62 IN Rom Friday, December 21, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS BE A WINNER PLAY Call The Jewish News Today 424-8833 The latest fashion happening on the Sunset Strip He e ;IF ' Presents THE NEWESTISOPHISTICATED SPORTSWEAR FOR THE CONTEMPORARY WOMAN Sizes 4 to 14 up to 50 o OFF On Fashions That Make A Statement SUNSET STRIP • 29548 NORTHWESTERN HWY. Just North of 12 Mile • Southfield 356-0676 Good thru Dec. 31, 1984 HOLIDAY HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9 TO 9, SUN. 12 TO 6 100% ALL CREAM CHEESE CAKE • • • • • Kosher Pre-Cut Triple Chocolate Brandy Alexander Black Forest • 16 or 20 slices per 4 lb. 10 oz. cake • Chocolate Swirl • Cherry • Amaretto • Plain • Strawberry $ 11 11 9 0 HORS D'OEUVRES I 100 pcs. Kosher Mini Egg Rolls Potato Pancakes ... 16 pcs. © Blintzes ... (cheese, cherry, apple, blueberry) 12 pcs.© Breast of Chicken a la Kiev ... 24/7 oz. pcs per box Boneless Chicken Breasts ... 32/6 oz. pcs. per box And Many Many More Items! 8648 • UN seeks peace parley United Nations (JTA) — The General Assembly last week re- newed its call for an international peace conference on the Middle East, with the participation of the Soviet Union and the Palestine Liberation Organization and asked Israel and the United States to reconsider their opposi- tion to such a conference. The call was made in a resolu- tion adopted by the Assembly at the conclusion of its debate on the Middle East. The vote was 121 in favor to three against — Israel, the U.S. and Canada — with 23, mainly Western countries, 'abs- taining. The Assembly adopted three other resolutions concerning the Palestinians last week. The U.S. and Israel voted against all the resolutions. One of the resolutions endorsed the recommendations of the Palestine Rights Committee, which includes a call for the estab- lishment of an independent Pales- tinian state and the recognition of the PLO as the sole representa- tive of the Palestinian people. The vote on this resolution of the Palestinian people. The vote on this resolution was 127-2 (Israel and the U.S.), with 21 absten- tions. Another resolution expressed continued support of the United Nations Division on Palestine. The vote on this resolution was 130-3 (Israel, the U.S. and Canada), with 17 abstentions. The fourth resolution requested the UN Department of Public In- formation to continue disseminat- ing information on the question of Palestine. The vote was 131-3 (Is- rael the U.S. and Canada), with 15 abstentions. Ambassador Benjamin Benjamin Netanyahu: Charges UN ploy Netanyahu of Israel, speaking after the vote, said that to justify their implacable antagonism towards Israel, the Arab countries had repeatedly contended that the Jews had seized Palestine from the Arabs who had lived there for centuries. But, he claimed, that contention was not supported by history because for thousands of years the Jews had lived in Pales- tine. The Israeli Ambassador said that the Palestine refugee prob- lem had been created largely by Arab armies who forced the Pales- tinians to leave their homes when they attacked Israel in 1948. Netanyahu also charged that the call for an international peace conference was a "ploy" to legitimize the PLO. He said peace was possible if the Palestinians, Israel and Jordan come to the negotiating table as Israel and Egypt had done. The Arabs should recognize Israel "by right and not on sufferance," he said. Human rights causes tied per cake 50 pcs. Franks 'n Blanket @ 50 pcs. Sausage Pizza Puffs a 50 pcs. Beef & Mushroom Turnovers@ NEWS $14" per box $14°° per box $1400 per box $1800 per box S0 $320 - 0 box $ 350 box $1 59 each 89 c each EMPIRE P A C3 Kil N:6C 50 6. 5 Washington — The Union of Councils for Soviet Jews last week expressed solidarity with victims of apartheid at a White House briefing on the occasion of Human Rights Day. UCSJ National President Morey Schapira said, "We are de- eply concerned about violations of basic human rights wherever they occur. The human rights community and freedom-loving people the world over must stand together to insure an end to such outrageous acts. The UCSJ wishes to take this opportunity to reaffirm our solidarity with those in South Africa who suffer from the oppression of Apartheid. "In expressing our deep and profound concern over this policy, which denies basic and funda- mental human freedoms to blacks and people of color, we are re- minded of the official oppression of Soviet Jews. The recent arrest and illegal detention of Hebrew teachers and religious activists is a sad parallel to the detention of labor leaders in South Africa, whose rights to free expression and fundamental human free- doms have been suppressed. We applaud the leadership of persons of conscience who seek to bring about constructive change for the troubled people of South Africa." In speaking to representatives of the human rights community President Reagan emphasized a "moral responsibility to speak out on this matter (of apartheid)." He further stated, "such brutal affronts to the human conscience as he systematic suppression of individual liberty in the Soviet Union, and the denial of religious expression by Christians, Jews, and Moslems in that country are tragic examples . . . Soviet Jewry is again being exposed to a sys- tematic anti-Semitic campaign." Last week, the Detroit Jewish Community Council and black ministers joined for a press con- ference to link the struggle of Soviet Jews with that of blacks suffering under apartheid in South Africa. On Monday, the De- troit Soviet Jewry Committee of the Jewish Community Council, in conjunction with leaders from the metropolitan area's major religious communities held a Fast for Freedom for Soviet Jews. In a related development; the Reagan Administration was praised by the Rabbinical Assem- bly for its "firm stand" against apartheid. .