1_, H; , 20 Friday, August 15, 1980 THE 7DETROIT IEISH NS Red Sea Fish Fly to Chicago Resilient Refusni k Muffled CHICAGO — The Shedd and the fish, accompanied During Olympic Games Aquarium recently ac- by Caditz, began a 29-hour . quired 12 flashlight or lan- tern fish from Israel through the efforts Chicago philanthropist Clement Caditz. ar- made Caditz rangements through Red Sea Marineland, Ltd. to ac- quire the fish, which in- habit dark coral caves in the Red Sea. Publicity about the pur- chase and travel ar- rangements helped smooth the way through customs, journey to Chicago. The fish traveled in specially-packed con- tainers in two, first class seats. Caditz decided against re-oxygenating the containers upon ar- riving in New York, and immediately took his charges on to Chicago. All the fish survived the journey and are on display at the aquarium. Only a San Francisco aquarium has a similar exhibit. Metropolitan Detroit's Most Complete Stationer `t Your Office Bo" e si as, • • • • • • Office Supplies Office Machines Office & Home Furniture Complete Gift Selections Printing • Rubber Stamps Data & Word Processing Supplies Modern Office, INC 31535 Southfield Rd. between 13 & 14 Mile' HOURS: Mon. - Fri. 8 - 5 642 5600 - During the Moscow Olympic Games, Newsweek sports columnist Pete Ax- thelm found time to visit the home. of Soviet refusnik Mikhail Kremin. Kremin, according to Ax- thelm, has been trying to join his parents in Israel for nearly seven years. Al- though his father is now dead, Kremin keeps push- ing to emigrate so that his sons, Sasha, 15, and Genya, 10, will not have to serve in the army. • The following are some of Axthelm's observations: "The Olympics have not been a good thing for the refusniks. For one thing, Soviet visa officials have been so preoccu- pied with processing Olympic visitors that the issuing of visas to would-be emigres has virtually ground to a halt. "Last year, Jewish emig- ration reached( a peak of 50,000. This month the number is likely to fall below 1,000. And in a par- ticularly cruel insult, the Soviets last week welcomed Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasir Arafat. Eight years after 11 Israelis were murdered at Munich by Black Sep- tember, the Arab 'terrorist group condoned if not di- rectly sanctioned by Arafat, he was even' invited to tour the village. 'A bandit state welcom- ing a bandit terrorist,' said Kremin, it saddens me but it does not surprise me.' "Mikhail ,himself has served two 15-day jail terms . . . The second time oc- curred two years ago, when Mikhail's wife, Galena took Sasha (his daughter) to a `mother's and children's' demonstration. "Mikhail soon received word that both might be sent to Lubyanka prison. He rushed out to try and- help, only to be met by A KGB agents who told him to stay home until further notice. ."Frustrated, he went back upstairs and unfurled a large banner over his bal- +................ * PRE-TEEN SALE : . , . 4 . . • ♦ * • * • • • ALL PRE-TEEN • • & JUNIOR WINTER JACKETS ANDS COATS 2.0% OFF OPEN SUNDAY, AUG. 11, 11-5 p.m. BLOOMFIELD OAK PARK 644-4225 545-3242 s H 23133 6527ZE n L eE .Gr R a!P North -GE .••••••••••••••• _ . Large selection of rings watches and other fine jewelry 14 and 18 K GOLD Diamonds and Fine Jewelry These services done on premises • Jewelry Repair • Watch Repair • Restringing No Job Too Small WE IN T RA UC "Where the customer comes first" Quality jewelers for 3 generations Mon.-Fri. 9 to 5 Sat. 9-3 All bankards honored 23077 Greenfield Advance Bldg. suite 389 Sfld. 557-5544 cony: 'Viva Israel.' Then he placed his tape deck in the window and played loud Is- raeli songs for the agents below. "Kremin is a quiet man. He speaks haltingly in English, referring to a dic- tionary for the right words. He has a voice that makes visitors listen carefully and think hard. And wish that it could be amplified to com- pete with the Olympic songs of the people who welcomed Yasir Arafat." ' High Court Asks for Explanation in 'Objector' Case JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel's Supreme Court has given the Defense Ministry one week to explain why a soldier who is a conscien- tious objector was ordered to serve beyond Israel's "green line." An attorney for Gadi El- gazi, a member of Rakah, told the court that his client had made his conscientious objector's status clear before he enlisted and said he would be willing to serve within Israel's pre-June 1967 borders but not beyond them. Elgazi's attorney said that such requests were granted in the past in the cases of conscientious objec- tors but that his client was turned down. Lansky Seeks to Visit Israel JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Israeli Supreme Court has given the Interior Ministry 30 days to explain why it has refused to grant a tourist visa to Meyer Lansky. The 80-year-old Lansky appealed to the court to help him obtain a one-month visa, claiming that two months ago Inter- ior Minister Yosef Burg had agreed to a visa but then re- versed himself. Lansky was in Israel 10 years ago but was deported after several months be- cause of his reputed associa- tion with organized crime in the United States. His deportation followed requests by the American government. He was sought by U.S. authorities for al- leged tax evasion. His ap- peal against the deportation was rejected and the Inter- ior Ministry refused to allow him to return, even for a visit. Lansky's attorney told the court Aug. 5 that his client "is an old Jew, suf- fering from cancer and other serious ailments. He has a strong Jewish conscience and would like with all his heart to visit Israel before his death." The attorney also said that it was inconceivable that a one-month visit could cause harm to the state or to the public welfare of Israel. According to the Bible, Jews are to think about the Torah every waking mo- ment. , Adding Bitter to Bitter By LEO SC,HNEIDERMAN Adding bitter to bitter God sweetened the waters of Marah With a branch of the bitter laurel tree And saved our people From dying of thirst irk the desert. Is this the divine formula For our redemption? If so, let our heroes and martyrs Wear crowns of laurel In token of ambiguous victory In Roman Games. When the bloody games are over And the Messiah comes Bitter will turn sweet And the Torah will be Our everlasting crown. Dayan to Star in BBC Series By LARRY PRICE (World Zionist Press) Moshe Dayan is a born ac- tor, says Roy Davis, director of the new BBC documen- tary series in which Dayan stars, along with Israel. "He will go through a scene as many times as is necessary to get it right," said the British born director. The series will be named "Living with the Bible," after Dayan's book of the same name. It will be in MOSHE DAYAN three parts, each one hour long. The series tells Day-, winter. an's life story, and at the The BBC provided Roy same time, that of modern- Davis, who said of Dayan, day Israel. "He is not at all what I ex- The idea for the series pected him to be. He is came from 'producer Arnon small. He is gentle." And Zuckerman, 46, an *Israeli David was surprised not who until recently was only with Dayan, but with head of Israel Television. Israel as well. "I expected Soon after he left the televi- Israel to be dangerous and sion, Zuckerman ap- hostile. It's not. It's peaceful proached Dayan in the lat- and quiet." ter's Zahala home. After a On a recent trek around two hour meeting, Zucker- the ancient sites of man emerged with a signed Jerusalem, two stars col- commitment from Dayan to lided. Dayan came across narrate and star in the film director Roman series. Polanjki, who was touring Zuckerman then ap- the city as a guest of Teddy proached BBC II with the Kolleck, Jerusalem's idea, and they bought it, mayor. The two:film" per- provided they could sup- sonalities paused for a shot. ply their own director by photographers. and scriptwriter. Zuc- But Dayan is more, of kerman's conditions course, than a film star. were that his company, His story is, in many Rimon Communications, ways, the story of Israel. would provide all other Thus, the film goes to the facilities. first kibutz settlement Rimon Communications in Israel, Degania, where holds the distribution rights Dayan was born. And, to the series, and hopes for a while the ex-cabinet world wide market. The minister, General, and Is- film will be aired early this raeli superstar, walks around the kibutz fields, he speaks not only of the ancient history of the land, but of the mod- ern history of present- day' Israel. Similarly, when Dayan walks through Israel's first moshav, (cooperative smal- lholders settlement) founded in 1921 by a group including his father, a dual meaning evolves: a peeling away of the layers of the earth, from the modern moshav existing today to that founded sixty years ago and then back to a settle- ment which was abandoned by Jews two thousands years ago. Thus the film's double dimension continues. Dayan tours battlefields, both ancient and modern and in both recalls their his-. tory, for his is the -look both, of a general and of an ar theologist. He overturns a historical stone with every step. "The film is in three parts," said Zuckerman. "The first is the settlement, from 1888 until 1948. There, in Degania and, Nahalal, where Dayaii- spent his childhood, we get the story of Israel, modern Israel, digging roots." The second part is Dayan the warrior. This will be from 1948 until 1973. This includes Dayan's evalua- tion of the Yom Kippur war of '73. Then comes part three, the Sabra. This is the politics of Dayan, and his comments on relations with the Arabs."