20 Friday, March 2, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS DANCE! into the 80's Soviet Jewish Emigration Activist Wins Visa inf o NEW YORK (JTA) — Soviet Jewish emigration activist Valery Godyak was granted an exit visa and has left the Soviet Union, ac- cording to information re- ceived by The Greater New York Conference on Soviet PARTIES BY Rock & Roll Disco 50's, 60's, 70's Best Music We Haven't Stopped.Dancing — Why Should You! Call Dan Sandberg 353 6699 - JIM PRENZLAUER Is Back In The OFFICE & JANITORIAL SUPPLY BUSINESS at JOMAR INC. "The One Stop Shop" 32980 Industrial Rd., Livonia, Mich. 525-0710 PROMPT DELIVERY Prices Even Better Than Before Jewry (GNYCSJ). After Godyak, a 42-year- old Moscow physicist, first submitted his application for an exit visa to Israel in 1979, he was promptly dis- missed from his job because of his "anti-Socialist act" of desiring to reunite with relatives in Israel. In 1981, Godyak and his wife Etalina, whose parents live in Israel, were refused exit visas on the grounds of "regime" considerations, in spite of the fact that Godyak's work had never involved "secrets," the con- ference reported. Meanwhile, Boris Be- gun, son of prisoner of conscience Iosif Begun, has been expelled from the Moscow Institute in which he was a graduate student. The announced reason for his expulsion was his absence from too many classes last semes- ter. But according to the GNYCSJ, the action was clearly intended to punish the younger Begun for his efforts to secure his father a lawyer and to help with his defense last fall. Iosif Begun was convicted in October NOW THERE'S A HEALTH PLAN FOR YOUR HOME. WILLIAM BROOMFIELD 1983, and is now serving a 12-year sentence for "anti- Soviet agitation and prop- aganda." The loss of his status to the military draft. In a related development, Leningrad activist Nedezhda Fradkova has ended her two-month hunger strike, it was re- ported by the National Con- ference on Soviet Jewry. Fradkova, 36, had been force-fed in a Leningrad hospital since she began her strike on Dec. 26. According to the NCSJ, she first applied for an exit visa in 1978, but was refused because Soviet authorities claimed that her father was engaged in security work, as the deputy director of the Leningrad construction NY Loves Pope Koch Claims inTERIOR sERVICE ; PL (An° ITIAL conoominium COMM-ROM RESIDEC Eliminate worries over the high cost of home repair and mechanical maintenance with the unique new Condo and Home Care plan. A SMART INVESTMENT You've invested in a health plan for yourself, now you can get one for your home. There's never been a plan offered like Condo & Home Care. We're an interior maintenance service that will keep your . home, condominium or office building covered — just like a warranty. 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University Post for Arafat? GLASGOW — A group of Palestinian students at Glasgow University have nominated Palestine Liber- ation Organization leader Yasir Arafat to be the school's rector. The PLO chief said last week that he hoped to visit Scotland if the Glasgow student body chooses him for the largely ceremonial post. Red Cross Reps Visit POWs TEL AVIV (JTA) — Representatives of the In- ternational Red Cross vis- ited three Israeli prisoners-of-war held :by Syria this week and re- ported them to be in satis- factory condition, according to a report from Geneva. The IRC representatives last visited the Israeli POWs in December. bureau. The NCSJ noted, however, that Fradko- va's parents had di- vorced when she was six months old and that she has never had close con- tact with her father. Fradkova was graduated in 1968 from Leningrad University with a degree in mathematical linguistics. After she was first refused an exit visa in 1978 she reapplied again at various times, but was refused each time. She protested by stag- ing hunger strikes. In Washington, three prominent non-Jewish United States Congressmen advised more than 600 col- lege students gathered in Washington to lobby on be- half of Soviet Jewry that their efforts are vital to the success of their cause and important to America's pol- icy on human rights. The Congressmen, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Dennis DeConcini (D-Ariz.) and Rep. Jak Kemp (R- N.Y.), addressed the eighth annual International Stu- dent Solidarity Day or- ganized by the Student Co- alition for Soviet Jewry and sponsored by the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundations and other Jewish groups. Most of the students are members of their campus Bnai Brith Hillel Foundations. Congressman William Broomfield (R-Mich.), meanwhile, appealed in a letter to President Re- agan for continued ef- forts by the U.S. on behalf of Soviet Jewry. In his letter to the President, Broomfield stated in part: "The issues of emigration and human rights should remain high on the agenda in all relevant forums, in- cluding the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe's follow-up meet- ings and the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. "The rapidly deteriorat- ing situation, however, indicates that new avenues must be explored to ameliorate the plight of Jews in the Soviet Union. We must encourage further participation of our West- ern allies and neutral and non-aligned nations in this effort. "America has long been a symbol of freedom for the oppressed peoples of the world. It is important that we reaffirm our commit- ment to this basic principle at this critical time for Soviet Jews. With the re- cent change in power in the Soviet Union, now would be a timely opportunity to renew our efforts." 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