▪ 16 Friday, Joe 9, 1918 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS . Study Shows `Gross Violations' by Soviets LET US COLLECT FOR YOU of Human Rights in New Repression Wave 'BAD CHECKS!! DELINQUENT ACCOUNTS!! FOX & ASSOCIATES 23777 Greenfield, Suite 277 Southfield, Mich. 48075 1-313-559-9600 Mr. Elias Other indow treatment . AO 1 644 oli? 4411 • SUNTONE SHADES • LEVOLOR BLINDS • VERTICAL BLINDS • Wiiir7n WOODS • WINDOW SHADES • CUSTOM SHUTTERS NISI 0 ..-Pwr4 • WALLPAPER • CONTACT PAPER • FLOOR TILE • FORMICA • PAINT I INCOMING FREIGHT ADDED dynamic &WALLPAPER INSTALLATION AVAILABLE PAINT 542-3315 23061 COOLIDGE HWY., OAK PARK, AT 9 MI. WASHINGTON — The Soviet government has en- gaged in "systematic" and "gross" violations of human rights in a recent wave of repression aimed at politi- cal dissidents, according to a study released this week by the Joint Executive Con- gressional Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. The commission staff study examined the cases of 22 Soviet political dissi- dents, members of the Hel- sinki monitoring groups, who have been imprisoned or stripped_ of their citizen- ship since February 1977. In persecuting the Hel- sinki monitors, the report said, Soviet authorities have broken their own laws by conducting improper searches, prolonged pretrial detentions and denial of procedural rights to defen- dants on trial. The report was re- leased during hearings in which testimony on gov- ernment abuses of the Soviet legal system came from three prominent United States trial attor- neys who have actively sought to defend mem- bers of the Helsinki monitoring groups. The three are former U.S. At- torney General Ramsey Clark, Washington lawyer Edward Bennett Williams and Allen Dur- showitz, professor of law at Harvard Law School. In a related development, Mrs. Maria Slepak has told the Canadian Committee for Soviet Jewry that after she and her husband, the leading Soviet Jewish ac- tivist Vladimir Slepak, were arrested by Moscow police last week they were questioned principally about the whereabouts of FROM T. H. GROH The Rolex Day-Date. The superb calendar chronometer. The bold and beautiful design in 18kt gold or platinum only. The impregnable Oyster case. The unique president bracelet. Counterfeits flatter, but cannot deceive, wearers of this Rolex Day-Date. 41 ROLEX • Manufacturers of Original & Unusual Creations • Authorized Appraisers • Estate Liquidators • Jewelry Designers • 851-7333 1 1j their youngest son who is in hiding to escape being drafted into the Red Army. Mrs. Genya Intrator, of the Canadian committee, said she had spoken by tele- phone to Mrs. Slepak, who was released from prison June 1 after she suffered an attack of pancreatis, but was told to report back for interrogation last Monday. Her husband is still being held at Moscow's Buterskaya Prison. The Slepaks were ar- rested Thursday after they displayed a banner from their eighth floor balcony window saying "Let us go to our son in Israel." They were charged with "malici- ous hooliganism" which could draw a sentence of up to five years inprisonment. Meanwhile, the Stu- dent Struggle for Soviet Jewry and the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews reported that the Sle- pak's eldest son, Alexan- der, who lives in Jerusalem has cabled President Carter urging his "immediate interven- tion." Mrs. Intrator reported that 13 friends of the Slepaks demonstrated in Pushkin Square across from the Slepak home. They were taken away in a police van and interrogated. All were released except for Ida Nudel, who is consi- dered the "guardian angel" of the Soviet Jewish Prison- ers of Conscience. The Nudel apartment was ran- sacked and some of her Heb- rew books were taken away. Meanwhile, the 25 Jewish women placed under house arrest for protesting the denial of exit visas, de- monatrated from the win- Peacenik Urged: End Food Strike TEL AVIV (JTA) — Pres- ident Yitzhak Navon ap- pealed to Israeli "peace pilot" Abie Nathan to end his three-week hunger strike. Replying to Navon's let- ter, he said he was moved by the President's concern for his health but will not take food until the military gov- ernment on the West Bank is abolished and the gov- ernment officially declares there will be no more set- tlements in the occupied Arab territories. Nathan gained interna- tional attention in the 1960s when he piloted his own plane twice to Egypt as a one-man peace mis- sion to the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser. On both occasions, he was promptly ousted from that country. More recently, Nathan acquired a "peace ship" with the contributions of friends. Anchored in international waters, it broadcast peace messages interspersed with pop music to Israel and the Arab countries. dows of their Moscow apartments last week, joined by their 17 children. The women shouted from their windows that they wanted to emigrate to Israel. Foreign corres- pondents who gathered near the apartment com- plex were surrounded by KGB agents who beat on the windows of their cars shouting "Go away, you are not wanted here." Actions in support of the Moscow women were staged in London, Washington, D.C. Los Angeles, Cincin- nati and other Western cities. In another demonstraiton of support, Mrs. Helen Jackson adn Mrs. Harrison Williams, co-chairpersons of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry Congres- sional Wives Committee for Soviet Jewry, sent a tele- gram to Irene Gildengoni- Lainer, one of the Moscow women. In London, the Women's Campaign for Soviet Jewry has urged that the 1980 Olympic Games be taken away from Moscow. In New York, the Na- tional Conference on Soviet Jewry has learned that Iosif Begin has been moved to a prison for psychiatric testing. Meanwhile, a 61-year-old Russian Jewish ship cap- tain arrived in Israel years after he first applied for an exit visa and was summar- ily dismissed from the Soviet merchant marine. Captain Misha Edelman of Riga, unfolded his saga for reporters at Ben-Gurion Airport where he was greeted by his wife Feiga, who was allowed to come to Israel four years ago and his daughter who came herein 1972. In Jerusalem, Leon Dulzin, chairman of the World Zionist Organiza- tion Executive, urg4:d world Jewry not to give aid, directly or indirectly, to Soviet Jewish "drop- outs" — emigres who opt to settle in countries other than Israel after ar- riving in Vienna from the USSR. Addressing an assembly of the Zionist Council of Is- rael, Dulzin disclosed that the drop-out rate was run- ning at about 60 percent and claimed that if it rose much higher the aliya movement in Russia would be threatened with forcible extinction. He said the drop-out rate among Soviet Jewish emigres from the large cities in the USSR has reached 97 percent. Nursing Care When. You're ■ 11 N ot I I 1 I There. O II ■ I / IN ,,, / • HOME • HIMMTAL I • NURSING II HOME Compassionate Skilled Nurses. Companions and Aides to care • II N . O for a loved one while you're away. All employees are screened: bonded and insured. Reasonable • ii . Meta. II 2 MENTION THIS I II JEWISH NEWS AD AND • RECEIVE YOUR FIRST HOUR 1111 OF SERVICE FREE. 1 ▪ staff U : builders- ■ 1967_1155i HEALTH CARE In Master Charge & Rank Arntocard Accepted AVIS FORD IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE I t MARV GORMAN A GREAT ADDITION TO OUR SALES FORCE SEE HIM TODAY FOR $$$ SAVING BUYS FROM A SELECTION OF OVER FORD CARS, T REC. 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