raise the price of oil," Kennedy said. Heinz, while sharing Ken- nedy's opposition to arms sales to Arab governments which are not involved in the peace proc- ess, strongly defended the Ad- ministration's record on Israel. President Reagan, the Senator said, "restored our relationship with Israel, not as a burden, but as an ally." He pointed to the free Trade Area agreement between the two countries (which phases in the lowering and eventual aboli- tion of trade tariffs), the pro- vision of 1.5 billion in grants — not loans — to Israel last year, the strategic cooperation agree- ments on military maneuvers and research, and the $10.6 bil- lion in U.S. aid to Israel over the last six years, "more than any previous administration," Heinz said. Stressing the ties between the two counries, Heinz concluded, "Israel's struggle is America's struggle." Eleven Senators, in addition to Kennedy and Heinz, were present at an evening dinner, as well as numerous Congressmen and candidates for public office, a testament to AIPAC's impact on the political scene. Earlier, conference partici-, pants, who came not only to hear the scheduled speakers, but also to lobby their representa- tives on Capitol Hill on behalf of Israel, were told of a new ag- ricultural agreement between the Jewish state and the State of Texas. Called the Texas-Israel Exchange (TIE), the accord calls for cooperation in such areas as irrigation, dry land field crops, Benjamin Netanyahu aquaculture and saline water usage. CIA Director William Casey, in a rare public appearance, was the first speaker at the confer- ence. Blasting the Soviet Union and Mikhail Gorbachev for seek- ing to spread subversion, Casey speculated that Moscow may in- crease its support for Libya and promote "a more aggressive Sy- rian military posture toward Is- rael, abandon Arafat, and throw full support behind leftist and Syria-backed factions of the PLO." Casey said there is little the U.S. can do to persuade the Saudis to stop funding the PLO. He said the Saudis supply money to the terrorist group "for reasons of fear, intimidation and pursuing their own foreign pol- icy objectives." He added that cooperation between the U.S. and Israel has increased on intelligence-gathering against terrorism. Less Than Consensus On. AIPAC's Decision li To A l! p p o f oyurpfr A ienisd s aivcEushomers 37911 GRAND RIVER AVE., FARMINGTON HILLS • • ♦ . ; r 4 1 • '.; . 1. 1. 4 .•' • F A Q s •I .1 ,t1.4 , 4 it 4 .4 r Washington — An undercur- rent at the annual AIPAC policy conference in Washington was an air of frustration over the organization's decision to not oppose the Saudi arms deal pro- posed by the Administration, after initially leading the attack against the $350 million sale. Tom Dine, AIPAC's executive director, addressed the issue di- rectly in his state-of-AIPAC pre- sentation, asserting that "we de- cided not to fight (the Saudi) arms sale because in our best judgment, the cost of a confron- tation with the Administration would have been greater than the marginal benefit of stopping the arms sale." He characterized the U.S.- Israel relationship at this time as "excellent" and said that in the constant balancing act of weighing the costs and benefits of any given action, it was de- termined that "this particular arms package would have ques- tionable impact on the security ti; of Israel." He added that he found "a remarkable consensus among the major Jewish organ- izations in our community" agreeing that "we would not be justified in mounting a major campaign to confront the Ad- ministration's policy in this par- ticular case." But several national Jewish leaders took issue with Dine's assessment, saying they were not consulted before AIPAC made its decision. Zmira Good- man, the executive director of Hadassah, said that "whatevbr `consensus' means, I can tell you' that we weren't contacted before or after the decision." She said that her organization remains firmly opposed to the sale and is committed to "not leaving Sena- tors and Representatives out on the limb after they were given the signal" by AIPAC to oppose the sale. ' "There was a strong feeling in the halls and in the corridors among the activists at the con- I 1 4 4 •'•••••••••• t t tr.t:t i G P t ,C 6,6 6. 1,1,6,4,1 1,t .• •••+-• •- ■ • • ••••••• •••••••.••••ra,•I•.7pL....._ rmocrl . ••• 6 40.• ,"•••• ■•■ •••• ■ 1...t.41