10 Friday, May 25, 1984 Music by THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Siim Barnett Big or small, we custom the music to your needs. DEATH and DYING GROUP TO BEGIN IN ROYAL OAK Thurs. Evenings 968-2563 Want To Be Pampered? ENJOY UNEQUALED SERVICE To Share Experiences and Feelings about approaching or recent death of a close person. $20 per session Confidential Call Sharen Garner, MSW, ACSW, CSW, 546-2968 Loaners Provided FREE Pick-up & Delivery FREE If you're not wearing it, sell it. Never Leave Your Home or Office CALL US & WE'LL COME TO YOU! Capri You can't enjoy jewelry if it's sitting in your safe deposit box. Sell it for immediate cash. We pur- chase fine gems, Diamonds and Gold Jewelry. LEASING CO. A SERVICE TO PRIVATE OWNERS, BANKS AND ESTATES. DIVISION OF CITY FOODS SERVICE CO. 30400 Telegraph Road afif Suites 104,134 Birmingham, Mi. 48010 et/tAWg Transportation Specialists 26431 Southfield, Lathrup Village, MI 48076 (313) 569-6900 Ask for Ask for LEE ROTH ■••■■ ••••••••1111. DA I est. 1919 (313) 642.5575 AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA IN GRADING & EVALUATION. GEMOLOGIST DIAMONTOLOGIST Daily tit 5:30 Thurs. tit 8:30 Sat. DI 5 LAWRENCE M. ALLAN President ■ 11111111 ■ "MOW MOM= MIME 111111111111 Mir al VW SINAI HOSPITAL Fitness. Fair SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1984 1 to 5 p.m. Nathan I. and Betty Goldin Health Care Center 6450 Farmington Road West Bloomfield, Michigan 48033 FREE • Blood Pressure Screenings • Speech and Hearing Screenings (for adults and children) Fbsture evaluations Nutrition counseling PLUS: Fitness for the Handicapped "Wheelchair Roundup" featuring free wheelchair maintenance evaluations by Linden Medical Exercise testing and training demonstrations Stress management and relaxation demonstrations Fitness advice for persons with arthritis or diabetes AND THAT'S NOT ALL: Spin the "Wheel of Wellness" and win a prize! Drawing for valuable door prizes (courtesy of Centaur Racquet Club, Fitnesse, Scoopermarket and Sinai's Heath & Fitness Evaluation Program) Music Clowns Refreshments Additional parking available at Standard Federal Savings, Pulte Homes, and the Lark Restaurant. For information, call Sinai Hospital at 493-5500. NEWS Israeli jets bomb terrorists Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israeli Air Force jets bombed what was described as a terrorist base and training center in eastern Lebanon near the, Syrian border on Sunday and Israeli soldiers fatally shot one resident of Sidon and wounded two others in a grenade .incident in that south Lebanon town. The air raid was the seventh Israeli air attack on targets in Lebanon since the beginning of the year. A military spokesman said di- rect hits were scored on five buildings adjacent to a railway line in janta vil- lage, five miles east of Rayak and south of Baalbek in the Bekaa Valley.:He said the base was used by an Iran-supported Shiite Mos- lem terrorist group for training purposes and a staging area for attacks on the Israel Defense Force in Lebanon. All Israeli aircraft returned safely to their bases. Israeli planes flew reconnaisance flights over Beirut on Sunday. According to Beirut Radio, explosions continued in the target area for some time after the raid ended, indicating that ammunition stores had been hit. The radio report said many wounded were rushed by ambulance to hospitals in Baalbek. The clash in Sidon oc- curred when a hand gre- nade was thrown at an IDF patrol. Israeli soldiers opened fire, killing the man believed responsible and wounding two local resi- dents. An Israeli soldier was treated for scratches and re- turned to duty. Meanwhile, the Ein Hil- weh refugee camp in south Lebanon remained quiet after a week of unrest cli- maxed last Thursday by the fatal shooting of two women in the camp. The violence occurred after IDF patrols searched the camp and re- portedly uncovered large stocks of weapons and ammunition. Andolof Rydbeck the Commissioner General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UN- RWA) in Beirut which ad- ministers the camp, charged initially that the women were shot by Israeli soldiers. Later he amended that claim, saying they were shot by memnbers of the Palestinian National Guard Militia, a group of camp residents armed and supported by Israel. The IDF said the women were victims of internal rivalries and displites among the 35,000 camp residents which erupted be- cause of food shortages, a halt in PLO subsidies and a reduction in UNRWA. supplies. According to an IDF statement, one woman was killed by a man in a distur- bance that developed while he was moving his family out of the camp. The second woman was killed when unknown persons fired into a crowd at the funeral of the first victim, the IDF said. It dismissed allegations that the IDF searches were the cause of the unrest. runThe searches result& in the arrests of 27 camp residents, most of them identified as former in- mates of the Ansar prison camp where suspected ter- rorists were held after the PLO evacuated Beirut in 1982. The camp was emptied at the time of the Israeli-PLO prisoner ex- change. Some of the re- leased inmates returned to their homes in Sidon where they allegedly resumed anti-Israel activities. The IDF reported last week that 10 inmates had escaped from Ansar, the first indication that the prison camp was again in use. Four of the escapees were recaptured, one of them fatally shot in the process. Five still at large are being hunted by Israeli security forces. Meanwhile, an IDF soldier was slightly wounded in south Lebanon Sunday night when small arms fire was directed from ambush at an IDF convoy. UAHC urges black-Jewish harmony Secausus, N.J. (JTA) — The Union of American Hebrew Congregations (UAHC), deploring "threats of violence and appeals of prejudice" in the President- ial campaign, has called on black and Jewish leaders to form a "coalition of con- science" aimed at "building together a just society." A resolution of the UAHC's policy-making Board of Trustees declared: "The traumas of the mo- ment must not be used to justify the Jewish commu- nity's withdrawal from our historic commitment to so- cial justice and to coopera- tive efforts for decency." The action came at the semi-annual meeting of the board here last weekend. The resolution con- demned "threats of ter- rorism and reprisals di- rected against blacks or Jews, whether emanating from the Jewish Defense League or the Nation of Is- lam. We are troubled," the UAHC trustees said, "that Presidential candidates and other leaders of American public opinion have failed to adequately respond to these assaults on the democratic process."