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January 29, 1982 - Image 35

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1982-01-29

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

We should believe only in everywhere.
deeds; words go for nothing

—Rojas

SI EOMETHING NE W'

i

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
Congress will have 30 days
to review a proposal by the
Reagan Administration to
sell civilian communica-
tions equipment To an Arab
consortium which includes
the Palestine Liberation
Organization and Libya, as
well as Soviet client states
as Syria and South Yemen
but also pro-American
states as Egypt and Saudi
Arabia.
A detailed letter has been
sent by the Administration
to members of Congress as-
suring them that the $79
million deal for the 22-
member ARABSAT consor-
tium did not mean that the
U.S. was recognizing the
PLO and that the equip-
ment would not be used in
an Arab satellite system
which might have military
capabilities.
The deal was pulled back
last November in the face of
Congressional criticism
that the equipment might
have military capabilities.
The Administration
notified Congress of the
proposed sale Oct. 30 to
comply with the Arms
Export Control Act, but
Defense Secretary Cas-
par Weinberger told the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee on Nov. 3 that
he was not aware of it.
Secretary of State Ale-

Now Serving Brunch .. .
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Detroiter Has
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NOW THE ENTIRE FAMILY CAN EAT TOGETHER!
• COMPLETE MEALS
• COMPLETE DINNER SPECIALS
• 51 FLAVORS SUMMERY FROZEN DESSERTS
— WAITRESS SERVICE —
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NOW OPEN TIL 4 a.m.
FRI. & SAT.

Sunday-Thursday 9 to 9

,LATE KITE BREAKFAST SPECIAL

11 p.m.-4 a.m. $ 1 47

BONN — Some 8,500
people marched through the
streets of West Berlin last
week to protest the Jan. 15
bombing of an Israeli res
taurant. A 14-month-old
baby girl was killed in the
explosion and 24 people
were injured.
A Palestinian group
called "May 15" has claimed
responsibility for the bomb-
ing.
Meanwhile, a lead article
in the Frankfurter
Rundschau following the
bombing castigated the
German authorities for hav-
ing failed to react on time to
many signs of a neo-Nazi
ideological and political re-
surgence in the country.
The influential daily
reported that young
people in West Berlin
have been seen lately
wearing ear rings in the
form of swastikas — ap-
parently the in thing
among young rightwing
extremists.

(

"The Roumanian Wed-
ding" is finishing a three-
month run on Broadway, at
the Town Hall Theatre, and
will play for a week at the
Theatre for the Performing
Arts in Miami.
Detroiter Harry Peerce,
in his first Yiddish theater
role, is playing opposite Is-
raeli star Mary Soreanu.
Peerce attended Henry Ford
High School and the Uni-
versity of Michigan.

The mystic reverence, the
religious allegiance, which
are essential to a true
monarchy, are imaginative

xander Haig, confronted
with more Congressional
questions about ARABSAT,
said on Nov. 4 that the pro- .
posal was being withdrawn
pending further study.
A State Department
spokesman said that follow-
ing "our consultations with
Congress, we have no rea-
son to believe that Congress
will disapprove the case."
If Congress, after its
30-day review, approves of
the sale, the Administra-
tion intends to issue an ex-
port license to Ford Aero-
space, manufacturer of the
communications equip-
ment. Under the Arms Ex-
port Control Act, the license
needed to ship the equip-
ment abroad is subject to a
Congressional veto.

French firm Aerospatiale
which is assembling
three satellites for the
consortium.
According to plans, the
first satellite is to be
launched in early 1984. It
will provide the Arab world
with more than 10,000 tele-
phone circuits and a televi-
sion channel.
Negotiations have been
under way for a second
satellite to be launched by
the U.S. space shuttle in
mid-1984.

The conservative paper,
Die Welt, also attacked the
Bonn government in a front
page editorial for having
reacted to the restaurant
bombing too late and too
subdued.

Benefit Planned
for Interlochen

The Detroit Area Friends
of Interlochen will present
pianist Ruth Burczyk in a
benefit recital for the Na-
tional Music Camp Schol-
arship Fund 8:30 p.m.
Feb. 5 and 6 at the Edsel and
Eleanor Ford House, 1100
Lakeshore Rd., Grosse
Pointe Shores.
There is an admission
charge. For ticket informa-
tion, call Mrs. George J.
Zeitz, 563-9452.

WE NOW HAVE
DELIVERY SERVICE

Within 4 Mile Radius

Minimum Order $15

Delivery Charge $1.50

Choice Cocktails

RIIISHAW INN

851-6400

IN THE ORCHARD MALL
6407 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT MAPLE

Carry Outs
Available

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MON.-SAT. 3 p.m. to 8

A.' STUFFED PEPPER • STUFFED CABBAGE

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111‘ ROAST CHICKEN

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$

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Ind. Cup of Soup & Veg.

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$ 41 25
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Inc!. Cup of Soup, Bread & Butter

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CHICKEN LIVERS with Fried Onions

Includes: Cup of Soup,
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HOMEMADE BREAD!

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Lunch

$ 550

Dinner

EARLY BIRD WINTER SPECIAL

5 95

4 to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.

Help for Bridge
Players Offered

COMPLETE DINNER

INCLUDES: SOUP, SAW,
ENTREE, VEG., FROZEN YOGURT,
DESSERT, COFFEE N TEA

A class to help duplicate
bridge players improve
their game is held 10 a.m.
Thursdays at the Southfield
Civic Center.
The class is taught by
Joyce Krout. Admission is
free to the class, but partici-
pants are requested to join
the bridge session at 11 a.m.
for which there is a charge.

If all men were
philosophers, the social
order would be destroyed
and the human race exter-
minated; men need many
material things in order to
survive.
— Maimonides

sentiments that no legisla-
ture can manufacture in
any people.
—Walter Bagehot

Specializing in Authentic
Italian-American Dining
Lunches and Dinners

The equipment is actu-
ally being sold to the

8,500 Protest Restaurant
Bombing in West Berlin

1 1:L. ,...: P111

LI

U.S. Proposes Sale to Arabs
of Communications System

Friday, January 29, 1982 35,

$

SUNDAY BRUNCH - SPECIAL

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT 11 a.m.-3 p.m.

Children
Under 12
$ 295

Adults

$795

All Natural Gourmet Hot and Cold Buffet

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EP HWY
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TELEPHONE: (313) 353-7766

-

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