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April 02, 1976 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1976-04-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

18 April 2, 1976

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•• 61

Soviet Jew Samuilovich Still In Prison

The Ultimate in Catering

(Continued from Page 17)
his mother has not been
granted an exit visa.
Ms. Weissman said the
LICSJ is contacting friends
of Dr. Samuilovich in the
Congress to advise them

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that permission to emigrate
has not been granted and to
enlist their help.
Dr. Samuilovich applied
for permission to emigrate
in 1972 at which time she
was fired from her position

* *

Freed Soviet Jew to Appear
in Beth Shalom Program

or Bat Mitzva with a medal-
lion bearing Markman's
name.
Markman received an
exit permit to emigrate to
Israel last August, and
will visit American com-
munities which adopted
him under the auspices of
the National Conference
on Soviet Jewry and the
Greater New York Confer-
ence on Soviet Jewry.
Joining Markman in the
program will be a report by
members of Detroit's dele-
gation to the recent
"Brussels II" International
Conference on Soviet Jewry.
The program is open to
the public. For information,
contact Beverly Yost of the
Jewish Community Council
962-1880, or Rabbi David
Nelson of Cong. Beth
Shalom, 547-7970.

Vladimir Markman, a for-
mer Soviet Jew who was
active in pressing for the
political and cultural rights
of Jews in the USSR, will
headline Detroit's observ-
ance of "Soviet Jewry Soli-
darity Day" 8 p.m. Wednes-
day at Cong. Beth Shalom.
Markman's trip to Detroit
will take on an air of home-
coming when he speaks at
Cong. Beth Shalom. Three
years ago, when news of his
arrest became known in the
West, the congregation
"adopted" Markman and
wrote letters to him and to
his family and provided fi-
nancial assistance.
In addition, the congrega-
tion maintained support
among its members for its
adopted prisoner of consci-
ence by presenting each Bar

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at the Institute for Atomic
Energy in Moscow. In 1971
she received the second
highest Soviet decoration,
"The Red Labor Flag,"
awarded to her for her con-
tribution to the field of
science in color film re-
search.
Meanwhile, police in
Riga refused to release
Shmuel Zalmanson,
youngest brother of Sylva
Zalmanson, following his
arrest last week. No rea-
sons for his arrest have yet
been given and no date has
been given for a legal
hearing.
Zalmanson was told he
would be informed about
the charges against him
within 15 days, according to
Jewish sources.
Other members of the
family, Israel and Vulf, are

in Soviet labor camps, as in
Sylva's husband, Eduard
Kuznetsov.
In Paris, French philoso-
phers Jean-Paul Sartre and
Simone de Beauvoir re-
leased an appeal on behalf
of Dr. Mikhail Stern signed
by 50 Nobel Prize winners
from 13 countries.
The appeal retraced Dr.
Stern's career and
stressed that the award for •
his efforts on behalf of
humanity "is to be slowly
murdered in a forced labor
camp."
In addition to Sartre and
de Beauvoir, others who
signed the appeal included:
Samuel Becket, Andre
Lwoff, Henrich Boll, Arthur
Koestler, Kenneth Arrow,
Gunnar Myrdal, Harold
Urey and Richard Hofstad-
ter.

.

Refusal to Approve Arms Sale
Would Be `Slap in Sadat's Face'

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
Refusal by Congress to ap-
prove the sale of six C-130
troop transport aircraft to
Egypt "would be a slap in
the face" for Egyptian Pres-
ident Anwar Sadat, Secre-
tary of State Henry A. Kis-
singer told the House
International Relations
Committee Monday.
"A refusal by Congress to
countenance" the transfer
of the planes "would have
very serious consequences
because of the symbolism
that it involves" following
"so closely on his decision"
to abrogate the Egyptian-
Soviet friendship treaty,
Kissinger said.
The Secretary was testi-
fying before the committee
on the authorization by
Congress of the Administra-
tion's foreign aid program
for the fiscal year 1977 that
starts Oct. 1. He made a
similar appeal on behalf of
the C-130s in testifying be-
fore the Senate Foreign Re-
lations Committee March
26.
Under the questioning of
Rep. Thomas Morgan (D-
Pa.) the committee's
chairman, Kissinger testi-
fied it was in the national
interest to end the 20-year-
old American arms em-
bargo to Egypt because it
would "demonstrate" that
an Arab country "on a
road of moderation is bet-
ter for its people." He said
the U.S. has proposed
"substantial aid programs
for Egypt and we have
been helpful in interna-
tional forums for other of
its economic needs."
Meanwhile, a former
commander of the Israeli
Air Force dissociated him-
self from Israeli criticism of
the United States for agree-
ing to supply transport air-
craft to Egypt. Gen. Ezer
Weizman told a London au-
dience last week that Jewish
public opinion should stop
being "so fidgety and edgy."
The rapproachement be-
tween Egypt and the U.S.
and Egypt's corresponding
rift with the Soviet Union
were the best thing to come
out of the interim Sinai
agreement, he said.

Weizman, back in London
after addressing packed au-
diences in other British ci-
ties, brushed aside com-
plaints from some local
Zionists that he should not
have attacked the Israeli
government while travelling
abroad. He attributed the
present disturbances in the
West Bank to the fact that
the government was headed
by "four men with four dif-
ferent policies."

Suit Seeks Halt
of Kodak Meeting;
Boycott Aid Cited

NEW YORK — An Amer-
ican Jewish Congress-
backed lawsuit to prevent
the Eastman Kodak Co.
from holding its annual
meeting was adjourned this
week by United States Dis-
trict Judge John M. Canella
until Monday. No reason
was given for the adjourn-
ment.
The suit was filed in the
•names of Mr. and Mrs. Mar-
tin K. Balter, members of
the AJCongress, who jointly
hold 100 of the 161.5 million
Kodak shares outstanding.
The suit seeks to block the
April 27 meeting unless
Kodak agrees to report any
company policy regarding
compliance with the Arab
boycott of Israel within 60
days of the meeting.

BB Plans Confab
on Senior Housing

WASHINGTON — Bnai
Brith will conduct a two-day
conference on senior citi-
zens housing April 4-5 in
Washington.
The meeting is to guide lo-
cal Bnai Brith groups that
have expressed interest in
sponsoring non-profit hous-
ing for the elderly on legal
and other requirements to
assure Federal assistance
with construction, financing
and mortgages.
Bnai Brith has con-
structed five projects, total-
ing nearly 1,000 units, in Al-
bany, St. Louis, Baltimore,
and Harrisburg and Wilkes-
Barre, Pa.

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