GET READY FOR EXPO 88 $1295.00 Australia GOING TO THE AIRPORT? BUSINESS OR VACATION NEWS p.p. Custom Land Packages Available • AIR ONLY 5158.00 West Palm Beach $158.00 Tampa $158.00 Orlando $149.00 Las Vegas S198.00 Los Angeles $159. ^" Ft. Lauderdale CERTAIN RESTRICTIONS & TRAVEL DAYS APPLY MaVel Call: TRAVEL REPRESENTATIVES your Honeymoon Outlet r Start at your front door avoid the hassle at the airport and getting there! Your Speciolisr in Travel Comparison ROYAL CAB 17415 WEST TEN MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD, MI 48075 559-1972 Call us now for special rates with this ad 353-2960 Suite #118 29260 Franklin Rd. Clcrymoor Blda. 1?epresentatities1 Also, ask In The about our summer pckg. 41M■11■•■ FlyNow On A Delta DreamVacation Delta Sun Sale ORLANDO • FROM $269 (home of EPCOT Center/Watt Disney World) Including round-trip air fare, hotel for 4 days, 3 nights, Alamo Chevy Chevette, or similar car, for 3 days with unlimited mileage!' Quality Inn Plaza from $269 Holiday Inn International Drive from $309 Sonesta Village Hotel from $399 Buena Vista Palace from $459 GULF COAST FRom $329 Including round-trip air fare, hotel for 4 days, 3 nights, and an Alamo Chevy Chevette, or similar car, for 3 days, with unlimited mileage Plus bonus extras. TAMPA/S1 PEIERSBURG/CLEARWATER Colonial Gateway Inn (St.Petersburg) from $329 Holiday Inn Clearwater Beach Surfside from $379 , SARASOTA Holiday Inn Lido Beach FI MYERS Marco Beach Hilton from $389 from $409 THE BAHAMAS FRom $379 Including round-trip air fare, hotel for 4• . days, 3 nights; and airport transfers. In Nas- sau, also a native show (except Sunday). Sheraton-British Colonial Hotel or The Pilot House (Nassau) from $379 Holiday Inn Lucaya Beach (Freeport) from $419 Holiday Inn Paradise Island from $479 The Sheraton Grand Hotel on Paradise Island from $529 Paradise Island Resort & Casino — Britannia Towers & Paradise Towers from $549 BERMUDA FROM 4499 Including round-trip air fare, hotel for 4 days, 3 nights, and airport transfers and 2-for-1 admissions to special attractions. Royal Palms Club from $499 The Bermudiana Hotel from $579. Elbow Beach Hotel from $699 Marriott's Castle Harbour Resort from $799 Ask your Travel Agent to book you on Delta. Or call our Vacation Center toll free at 800 872 7786. All tour rates are from Detroit and are subject to - - change without notice. Similar hotels may be substituted. Rates, are per person, double occupancy; U.S. Departure Tax is included. Seats and accommodations are subject to availability. Add taxes and gratuities. Prices shown are available during certain limited travel periods; they can vary and may be higher depend- ing upon the actual date. day of travel and hotel selected. Certain charges and fees cannot be assessed immediately, but can only be collected on checkout or departure. $1.00 fuel surcharge on flights leaving Florida not included. *Gas, taxes, rental deposit and optional Collision Damage Waiver not included. Dream Vacation is a registered trademark of Delta Air Lines, Inc. 56 Friday, March 20, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Gets You There With Care Israel Denies Funding Pollard Defense Jerusalem (JTA) — A private fund established a week ago to raise money for Jonathan Pollard and his wife Anne Henderson-Pollard wound up its activities last Monday following Israeli media reports that official sources in Israel were in- directly assisting the Amer- ican couple convicted of spy- ing for Israel. The Voice of Israel reported that official sources had paid out $80,000 towards the Pollards's legal expenses which are estimated at about $120,000 and have promised to cover the full amount if possible. There were no reports of where the money originated or how it was transferred to the Pollards. A government spokesman denied that the government was involved in any way with providing the Pollards with funds. Jonathan Pollard, a former civilian intelligence analyst employed by the U.S. Navy, was sentenced to life im- prisonment for his espionage activities on behalf of Israel. His wife received a five year sentence as an accessory. The severity of the sen- tences rallied public sym- pathy in Israel for the Pollards. An opinion poll published in• Yediot Achronot showed that 68 percent of the respondent favored govern- ment assistance to the Pollards, 22 percent preferred public assistance, and only eight percent thought no assistance should be given. The government's position from the outset has been that Pollard's spying was a "rogue" operation without the authorization or knowl- edge of the government. It has not deviated from that position. After Pollard was sentenced, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir stated that his fate was of no concern to Israel since Israel neither hired him nor gave him es- pionage assignments. Meanwhile, two official probes are underway into the government's involvement with Pollard and its handling of the affair. A two-man com- mittee of inquiry established by the Inner Cabinet will begin reviewing document and will call its first witnesses soon. The committee is headed by Yehoshua Rotenstreich, a prominent lel Aviv lawyer. Its other member is Gen. (Re) Zvi Tsur, a former Chief of Staff. Rotenstreich took the assignment after it was re- Jonathan Pollard: Getting help? jected by retired Supreme Court Justice Moshe Landau because the committee has been given no statutory powers such as the right to subpoena witnesses and have them testify under oath. It will report directly to the Cabinet. According to Roten- streich, its work will be com- pleted "no later than the end of April." The second' investigation is being conducted by the in- telligence subcommittee of the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Security Committee which began hearings last week. Its first witness was Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The Knesset body meets in closed session and while it has subpoena power it lacks the broad scope and prestige of an official commission of inquiry, such as, for example, the Kahan Commission which investigated the conduct of the Lebanon war in 1983. Pollard Case Triggers Angry Controversy Jerusalem (JTA) — Shlomo Avineri, a distinguished Israeli scholar and academi- cian, has triggered an angry controversy over his charge last week that American Jewish leaders exhibited a "galut" mentality in their reaction to the case of Jona- than Pollard, an American Jew sentenced to life im- prisonment for spying for Israel. He accused them of "cring- ing" for fear of charges of dual loyalty, thereby belying "the conventional wisdom of American Jewry feeling fee, secure and unmolested in an open pluralistic society."