We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. PHYLLIS & SELMA KORN L'Shana Tova Wishing all our family and friends a year of health and happiness. to all our friends and relatives. HARVEY, LARRY & MICHELLE GOLD vanDn 7\1117 Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. CAPITOL REPORT EVE & BERNIE MARKOFSKY MRS. DAVID MENDELSON WOLF BLITZER Best wishes for a happy. healthy New Year. Best wishes for a happy. healthy New Year. PENNY & ISRAEL MILLER MARK & ARLENE MILLMAN We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. JANET AND BEN KORN AND FAMILY 1111DT1 71a1∎ nic1362 Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. t13 61 to all our friends and relatives. MR. AND MRS. SOL KLEINMAN AND FAMILY We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. ALAN, NOREEN, SAMANTHA & BENJAMIN KLEIN FELINA AND WOLF GOLD limn A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. nalz nativ-2 X11 t.13`2 to all our friends and relatives. to all our friends and relatives. . ANNE & SIDNEY FOGEL "FRITZ" & ALICE FRIDSON CHERI & ANDY DWORKIS JOSH, DANNY & HANNAH May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all our family and friends. May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all our family and friends. SY & SELMA RASKIN MICHAEL, SANDY & BRYAN ROBBINS A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. AVRUM & CLARA FEINSTEIN May the coming year be one filled with health, happiness and prosperity for all our friends and family. NANCY ZAUSMER LEVY & ROBERT LEVY - May the New Year Bring To All Our Friends and Family — Health, Joy, Prosperity and Everything Good in Life. To All Our Relatives and Friends, Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity. THE RATNERS of San Diego SARAH & IRVING PITT 142 Friday, October 3, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NORMAN, BARBARA, HILARY AND BETHANY The Fallout From Pollard F ormer U.S. Under Secretary of State Joseph Sisco believes that Israel has successfully managed to limit the negative fallout from the Jonathan Jay Pollard spy scandal and the other subsequent incidents involving alleged Israeli steal- ing of U.S. weapons and technology. "Despite the strains, U.S: Israeli relations today are as good as they have ever been," he said in an interview. "It's reflected in the fact that the two key leaders in the Ad- ministration — namely, the President and the Secretary of State — understand fully the commonality and par- allelism of Israeli-American relations, and that view per- vades widely within the Ad- ministration." Sisco, who served as the State Department's ranking Middle East specialist until 1976, said that Israel's posture in the peace process these past two years has also been deeply appreciated by senior officials in Wash- ington. "The Reagan Administra- tion has concluded, rightful- ly in my judgment, that Israel has been fully coop- erative in trying to move mat- ters to the negotiating table, and that the problem is and has been on the Arab side," he said. The former official, today an international business con- sulant in Washington who is still widely regarded as a leading expert on the Middle East, noted that even Jor- dan's King Hussein publicly blamed PLO chairman Yasser Arafat for the stalemate. In the past, Sisco said, it had been "characteristic" for the Arabs to simply blame the U.S. and Israel. This Jor- danian posture, he said, "has not only major significance in terms of the attitude of the Reagan Administration, but it's of major significance in the area itself:' Also helping Israel in limiting the damage from the Pollard affair, he continued, was the impressive economic recovery in the country and the unilateral withdrawal from Lebanon — both of which were deeply appre- ciated by Washington. Still, Sisco acknowledged that there are some officials in the U.S. government who do not necessarily share the positive feelings toward Israel of Ronald Reagan and George Shultz. These critics have sought to exploit the es- pionage scandal and the other incidents in order to drive a wedge between Washington and Jerusalem. Reagan and Shultz, he said, "have underscored the broad picture — the importance of