8 • • • • • • • October 24, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS MOVING? HOUSEHOLD SALES IN YOUR HOME ESTATES LIQUIDATED MARION GASPAS 626 - 8402 626 - 6795 IRENE EAGLE 626-4769 626-8907 • • • • • • • • Soviets Bar Jewish Lawyer From World Parley in U.S. WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Soviet government has refused to allow Vladimir Lazaris, a Jewish lawyer in Moscow, to attend the World Conference on Peace Through Law currently being held here. Lazaris, whose wife and 1 6111111111111111111111111111111 All Types of Signs You Need to Be Noticed Magnetic Signs thru Nov. with coupon 398-3210 22626 Woodward, Ferndale, Mich. 48220 111111111111111111111111111111 child are in Israel, was in- vited to attend by a cable personally sent to him by Charles S. Rhyne, president of the World Peace Through Law Center in Washington, which arranged the confer- ence, and who also is a for- mer president of the Ameri- can Bar Association. Lazaris replied that he re- gretted his inability to at- tend since the Soviet author- ities would not grant him an exit visa. The case of Lazaris, who was dismissed from his law practice in Moscow for ask- 'ing to emigrate to Israel, was presented to the panel concerned with the right to leave one's own country, by Alan Gould, of Berkeley, Calif., and William I. 1Viller, a Queen's Counsel in Mon- treal. Four Communist countries — Poland, Bul- garia, Romania and Yugos- lavia — but not the Soviet Union — are among the 129 countries represented at the conference. Meanwhile, the Israeli delegation introduced two resolutions at the confer- ence relating to freedom of emigration and effective opposition to political ter- rorism. One Israeli resolution calls for the right of any person to leave any country, including his awn, and to take his personal property with him. In addition, it calls for a ban on any coun- try which subjects any per- son desiring to exercise this right, to sanctions, penal- ties, harassment or humilia- tion. The other Israeli reso- lution, against terrorism for political ends, recommends strengthening of interna- tional c000peration on pros- ecution and punishment or effective extradition. It was learned in New York that Lev Roitburd, whose appeal was rejected by the Odessa regional court, is due to be trans- ferred frofn the local jail to a labor camp. The National Conference on Soviet Jewry said his lawyer intends to For $100 in Passbook Savings: Free Gifts from NBS! Save $100 in a new Passbook Savings Account at National Bank of Southfield, or add $100 to your present account. We'll thank you with a free gift: an electric warming tray or a radio. You put in your money and take your choice. This offer is good at all six NBS banking locations (see list below) until it expires October 31, 1975. 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Landmark building at Telegraph and 12 Mile houses NBS Financial Corporation headquarters, NBS main office and other businesses. 17000 WEST 8 MILE ROAD, Southfield Office Plaza 15565 NORTHLAND DRIVE, Northland Point 20000 WEST 12 MILE ROAD" at Evergreen Road 27100 LAHSER ROAD' • at 11 Mile Road 6070 WEST MAPLE ROAD" at Farmington Road •pt F 'I ill ft, 1, OFF I itpt•ri 0 It, 4 \I I [WM IN WINDO\V`, SO tycn ti Illt Iu 4 PI IONE 554-4000 M IS. Neighborhood banks that are big and strong. take another appeal to a higher court. Meanwhile, Secretary of the Treasury William H. Simon has voiced "deep con- cern" over a new 30 percent tax that the Soviet Union plans to impose Jan. 1 on all currency transfers to Soviet citizens from abroad, it was reported by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- tions. Rabbi Israel Miller, chairman of the Confer- ence, released the text of a letter from Simon stating that the American Em- bassy in Moscow was "making . . . inquiries" into the tax and that the Treasury Department was "looking into it care- fully." In another development a Russian Jew has enrolled at Yeshiva University with the intention of returning to the Soviet Union to teach and serve Moscow's Jewish com- munity. Jakov Ryklin, 30, and on a one-year visitor's permit to the U.S., has enrolled at the university's Erna Michael College of Hebraic Studies. Courses are taught in the Hebrew language. Ryklin was given permis- sion by the Soviet Union to visit his family living in For- est Hills, Queens. Having heard about Yeshiva University's teaching programs from Rabbi Pinchus Teitz of Elizabeth, N.J., while in Russia, 'he decided that during his year's stay he would study at the school and at the same time take outside instruction with Rabbi Teitz in shehita (ritual slaughtering) and mila (circumcision). Rabbi Teitz is a frequent visitor to the Soviet Union. In Philadelphia, newly elected officers of the Na- tional Conference on Soviet Jewry reaffirmed their com- mitment to the struggle of Soviet Jewry, in a statement issued at Independence Hall. The statement read by Stanley H. Lowell, re- elected chairman of the NCSJ, in the ceremony wit- nessed by hundreds of Jew- ish community leaders from across the United States, pointed out, "Today in our Bicentennial Year, our brothers and sisters in the Soviet. Union are continually denied their rights; their lives subject to cons'tant harassment, surveillance and discrimination from the Soviet authorities." Even as the ceremony was taking place, reports from Moscow stated that Ernst Neizvesty, one of the Soviet Union's best-known graphic artists and sculptors, ap- pealed to President Nikolai Podgorny for permission to emigrate to Israel. The art- ist, who won worldwide at- tention in 1962 when he publicly quarreled with Ni- kita Khrushchev over mod- ern art, asked for. Kremlin intervention to halt harass- ment directed against him and to end what he termed his "enforced detention" in the USSR. Neizvesty, who has been in official disfavor for many years, said he sent his appeal after a second refusal this year for per- mission to emigrate. Ear- lier this year he said he was told by officials he could not leave because he had not divorced his wife. Now, he told Western re- porters, officials had told him he could not leave be- cause he had two aged par- ents. When he appealed to emigrate last March, he was expelled from the artists' union and from his official workshop. He told reporters that his wife and his mother and father had approved his request to emigrate. Red Magen David Still Seeks- to Join Red Cross League WASHINGTON (JTA) — Ambassador Shabtai Ro- senne, the Israeli diplomat who is a special adviser to the executive committee of the Red Magen David So- ciety in Israel, will visit the United States for three weeks next month in con- nection with the society's ef- forts to obtain admission into the League of Red Cross Societies. Rosenne, who has -served Israel for 15 years at the United Nations, is due in New York about Nov. 10 and will visit a number of other cities including Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Houston, New Orleans, Miami and Washington. Assisting in the efforts, which have become - known as "Operation Recognition," is Rabbi Rubin R. Dobin of New York. The history of thie Red Magen David Society's ef- forts to become a league member began in the spring of 1949, at the first diplo- matic conference outside of the United Nations at which Israel was represented. The Magen David Society, which is Israel's national relief organization, is in the unsatisfactory position of not being able to gain ad- mittance into the League of Red Cross Societies because a current condition for ad- mission is that the member of a national society use one of the recognized emblems and titles. The results is a vicious circle of discussions that have gone on for a_quarter of a century on inter-gov- ernmental and societal levels. Last year, in Geneva, Is- rael put forward a formal proposal requesting mem- bership at the diplomatic conference on Reaffirma- tion of Humanitarian Law. The three-year conference will terminate next year. If the wife you have is small. bend to her and whis- per all! —The Talmud