THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 21, 1984 Begin to undergo prostate surgery Jerusalem (JTA) — Former Premier Menachem Begin was scheduled to undergo surgery this week for prostate gland trouble. A spokesman for Shaare Zedek Hospital in Jerusalem, where he has been undergoing tests for sev- eral days, announced officially that Begin is not suffering from any malignant illness, and that the hospital was recommending the surgery. As is common practice, the hos- pital did not formally specify the nature of the case, beyond deny- ing categorically the reports — especially in the tabloidHadashot — that Begin has cancer. But reliable Israeli sources say Begin has prostate problems and the operation recommended would be carried out under local_ anesthetic. The hospital said Begin is spending his time there with members of his family or reading. 13 MILE RD. LATHRUP VILLAGE RD. SOUTHFIELD km. ....... OIL* 24 9 MILE RD. RD. SOUTH FIELD 10 MILE O .J IL CC E V ERGR EEN Washington (JTA) — The Se- nate has approved a resolution calling on President Hafez Assad of Syria immediately to "permit all members of the Syrian Jewish community to emigrate from Syria to the United States." The concurrent resolution, ap- proved unanimously last week, introduced by Sen. Daniel Moyni- han (D-NY), noted that Assad stated in an interview in 1976 that he would allow the members of the Syrian Jewish community to emigrate to the U.S. The resolution also noted Sy- rian restrictions on travel abroad by Syrian Jews, as well as laws requiring that all Jews bear spe- cial identification cards, and re- strictions on Jewish rights of in- heritance. The Syrian govern- ment forbids all members of the Syrian Jewish community the right to emigrate. International attention focused on the estimated 4,000-member Syrian Jewish community when last December, Lillian Antabi Abadi, a 25-year-old Syrian Jewish woman, was found brut.: ally murdered in Aleppo along with her 6-year-old son, Joseph, and her 3-year-old daughter, Sandy. If the authorities in Syria de- sire to improve the currently poor relationship with this country," Moynihan said, "then one way to do it would be to permit those members of the Syrian Jewish community who desire to do so to emigrate to the United States." Meanwhile, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week also approved a resolution spon- sored by Committee chairman Charles Percy and Claiborne Pell (D-RI) condemning the infringement of religious freedom by Warsaw Pact coun- tries. The resolution charges the Soviet Union with having "se- verely curtailed the right of Jews to study and practice their reli- gion and to adhere to their reli- gious traditions" and urges their right to emigrate. TO BUILD BUSINESS WHERE SOUTHFIELD LIVES TELEGRAPH Senate resolution asks Syria to let Jews emigrate 13 8 MILE RD. PLACE YOUR AD WHERE SOUTHFIELD SHOPS When area residents turn to their new Neighborhood Directory, make sure they find you. There's a great way for you to reach those customers. It's the new Michigan Bell Southfield Neighborhood Directory, including a complete Yellow Pages section devoted to businesses that serve the people of your area. If that means you, your ad belongs in those Yellow Pages. As always, advertisers in a Michigan Bell Yellow Pages program can count on our representatives who are ready and waiting to give you all the assistance you need in preparing your ad: copy and layout help, tips about including your busi- ness hours, credit cards accepted and other impor- tant selling points. • • • 111. .... - ... . SOUTHR So, if you'd like to do more business with the people in your area, use the advertising medium that reaches them where they live and shop...the Michigan Bell Southfield Neighborhood Directory. To make sure your ad is a part of it, contact your Michigan Bell Representa- tive by calling (313) 252-9200 today. Michigan Bell Yellow Pages Make sure your Yellow Pages ad appears in the new...the one and only Michigan Bell Southfield Neighborhood Directory