THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Soviet Jewish Activist Jailed NEW YORK (JTA) — Lev Elbert, one of Kiev's leading Jewish activists, was sen- tenced to one year in a Labor camp for "evasion of an army reserve call-up notice," according to the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry and Union of Coun- cils for Soviet Jews. Elbert 'is a 35-year-old engineer and translator. He, his wife and son, have sought exit to Israel for nine years. In a related development, the vice chairman of the Greater New York Confer- ence on Soviet Jewry, Rabbi Haskel Lookstein, said that continued restrictions on Soviet Jewish emigration and the oppression of Soviet Jewish cultural activities "places them in terrible danger." Speaking to some 75 persons at the 34th an- nual meeting of the New York Association for New Americans (NYANA) last Sunday, Lookstein said that "Jews in Russia are neither permitted to live Jewishly nor to emigrate to lands where they might live as they wish. The resulting pressure places them in terrible danger." The NYANA, founded in 1949, is the principal Jewish agency responsible for resettling Jewish refu- gees in the New York met- ropolitan area. The annual meeting elected Paul Alter of New York as president for the year 1983-1984. In Washington, recent as- sertions by former President Richard Nixon and former Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger,. that the Jackson-Vanik amendment to the Foreign Trade Act is a deterrent to detente between the U.S.and the Soviet Union and to Soviet Jewish emig- ration was rejected by a noted scholar on the Soviet Union. Dr. William Korey, direc- tor of policy research for the International Council of Bnai Brith, declared in a paper presented at the an- nual spring meeting of the Bnai Brith International Board of Governors, that contrary to that thesis, the Jackson-Vanik amendment would strengthen and legitimize detente by "hold- ing it accountable to fun- damental principles of in- ternational and human conduct" and emphasize the U.S. commitment to human rights. He added that the amendment, which- ties benefits, including most- favored-nation (MFN) trade status treatment, credits and investment guarantees to the re- moval of obstacles to emigration from the Soviet Union and Eastern bloc nations, had a deci- sive and positive effect on Soviet Jewish emigration even before the measure was enacted into law in 1975. Nixon wrote in an article last summer that Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union jumped from 1,000 in 1968 to 35,000 in 1973. This, he said, was due to "private pressure" or "quiet diplomacy." He said the Soviets want what the Western nations produce and are willing to give up something to get it. How- ever, he emphasized "they will give up more in private than they will in public." The former President charged that the Jackson- Vanik amendment put the Soviets on the spot publicly by tying trade to emigration policies. Consequently, he added, Jewish emigration plummeted. Kissinger, meanwhile, in his memoirs, "Years of Up- heaval," echoed Nixon's viewpoint although the two apparently split on the theory of linkage. In his article, Nixon wrote, "The key is to make very clear to them (the USSR) that there is an iron link between their behavior and the West's willingness to make the trade deals they hope for while not doing so in such a way that they lose face." Kissinger rejected trade linkage to internal Soviet behavior, stating that lin- kage was acceptable to in- ternational conduct, not domestic behavior. Korey, in his study, found that the early rise in Jewish emigration had little to do with diplomacy. He credits the increase to "the extraordinary courage of Soviet Jewish activists whose exodus movement, stimulated by a growing anti-Semitism, could not and would not be halted by . . . Soviet judicial trials and harsh sentences im- posed in late 1970 and 1971" and resulting "massive out- cry of world public opinion." Besides international public outcry for easing of emigration restrictions in the Soviet Union, Korey asserted that the Kremlin was also pro- dded by its desire for de- tente. The Soviets sought detente, Korey said, in order to defuse interna- tional tensions, stabilize the status quo in Central and Eastern Europe, and obtain extensive trade with Western industrial powers, especially the U.S. However, as long as the right to emigrate was not respected, "dis- cussions leading to de- tente would inevitably be strained," Korey said. Thus the doors to Jewish emigration were opened further, as the number of Jews seeking to emigrate increased three fold, the Kremlin imposed a "dip- loma tax," which required emigrants to pay an exor- bitant sum, supposedly in compensation for the cost of their education, according to Korey. It was at this time that the amendment linking trade benefits with the re- moval of obstacles to emig- ration was proposed by Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.). NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS: Concluding, Korey as- serts that the Jackson Vanik amendment serves two crucial functions: First, it does not obstruct the flow of immigration; 'rather it emphasizes and symbolizes America's commitment to human rights. And second, it legitimizes detente by holding it accountable to fundamental principles of international and human conduct. "To do otherwise would make a mockery of the process," Korey de- clared. In 1944, HIAS helped bring Yemenite Jews from Aden and Bokharan Jews from the Soviet Union to Palestine. Friday, June 3, 1983 21 FLOOR COVERINGS NOW SERVING YOU AT OUR NEW LOCATION 10721 W. TEN MILE RD. BETWEEN COOLIDGE AND WOODWARD Phone 548-7884 Featuring /1111111 I'" I I' BIGELOW CARPETS IN 111'0'1101 I I 111111111111 1111111111 11111 II 11111111! 111111111111110 Heavy mesh-top 42" table, plus four matching chairs! "RIO" CHAIR ROLLING PORTA-SERVER $25 c Value One Week Only! WEATHER-PROOF! Assembles without tools. Comes with Iwo lift-out ice buckets, and easy- rolling casters. BEAUTIFUL WROUGHT-IRON LOOK with a weather- resistant Sunset Yellow finish. The sturdy table measures 42" in diameter, and is made to ac- commodate an optional umbrella. The comfort- able barrel-back chairs, with mesh inserts, match perfectly. Colorful seat cushions available. "SNAP-LOK" CONSTRUCTION FOR EASY WINTER STORAGE! 4/$39 WIRE-MESH DESIGN with sturdy tubular frame! These porch 'n patio chairs are made for STACKABLE storage. A $100 VALUE! In West Bloomfield • Northwestern Highway at Orchard Lake & 14 Mile "Showcase" Store In Dunham Center • Call: 855-5777 Sale Prices Not Retroactive. Some Items Pick-Up Price. W. BLOOMFIELD • 33080 Northwestern NORTHWEST • 21651 West 8 Mile Rd WEST • 26400 Plymouth Rd. EAST • 2034 East 8 Mile Rd. SOUTH • 3626 Fort Street WARREN • 27854 Van Dyke WAREHOUSE OUTLET • 1576 Union Lake Rd. 855 - 5777 537-2422 937-9700 892-1122 383-8003 573-8020 363-3003 (Not all adv. items at Warehouse Outlet Store) SHOP DAILY 10 to 9 • Sat. 10 to 6 • Closed Sunday