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November 24, 1978 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1978-11-24

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -

Katz Family Emigration to U.S.
Delayed by Birth of Second Child

NEW YORK — The birth
of their second child has
temporarily caused the
delay of the emigration of
Boris. and Natasha Katz,
and another daughter, Jes-
sica, from the Soviet Union.
- The Katzes were given an
exit visa, whose daedline is
Dec. 4, to come to the U.S. to
seek medical aid for Jessica
who is suffering from a
malabsorption syndrome.

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Observers say the Katzes
will face red tape to get the
child out of Russia.
Meanwhile, 15 Soviet
Jews who met recently with
a U.S. Senate delegation
said they feared a sellout by
the U.S: when the Senators
said they want to weaken or
repeal the Jackson-Vanik
Amendment that restricts
Soviet-American trade
until the Kremlin eases its
restrictions on Jewish
emigration.
A spokesman for the
group of 15 Jews said
they were surprised by
the statement. A senator-
ial aide called the group
inflexible.
Sen. Abraham Ribicoff
(D-Conn.), chairman of the
delegation said the senators
raised the subject of Jewish
emigration at "almost every
private conversation" with
high ranking Soviet offi-
cials. In statements to re-
porters, the Senators did not
seem to favor a change in
the U.S. position on Soviet
Jewish emigration.
In a related development,
Nobel Peace Prize winner
Prof. Andrei Sakharov and
his wife Elena Bonner have
called on each foreign dele-
gation to the 1980 Moscow
Olympics "to take particu-
lar responsibility for the
fate of one, two or more pris-
oners of conscience in the

USSR," according to an ap-
peal obtained by the Inter-
national Monitoring Com-
mittee for the 1980 Olym-
pics.
In New York, the Stu-
dent Struggle for Soviet
Jewry and Union of
Councils for Soviet Jews
have been asked by Avi-
tal Sharansky, who is
compiling a book about
her husband Anatoly, to
collect copies of corre-
spondence persons may
have received from him
before his arrest in 1977,
or anecdotes from vis-
itors to the USSR who
had met with him.
The material should be
sent to the SSSJ at 200 W.
72nd St., Suites 30-31, New
York, N.Y. 10023, and will
be forwarded to her in Is-
rael.
Meanwhile, Dr. William
Korey, director of interna-
tional policy research for
Bnai Brith, said "the Soviet
Union not only saturates its
own people with a non-stop
campaign of anti-Semitic
books, cartoons, articleS and
television programs, but it
is also the world's largest
exporter of anti-Jewish hate
materials."
Dr. Korey warned of
possible Soviet efforts to
distribute • anti-Semitic
pamphlets at the 1980
World Olympics in Moscow,
_ citing such attempts this
summer by Soviet officials
at a space show in Toronto
before Canadian officials
put a halt to the practice.

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WASHINGTON (JTA) —
New danger signals in the
Middle East were asserted'
by a panel of experts at a
conference on "American
Policy in the Middle East
After the Camp David
Summit," held at the
American University.
The conference heard re-
ports and opinions by in-
telligence experts of new
dangers to Israel and world
peace as a result of the
latest instability in Iran,
the victory by Communists
in Afghanistan, the in-
creased Soviet presence in
Africa and by the Camp
David accords themselves.
"While Camp David set
into motion an irreversible -
process of peace, it has
brought with it new risks
and fresh opportunities,"
declared Joseph Sisco,
president of American Uni-
versity. Sisco, former
undersecretary of state, co-
chaired the conference with
Prof. Hans J. Morgenthau,
the political scientist.
Dr. Mordecai Hacohen,
chairman of the conference
committee, opened the
round-table conference with
an expression of hope that
in the post-Camp David at-
mosphere, "the Arab na-
tions will recognize that the
Soviet Union, rather than
Israel,_poses the_threat in
the Middle East, and that
the United States, com-
pared to the Soviet Union, is
always the better ally."

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Fridy, November 24, 1918 15

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