REID CLASS & PLASTICS • SPECIALISTS IN CUSTOM SHOWER ENCLOSURES • EXPERTS IN CUSTOM MIRROR DESIGN AND INSTALLATION Study Finds Most Soviet Olim Happy With Choice EUROPEAN FRAMELESS GLASS SHOWER ENCLOSURE Call today for a free estimate, or visit our Southfield showroom for a consultation, 22223 Telegraph Rd. (South of 9 Mile) 353-5770 — Interior decorators and Builders Welcomed - - Custom Glass Experts Since '1964 — DISCOUNTS $9999 INTERPLAK sgg. TOOTHBRUSH $64 88 SEIKO WATCHES 40-50% OFF sL'isg. MONT BLANC PENS 40% OFF sLr. RAY-BAN SUN GLASSES RCA-ZENITH 'TVs Oscar Braun's 15075 W. Lincoln Oak Park 968-5858 CROSS PENS 40% OFF GEORGE 01IRENSTEIN JEWELERS LTD. Premium Quality Drycleaning and Fast Service Are Compatible Phrases .. . We Guarantee It! Every Customer Can Receive 1 1 0 FREE DRY CLEANING a 4crt For Grais ' Certified GeroologIst - Amerimn Gem Society Harvard Row Mall - Labia' & 11 Mlle Road BOOKS HOURS: Monday thru Friday 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 31221 SOUTHFIELD ROAD • 646-0047 North of 13 Mile — We Buy and Sell Good Used Books Next to MC Sporting Goods 33210 WEST 12 MILE ROAD • 553 0025 - LIBRARY BOOKSTORE One Block East of Farmington Road 6389 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD • 626 0047 - In Orchard Mall — Orchard Lake Road and Maple 545-4300 26263 WEST 12 MILE ROAD • 353 0048 - Just East of Northwestern — Next to Burger King Open 7 Days 31140 HAGGERTY ROAD • 661 0083 - Just South of 14 Mile — Country Ridge Commons Books Bought SAME DAY SERVICE • ON SHIRTS — In By 10 a.m. Monday-Friday • DRY CLEANING — In By 10 a.m. Monday-Saturday SATURDAY DRY CLEANING /11 Your Home ANL 26 FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1991 M. Sempliner Tel Aviv (JTA) — The vast majority of the Soviet Jews who have immigrated to Israel are glad they made the choice. An overwhelming 78 per- cent would advise their relatives still in the Soviet Union to come to Israel, ac- cording to a poll of recent olim, conducted in October. The results, published Dec. 26 in Ma'ariv, show that only 8 percent would rec- ommend their relatives go to the United States or another country, and only 3 percent would advise them to stay in the Soviet Union. Another 10 percent said they were uncertain. The United States had been the choice of the vast majority of Jews leaving the Soviet Union until last year, when Washington stopped increasing its refugee quota to keep pace with the rising level of Jewish emigration. Meanwhile, Shoshana Cardin, newly elected chairwoman of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, urged American Jews to regard Soviet aliyah as a tremen- dous investment opportuni- ty, rather than only a philanthropic cause. Mrs. Cardin was in Jerusalem along with Seymour Reich, outgoing chairman of the Conference of Presidents, an umbrella group representing 46 na- tional Jewish organizations in the United States. She and Mr. Reich were critical of the apparent lack of bureaucratic coordination among the Israeli ministries and agencies responsible for immigration and absorption. "There seems to be not that urgency of everyone working together to ensure the maximum efficiency in the minimum amount of time," said Mrs. Cardin, who also chairs the National Conference on Soviet Jewry. She said American Jewish investors could make money while helping build homes and amenities for the mill- ion Soviet Jews expected in Israel by the end of next year. She said the Conference of Presidents would be press- ing for larger U.S. loan guarantees to help Israel ab- sorb the massive immigra- tion. General To Plea-Bargain In Israeli Fraud Case Tel Aviv (JTA) — The chief military prosecutor has con- firmed that a plea bargain agreement has been signed with Brig. Gen. Rami Dotan, an air force officer charged with large scale embezzle- ment, bribery and corrup- tion. Israel Defense Force Judge Advocate General Amnon Strasnov, who disclosed the deal, stressed that the pros- ecution would demand a stiff sentence regardless of the plea. He hinted at 10 to 13 years in prison. Mr. Strasnov explained that the length of the sentence would depend on how the charges are for- mulated, which he refused to specify. But he said an in- dictment would be presented in court shortly. Many ranking IDF offi- cers, including air force commander Gen. Avihu Bin- Nun, consider Gen. Dotan a traitor and believe he should be tried as such. But Mr. Strasnov rejected their opposition to a plea bargain. It was the only way to get to the bottom of a very serious and complicated in- vestigation, he said. He described the Dotan af- fair as the biggest, most se- rious case of fraud and embezzlement ever exposed in Israel and certainly in the IDF. Mr. Strasnov said the accused would return all of the money he and his con- federates obtained by fraudulent means in exchange for a promise by the prosecution that his wife would not be implicated in the charges against him. Gen. Dotan, former com- mander of the air force quartermaster corps, was the air force's senior repre- sentative on the Defense Ministry's purchasing mis- sion in New York in 1984 and 1985. He and his associates are alleged to have pocketed tens of millions of dollars through elaborate schemes involving bribes, kickbacks, phony invoices and undelivered materiel.