WE KNOW HOW DETROIT LIKES TO PARTY! - zvahs - Special Birthdays - Anniversaries - Engagement Parties Scudded With Fear Threat of Iraqi missiles hangs like germ-filled cloud over defenseless Israelis. ERIC SILVER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS L It's been five months since Aaron's Bar Mitzvah and our friends still rave about it. Your entertainers made this party. Their high energy,and smiles kept the dance floor packed all night long. Everything was perfect. Not only did we dance our tails off, but your staff never lost sight of the fact that this was a Bar Mitzvah. Every entertainer made Aaron feel as though he was the most important person in the world. I have seen Star Trax at numerous events and I'm amazed with the creative new ideas you come up with for each party. Your whole office team including yourselves, Amanda, Randy, and Vonda, are terrific. Everyone made me feel as though I was your only client. Your knowledge of parties including timing, spacing and music selection, helped to put my mind at-ease. Your efficiency, creativity, friendly faces, and talent make Star Trax the "True Entertainment Professionals"! We cant wait to work with you at all our future events. Thanks again, I ateractive Entertainment always buy or recreate the nec- essary equipment. Much of the equipment for making biological weapons is dual-use, civilian and military. It's available. And we shouldn't underestimate the tech- nological capability of the Iraqi engineers." Dr. Dany Shoham, a research chemist, reserve colonel and writer on chemical and biological warfare, adds: "If Saddam has got the warheads, it wouldn't be dif- ficult to re-weaponize such war- heads. Conversion from conventional to biological warhead is not sim- ple, but Iraq could overcome the technological problems." For Israel, the prospect is of more than academic interest. Avraham Rotem, a retired gen- eral and former strategic planner in the Israel Defense Forces, says bluntly: "Israel has no means to protect itself against such a threat. We would be completely vulnerable to a Scud attack with biological warheads. No one has anything to stop a Scud, and it's going to remain like this for the next 10 years." Dr. Shoham estimates that a single warhead armed with an- thrax could cause "thousands" of casualties if fired on Tel Aviv. A botulism attack would affect PHOTO BY UPI/REUTERS De- Renee, Marc, and all my new friends at Star Trax, ast weekend the Jerusalem Post ran a cartoon by Oleg showing the ravaged, gray face of Rolf Ekeus, head of the U.N. Special Commission on Iraq. In each of five frames, head- ed 1991 through 1995, he is con- fidently announcing: `We've destroyed all Iraqi weapons of mass destruction." A sixth frame reads bleakly: "'To be continued." Israel has no quarrel with the Swedish diplomat, but is urging the United Nations, and above all the United States, not to take Saddam Hussein at his word when he says he has nothing up his sleeve. With memories still fresh of the 39 Iraqi Scuds, armed with conventional high explosives, that hit Tel Aviv in January and Feb- ruary 1991, it is literally a mat- ter of life or death for Israelis, who still have no effective defense against such missiles. Strategic analysts here argue that even if the shaky Iraqi dic- tator has destroyed his biological and chemical stockpiles, he still has the resources to rebuild them. Professor Efraim Inbar, direc- tor of the Begin-Sadat Centre for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan Uni- versity, near Tel Aviv, warns: "The Iraqis have done it once, they could do it again. They could The Most Electrifying Entertainment Production In T e Coun Lighting System s Staging- Systems Big Screen TVs Costumed Dancers Giveaways Pa Other Services Include Band Bookings - Valet Parking - Invitations - Dance Classes Photo Keepsakes - Karaoke & Music Videos - Tee Shirts Birthday Parties (In the Star Trax Dance Studio) & More Marc Schechter Renee Cherrin Erlich. Mitch Rosenwasser Soldiers inspect damage caused by an Israeli Scud missile.