THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
The first and worst of all All sin is easy after that.
frauds is to cheat one's self.
— Bailey
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/011IERSET
• •""-- DINER THEATRE ...6 " m • o
detroit's Original dinner theatre
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Aftdo Jimmy Launce PROductions, Inc.
presents
How The Other Half Loves
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Comedy-Farce by Alan Ayckbourn
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Performances: Wed. Mat. noon - Group Rates &
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Available
• Fri. & Sat. Cocktails Performances
7pm & Dinner 7:30 pm
Show 8:45 pm •
• Reservations 643-8865
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Somerset Mall-Troy
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5555555. 55 555555555 • ••••••••••••
'MODERN DELICATESSEN
IS ALIVE AND WELL
AND STILL LOCATED AT
3900 FENKELL (corn •r of Holmur)
862-1444
Dick and George Gunsberg
SUSSEX HOUSE
19A10T1EWVE.R1G2REMENILE
EVERY SUNDAY
BRUNCH 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
559-3377
AMY JACKSON
In our cocktail lounge
FRI. & SAT.
Over 30 Items
$ 6 95 Adults
$495 12 & under
LUNCH & DINNER SERVED
6 DAYS A WEEK
SAM JARRUS
PRIVATE ROOMS FOR
ALL TYPE PARTIES
General Manager
IF YOU WANT A FINE DINNER
WITHOUT HO PAYING
TOO MUCH MONEY
M E COOKING
RIVIERA
13400 W. 8 MILE, E. OF COOLIDGE • Oak Park • 541-3385
LIVER & ONIONS ...
MEAT LOAF
BASKET OF SHRIMP
FRESH BAKED FISH
BROILED WHITEFISH
BROILED HADDOCK
Men iwlodes: Sou w Salad, Put.. Veg. & Dessert (AIL rice Min If kW role
$2.95
$2.95
$3.95
$3.95
$4.10
$3.95
pastries)
ALEXANDER'S Po%
54Z-4414
13400 W. 9 MILE & COOLIDGE
OPEN 7 DAYS
12 DAILY DINNER SPECIALS
5 p.m.-11 p.m.
Mon. Thru Sat. 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.
- Sun. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. -
1 DAILY BREAKFAST SPECIALS
FROM $2.95
1-11 a.m. Mon-Tburs., Sat. & Sun. Ill 2 p.m.
INCLUDES: ENTREE, SOUP,
VEG., POT. & DESSERT
FREE
FROM 99c to $2.95
WEIGHT WATCHERS FROSTED TREAT
DESSERT
WITH ALL LO-CAL DINNERS!
10% DISCOUNT
SENIOR CITIZENS
2-5 p.m.
SUNDAY IS
FAMILY
FRIDAY ALL DAY
FISH & CHIPS
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT
CIRO'S
1535 CASS LAKE RD.
1/4 Mile N. of Orchard Lake Rd.
681-3440
Friday, February 5, 1982
Congressmen Protest Harsher
Sanctions Against Soviet Jews
NEW YORK (JTA) — A
total of 109 key members of
the House of Representa-
tives have sent an urgent
letter to Soviet President
Leonid Brezhnev, protest-
ing the "extraordinary ac-
celeration" of the Kremlin's
campaign against the
Jewish cultural movement
in the Soviet Union as well
as the 90 percent slash in
the rate of Jewish emigra-
tion in recent months, ac-
cording to the Student
Struggle for Soviet Jewry
(SSSJ).
The letter was initiated
by Rep. Stephen Solarz
(D-N.Y.), chairman of the
Asian and Pacific Affairs
Committee, in cooperation
with the Center for Russian
and East European Jewry
and the SSSJ, the SSSJ re-
ported.
Copies of the letter were
sent to President Reagan
and Secretary of State Ale-
xander Haig, who were
urged to persist in their in-
tervention with Soviet
authorities to cease their
assault on Soviet Jews.
Several resolutions on
these issues directed to
both Brezhnev and Re-
agan are also being pre-
pared in the Senate and
House under the au-
spices of Sens. Claiborne
Pell (D-R.I.) and Rudy
Boschwitz (R-Minn.), and
Rep. Patricia Schroeder
(D-Colo.) and Christ-
opher Smith (R-N.J.).
In Philadelphia, it was
reported that 60,000 people
in the Delaware Valley
petitioned to let the Jews in
the Soviet Union go.
The petitions collected
locally have been sent to the
presidium of the World Con-
ference on Soviet Jewry
which is meeting in Wash-
ington. The petitions call for
the release of Jews who
want to leave the Soviet
Union, the end of harass-
ment of Jews who have
applied to emigrate and the
release of prisoners of con-
science sent to labor camps,
prisons and exile soley be-
cause of their desire to- emi-
grate.
Detroit's Jewish Com-
munity Council petition ef-
fort netted 4,000 signa-
tures.
Meanwhile, Sen. Henry
Jackson (D-Wash.)
pledged that despite ef-
forts to repeal the
Jackson-Vanik amend-
ment which links United
States' most-favored-
nation trade status to in-
creased emigration from
the Soviet Union and
other Communist coun-
tries, the law will con-
tinue to remain enforced.
Jackson said that
Romania has been comply-
ing with the law for several
years and Hungary now
plans to do so. He said with
these two Eastern bloc
countries complying, "for
the Soviet Union to say they
can't do it is embarrassing."
The support for Soviet
Jewry in Congress was also
stressed by three young
Congressmen who made
their first trip to the Soviet
Union earlier this month
along with Jerry Goodman,
executive director of the
National Conference on
Soviet Jewry. The three are:
Rep. James Shannon (D-
Mass.), now in his second
term; and two freshmen,
Reps. Christopher Smith
(R-N.Y.) and Samuel Gej-
denson (D-Conn.).
In a related development,
Sen. Alan Cranston (D-
Calif.) said that the emigra-
tion of Soviet Jewry is
"linked" to the status of the
United States-Soviet rela-
tions.
Soviet Jewish emigra-
tion decreases as it did
last year and harassment
of Jews increases when
U.S.-Soviet "bilateral re-
lations deteriorate,"
Cranston told the
presidium of the World
Conference on Soviet
Jewry.
The Senator noted that
the harsh treatment of Jews
in the USSR contributes to
poor relations between the
U.S. and the Soviet Union.
In Paris, President Fran-
cois Mitterrand was asked
for the support of France
and his own personal influ-
ence to help secure the re-
lease of imprisoned Soviet
Jewish activist Anatoly
Shcharansky.
In Geneva, U.S. Secretary
of State Alexander Haig,
who held talks with Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko, said that he had
raised the issue of
Shcharansky just as he had
promised to do when he met
with Shcharansky's wife,
Avital, in Jerusalem two
weeks ago.
Haig also told the JTA
that he also discussed the
issue of human rights in
the Soviet Union and the
emigration of Jews who
wanted to leave the USSR
but were prevented from
doing so.
Only 290 Jews arrived in
Vienna in January, it was
reported by the National
Conference on Soviet
Jewry.
Meanwhile, a young
Romanian Jew, Adrian Il-
lie, has gone on a hunger
strike in Bucharest to
dramatize the government's
refusal to allow him to re-
join his only sister and other
family members in Israel.
It also was learned that
Gregory and Elena Genusov
have been denied emigra-
tion to Israel since 1976,
and are harassed by the
KGB for seeking to study
Dutch Jewish
Cemetery Ruined
AMSTERDAM (JTA) —
Anti-Semitic daubings were
found on nine tombstones in
the ancient Jewish cemet-
ery at Middleburg in
southwest Holland.
The Middleburg public
works department has
cleaned the defaced stones
and the local Jewish con-
gregation has filed a crimi-
nal complaint against par-
ties unknown.
35
Research
their heritage in unofficial
Jewish classes. Letters of
support can be sent to them
at: Vasilevsky Ostrov Line
12, House 29, apt. 20,
Leningrad, RSFSR, USSR.
Grant
SAN FRANCISCO (JTA)
— A three-year $250,000
research grant has been
made by the National Insti-
tute of Mental Health to two
doctors at Mount Zion Hos-
pital and Medical Center to
study psychotherapy for
middle-aged adults.
Billifi'S BODY SIIIIP
WOODWARD bet. 8 & 9 MILE • Valet Parking • 1 3 99- 10401
FANTASTIC SPECIAL
COMPLETE DINNER
20 OUNCE
& oft n
T-BONE 't5'
STEAK
INCLUDES: SALAD, CHOICE OF DRESSING, BAKED
IDAHO POTATO, ROLL & BUTTER
Please Call
For Reservations
DOUG'S NOW'
OPEN SUN.
NOW APPEARING
"ACCORDING TO
JOHN/PAUL"
LENNON & McCARTNEY
REVUE
FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS
GREAT MEXICAN & AMERICAN FOOD
FEATURING OUR HOUSE SPECIALTIES:
1 lb. Strip Sirloin Steak, Seafood Maximilian's,
Full Slab Baby Back Ribs, Chimichanga, Etc.
!OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I
Home Of The
COMEDY CASTLE
Shows Tues. Thru Sat.
FRI. & SAT., FEB. 5 & 6
PAUL MOONEY
TUES., FEB. 9
NEW TALENT NIGHT
WED.-SAT., FEB. 10-13 ...JAMES WESLEY JACKSON
4614 N. WOODWARD, 1/2 blks. S. of 14 MILE
Royal Oak
the
roman
lerraee
27822 ORCHARD LAKE RD_
AT 12 MILE OFF '4. 851-4094
Open Mon. thru Sat.
1 1:30 a.ru.-2:30
Q.M.
EARLY BIRD DINING SPECIALS
4-6:30 p.m. Mon. Thru Sat.
Senior Citizen Discount
McFROCK'S
Saloon
(Below Roman Terrace)
SUNDAY
LASAGNA, SPAGHETTI &
BABY BACK RIB DINNERS
Open tot Lunch Mon.-Sat. from 11:30 j
Open Sun. 4 p.m..
855-3860