FJ.pa4,y, IN VOGUE 20%-40% off oil merchandise always Daywear • Eveningwear glamorous accessories the Swiss bank accounts set up for Secord and ousted Na- tional Security Council staf- fer Oliver North. * * * Ambassador Meir Rosenne, having just completed a four year assignment in Washing- ton, is returning home basically upbeat about the future of American-Israeli relations despite all the recent difficulties. He singled out for priase Secretary of State George Shultz. Rosenne said, "I will Rosenne conceded the dam- age in the U.S:Israeli relation- ship caused by the Jonathan Jay Pollard spy scandal. But it has been contained. VOGUE PLAZA 1919 S. Telegraph Bloomfield Hills, MI /2 Mile N. of Sq. Lake Rd. 338-9400 - 32726 Grand River Ave., VILLAGE COMMONS • Farmington, MI Make your reservations for The Jewish National Fund TESTIMONIAL DINNER HONORING Roseene had high praise for the American Jewish leader- ship. "These are extremely devoted people. To be involv- ed in Jewish life is certainly not a recipe for rest and an easy life. I think that one of the reasons that the Jewish community in this country is held in such high esteeme — by everyone — is due to the quality of leadership they have." Rosenne plans to remain in the Foreign Office upon his return to Jerusalem. "I have nine years to go before I rech the (65-year old) retirement age," he said. "I belong to the Foreign Office. Abrams' Job May Be Shaky After Testimony Washington (JTA) The position of Elliott Abrams, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs and one of the most out- spoken Jewish neo-conserv- ative in the Reagan Ad- ministration, appeared tenuous last week after his two days of testimony before the Senate-House Iran- Contra Committee. However, Abrams, who ad- mitted he had mislead Con- gress last year about the Ad- ministration's aid to the Con- tras, indicated at the conclu- sion of his testimony that he plans to remain in his job. Secretary of State George Shultz "seems to be pretty satisfied with the job I've done for him," he told the committee. This assessment was seconded later by State (313) 471 4141 Rosenne's greatest sense of achievement these past four years as Israeli envoy to the U.S. involves his role in help- ing to convince the U.S. to undertake an emergency air- lift of Ethiopian Jewish ref- ugees stranded in the Sudan to Israel following the col- lapse of the Israeli rescue operation. He recalled his effort to get Vice President George Bush personally involved. "These were Ethiopian Jews, not American citizens. I know of no other precedent in modern history when a country did what the U.S. did in this case — with the airlift. The debt of gratitude we owe to the U.S. was immense." Meir Rosenne always remember the Secre- tary of State of the U.S. par- ticipating in the Passover seder at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. It was an historic event. His very presence there was louder and stronger than a thousand speeches. There was a message to Soviet Jews, and a message to Soviet authorities as well." In general, Rosenne said, "Israel is more popular today than it was 20 years ago. No doubt about it." ELk For All Your Educational Juvenile, Decorative, Jigsaw & Crossword Puzzle Needs Department spokesman Charles Redman, who said Shultz "thinks Secretary Abrams is dong a sensational job, and he has full and total confidence in him." But several members of the committee, including some who praised Abrams, indi- cated that the Administra- tion might have difficulty in getting approval for con- tinued funds for the Contras if Abrams was still at the State Department when the Administration makes its re- quest in September. The 39-year-old Abrams is the son-in-law of Norman Podhoretz, editor of Commen- tary, the monthly published by the American Jewish Committee, which is con- sidered the intellectual voice of the neo-conservative movement. - • • .9w e yr v a pO tkiaffig Guest Speaker Senator Lowell Weicker, Jr., the liberal Republican from Connecticut who in the eyes of a nation became the conscience of the Watergate Hearings Wednesday, June 24, 1987 Congregation Shaarey Zedek 27375 Bell Road, Southfield $150 per person . For Reservations Phone 557-6644 or write to JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 18877 W. Ten Mile Road, Suite 104 / Southfield, MI 48075 General Co-Chairmen: Joseph and Edythe Jackier Dinner Chairman: Michael Feldman President, INF Council of Detroit Franklin J. Ellias Executive Director, PIF Council of Detroit Edward Rosenthal Vice-Chairmen: Peter M. Alter Max Biber Sidney Feldman Hadar Granader Ruben H. Isaacs Charles Milan Norman and Dulcie Rosenfeld Jane Sherman Max Sosin Honorary Chairmen: Leonard N. Simons Philip Slomovitz Max and Frieda Stollman Phillip Stollman 33