100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

October 26, 1984 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-10-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

34

Friday, October 26, 1984

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES
of Bloomfield










Services for adults, children and adolescents
Individual, family and group psychotherapy
Marriage Counseling
Divorce mediation
Relaxation training
Learning problems assignment
Career planning
Services for hearing impaired
BLUE CROSS AND
OTHER INSURANCE ACCEPTED

Winterset
746 ' Galleries

Ltd

Suite 102
Bloomfield Hills, Mich.
CALL: 335-8210

U.s. stresses Soviet Jewry plight
in negotiations with the Russians

SALE!!!

CUSTOM FRAME
1 piece of artwork
and receive 2nd frame

FREE!

equal value)

OIL PAINTINGS

75% off

2000 N. Woodward Ave.

--

NEWS

$300.00 for

681-8708

2542 Orchard Lake Road
1 mile W. of Middlebelt

7

CHILDREN OF HOLOCAUST

Survivors Association In Michigan

Washington (JTA) — Secretary
of State George Schultz pledged
that as the United States intends
to build a "now, more constructive
period in Soviet American rela-
tions" following President
Reagan's recent meeting with
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko, it will continue to
stress the plight of Soviet Jews
and other human rights issues.
"I hope that no one, either in the
Soviet Union or in this country,
seriously entertains the idea that
once negotiations are underway,
the United ,States will refrain
from raising our human rights
concerns," Shultz told the leader-
. ship Assembly of the National
Conference on Soviet Jewry

h

cordially invites you to a benefit showing of
the Academy Award-winning Documentary

(NCSJ) at the 'Capital Hilton
Hotel.
"If improvement in Soviet
human rights performance con-
tinues as in the past to be nothing
more than the cynical manipula-
tion of human lives for political
purposes then the Soviets cannot
expect that international and
internal pressures for better per-
formance will stop growing."
Shultz said the Soviet Union
pays a "large and steadily increas-
ing" price of censure and isolation
for its human rights violations.
"We shall continue to do all in our
power to see that the price con-
tinues to increase," he stressed.
The Secretary of State was pre-
sented with the NCSJ's
Humanitarian Award by Ken-
neth Bialkin, president of the
Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith and chairman of the Con-
ference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations.
The three-day NCSJ Leader-
ship Assembly marks the 20th
anniversary on behalf of Soviet
Jewry.
At a dinner Monday the NCSJ
presented its Solidarity Award to
Jane Fonda "for her efforts on be-
half of long-time refusenik Ida
Nudel."

Refusenik continues
his hunger strike

narrated by:

ELIZABETH TAYLOR & ORSON WELLES

introduced by:

SIMON WIESENTHAL

Thursday, December 6th, 1984 at 7:15 or 9:15 p.m.
at the

MAPLE THEATRE - BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN

* ALL proceeds_will benefit the "HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL CENTER"

for further information please call:

557-6089

ri

13,ruce,

of,' ( '''09CESS

Brings you colored stone
bracelets at 30% off

New York (JTA) — Soviet
Jewish prisoner of conscience
Aleksandr Kholmiansky is still
on a hunger strike, the Greater
New York Conference on Soviet
Jewry reported.
Kholmiansky, a Moscow re-
fusenik who applied to emigrate
in 1978, was arrested on July 25
and charged with "hooliganism."
According to Jewish activists in
the Soviet Union, Kholmiansky is
being accused of organizing a "na-
tional Hebrew study group," al-
though no such group exists. The
prosecutor now also claims to
have "found" a gun and ammuni-
tion in Kholmiansky's apartment.

NI In= IM MIMI= NE =MI IIIIINNINIMINIMIIMMIIIIIIIIIMMINIMMINIMMENNIIIM11111-1111

Israel credentials
at U.N. approved

PATRON $250.00 with 2 admissions
reserved seating and name in program.
SPONSOR $100.00 with 2 admissons
reserved seating and name in program
DONOR $25.00 with 1 admission and
name in program
SINGLE TICKET $10.00

PLEASE MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO:

NAME

CHAIM

15710 Addison
Southfield, Mi 48075

ADDRESS

CITY

PHONE

TICKETS WILL BE MAILED BY NOVEMBER 29th, 1984

Choose sparkling amethyst,
garnet and topaz stones set in
14K gold herringbone bracelets.
• jewelry and watch repair
• cash refunds • free gift wrap

bruce m. weiss

26325 Twelve Mile
Southfield, Michigan

SHOW TIME PREFERENCE

❑ n

7:15 or 9:15

In the Mayfair Shops-
S.E. corner of Twelve Mile
and Northwestern

353-1424

"We're the Jeweler that's just around the corner"

MON.-SAT. 10:00-5:30
THURS.
10:00-9:00

United Nations (JTA) — The
United Nations General Assem-
bly overwhelmingly rejected an
Iranian proposal to expel Israel
from the world body. The vot was
80-41 with 22 abstentions.
The Iranian motion was de-
feated after Denmark introduced
a countermotion not to deal with
it.
The voting in the General As-
sembly produced some surprises.
Iraq, the arch enemy of Iran with
which it has been at war for more
than three years, abstained. Jor-
dan and Lebanon absented them-
selves from the hall during the
vote. Egypt, as it did last year,
opposed the Iranian amendment
by supporting the Danish move.
The 41 votes for the Iranian
proposal came mainly from Arab
and Communist bloc countries
headed by the Soviet Union. Most
of the abstentions were by Third
World countries.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan