THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 38 Friday May 8, 1981 , Soviets Tighten the Reins on Public Jewish Gatherings SHANGRI-LA WEST NOW OPEN SUNDAYS (from 4 p.m.) SERVING OUR POPULAR ALL YOU CAN EAT CHINESE BUFFET FROM 4:30 p.m. FRI., SAT. & SUN. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE RD. Across From Showcase Cinema 335-8060 IIN THE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Credit Cards Honored the roman lerswee 27222 ORCHARD LAKE RD.. AT 12 MILE OFF 696 851-4094 Open Mona thru Sat. 11:30 a.m-2:30 CI-M. MOTHER'S DAY OPEN 2-8 p.m. Reservations Suggested! McFROCK'S Saloon (Below - Roman Terrace) OPEN FOR LUNCH STARTING MON., MAY 4 i NEW YORK (JTA) — The official noose around unofficial gatherings of Moscow Jews grew tighter as KGB agents Sunday pro- hibited a mass memorial meeting to victims of the Holocaust in the Ovrazhki woods near Moscow, it was reported by the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry and the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews. In an earlier move to halt unofficial gatherings, Soviet_ authorities shut down a weekly biophysics seminar led by Prof. Ale- xander Lerner which had been operating for the past six years. Meanwhile, Dr. Vladi- mire Kislik, the 46-year-old activist from Kiev, who was arrested March 19 after he left a Purim party and was charged with assaulting a woman, has been placed in the notorious psychiatric ward of Kiev's Pavlov Hos- pital. Alexi Murzhenko was reported by his wife, who visited him in the Perm labor camp, to be suffer- ing from an advanced state of tuberculosis. The mother of POC Yuri Federov, who visited him also in the Perm labor camp, reported that he has been ill for the last six weeks and is unable to work. FROM PAT ARCHER And Everyone At arcaliour 28815 FRANKLIN ROAD AT NORTHWESTERN t Southfield • 358-3355 WE WILL BE OPEN FOR MOTHER'S DAY THIS SUNDAY, MAY 10 3 Beatings . . . 2 p.m., 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Featuring A Special MOTHER'S DAY Menu (Children's Menu Also Available) MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW NOW APPEARING TUES. THRU SAT. LARRY NOZERO Quartet 358-3355 In Washington, Soviet prisoner of conscience Ida Nudel's 50th birthday was marked with praise for her bravery and demands that the Soviet Union release her from exile in Siberia and allow her to emigrate to Israel. A delegation from the Congressional Wives for Soviet Jewry led by Mrs. Dee Ann Jepsen, wife of Sen. Roger Jepsen (R-Iowa), tried to present a letter to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, but the delega- tion was told the embassy was closed for the day. Lev Riotburd, a former Soviet activist now living in Israel, appeared be- fore the Soviet Embassy and at a ceremony earlier on Capitol Hill sponsored by the Congressional Vigil on Soviet Jewry led by Rep. Michael Barnes (D-Md.). At both ceremonies, a let- ter was read from Nudel in which she expressed her "deep gratitude" to those throughout the world who have demonstrated "con- cern for my fate during these painful years of exile." In New York, the Soviet Jewry Research Bureau (SJRB) of the National Con- ference on Soviet Jewry re- ported that 1,155 Soviet Jews arrived in Vienna in April. House Committee Votes $1.5 Billion to Israel, Egypt *.*..%."MitA.V.C.A.*A.A. "-VE:tAt."- A.C.A.‘ "..C.:Mt.V. ..‘%.t.VA&VV1/4"-.VMA 1 t 40 11C. t AV w M hi" /441 AL d and OBSTAORAS T DINNER THEATRE io A, 04 _4 4 it li t presents Nancy Gurwin Performances Friday & Saturday Group Rates Available in . Irving Berlin's ° .01 . 9361 Cooley Lk. Rd. YOUR Union Lake to 0 A NANCY GURWIN PRODUCTION "ix-aciria-v-A 100 - Make It Really Special GOLDEN MUSHROOM At HAMILTON PLACE In Southfield • • • • F -( qs 4 • Bat Mitzvas Bar Mitzvas • Weddings Anniversaries • Reunions Meetings • Banquets Showers • All Occasions For Information Call cc) p -.- z 646-8990 - Piano Duet Pianists Helen Kerwin and Mary Siciliano will give the Detroit premeiere of Julius Chajes' piano duet "Suite from Jacob and Rahel" 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Marygrove College's Madame Cadillac Hall, for a Detroit Musician's League meeting. The public is wel- come. Haas on WQRS Reprove not a scorner, lest he hate thee; reprove a wise man, and he will love thee. 0: no to to /0. io to ,. ANNIE GET ;;. 3 6 3 - 1 5 3 5 — GUN 0 ;✓ WASHINGTON (JTA) — Earmarking of more than $1.5 billion in U.S. eco- nomic aid for Israel and Egypt for the next fiscal year (beginning Oct. 1) passed by a 12-8 margine yesterday in the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The approval was under- stood to be a gesture of U.S. encouragement for the Camp David peace process. Under the bill, $785 mil- lion was specified for Israel and $750 for Egypt, out of a total of some $2.5 billion in economic aid proposed for fiscal 1982 in pending foreign aid legislation. The award-winning Ad- ventures in Good Music program by Karl Haas, which ends 22 years of broadcasts over WJR radio today, will be heard begin- ning 10 a.m. Monday over WQRS-FM (105.1). is o : A' r0 for your listening and dancing pleasure, Monday - Thursday from 8:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday from 9 p.m. [ NOtZTKALD HILTON 5500 Crooks Rd. at 1-75 Troy, Michigan 48098 (313) 879-2100