36 Friday, November 1, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Iry Ashin 1:11 7Y RESIATS • Fine Jewelry & Watch Repair Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-5 26001 Coolidge Closed Saturday Oak Park 545-5114 RICHARD A. BLOOM SOUTHFIELD COUNCILMAN Call 541-FLEX • 14 Days • 2 for 1 $14.00 $20.00 • 3 Months Unlimited $99.00 (1 MONTH UNLIMITED CLASSES) Soviet Plan To Fly Jews To Israel Revealed ELECT FLEX-APPEAL EXERCISE COMPANY AEROBICS • STRETCH-N-TONE • NON-IMPACT AEROBICS FOR NEW MEMBERS: NEWS • Secretary, Southfield Lathrup Op- timists. • Past Governor, Michigan District Op- timists and 1984-1985 Finance Chair- man. • Member, Southfield Chamber of Com- merce Political Action Committee. • Board of Trustees, Community Service For Hearing Impaired of Oakland County • Board of Directors, John Grace Com- munity Center. EACH FIRST CLASS FREE Paid For By Committee To Elect Richard A. Bloom, Councilman, 19871 Wildhern Ct., Southfield — 3784 W. 12 Mile — PLEASE PRESENT THIS AD Longtime refusenik Mark Nashpitz arrives in Israel with his wife, Ludmilla, and their five-year-old son. Paris (JTA) — Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev has asked France to fly several thousand Soviet Jews from the USSR to Israel on a special airlift. But the plan, which Gorbachev dis- cussed with President Francois Mitterand during his visit to Paris earlier this month, has been delayed for the time being as French experts study its practical aspects. This information, which was published by Le Monde, was ap- parently made public by the French government after Israeli Premier Shimon Peres told a • ACTIVIST FOR JUDAISM IN THE N CHAIRMAN. SOVIET JEWRY EDUCATION AND IFORMATION CENTER. JERUSALEM Jo <01' Go ' eA/ N \c\e re so A -' ‘i o‘ ' 6 ''e\a ' ‘ lts '0%# G off\ 0 11 2 `,0(0 e \e si3\0 snX/ ,, 0`)N-5 40 4,e4,1\14 \s'(\. \\,ilesk N G dad ch ‘ 3, e S •i tI\ \I • \S' 0 6 .\(1 he \- \ 9 66013 ' GGN o lez,(Ns v". ,„, ‘ ‘.al tt0Se ,, G*0 to. 6\ov) , ti,‘ ` o\e P ,;e P GYk ec, ,,X8 , i'' S • . (,(‘S e, ‘ s Ge *,6 0\4 • o'(\ L-- ?).‘-‘— e: \ g e , ,I cke o ° ‘40 CP \\ CO-SPONSORS American Women for Bar-Ilan • Anti Defamation League of B'nai B'rith • B'nai B'rith Metropolitan Detroit Council • Children of Holocaust Survivors Association in Michigan • Congregation Beth Shalom • Congregation B'nai David • Congregation Shaarey Zedek • Detroit Soviet Jewry Committee of The Jewish Community Council • Detroit Zionist Federation •. Jewish Community Center • Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit • Jewish Welfare Federation, Women's Division • Metropolitan Council of Young Israel • National Council of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section • National Conference of Synagogue 'Youth • Pioneer Women/ Na'amat, Greater Detroit Council • Sisterhood of Adat Shalom • Sisterhood of Congregation Beth Abraham Hillel Moses • Sisterhood of B'nai Moshe • Sisterhood of Temple Beth El • Sisterhood of Temple Israel • Temple Beth El • Temple Israel • Women's American ORT, Michigan Region • Zionist Organization of America, Metropolitan Detroit District news conference following his luncheon meeting with Mit- terand Friday that France might fly Soviet Jews directly to Israel. Peres also said at the news conference that he had discussed the liberalization of emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union and the loosening of restriction on them, and the restoration or diplomatic ties between the USSR and Israel with Soviet Foreign Minister Edward Shevardnadze when they met in New York last Wednesday night at a reception connected with the 40th anniversary of the UN. Meanwhile, in New York last week, John Cardinal O'Connor told conservative rabbis that he would ask President Reagan to raise the issue of Soviet Jewish immigration and religious rights when he meets with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva Nov. 19. Speaking at an all-day confer- ence of social concern sponsored by the Rabbinical Assembly, New York's archbishop told the 250 assembled spiritual leaders: "The story of Jewish and Chris- tian suffering in the Soviet Union must be told to every man, woman and child. We can- not be rebuffed in this mission to educate everyone regarding this deprivation of human rights." In other news, longtime Soviet refusenik Mark Nashpitz ar- rived in Israel with his family last week. Nashpitz, who applied to leave the USSR in the early 1970s, was finally granted an exit visa by Soviet authorities last month. And the National Conference on Soviet Jewry reported last week that Hebrew teacher Leonid Volvovsky of Gorky was sentenced to three years impris- onment on charges of allegedly "defaming the Sovet State and social system." The sentence was handed down after a five- day trial from which his family and friends were barred. Among the evidence presented against the 43-year-old engineer was Leon Uris's novel, Exodus. This marked the second time in' less than a year that the novel was presented as alleged "proof' of anti-Soviet behavior. It had also been included in eviden- tiary materials used in the case against Odessa Hebrew teacher Yakov Levin, who was convicted of the same charge last Novem- ber. A woman who testified against Volvosky claimed that he gave her the book and asked her to distribute it. CJC Urges T-Shirt Ban Toronto (JTA) — The Cana- dian Jewish Congress 8CJC) has urged local retailers to stop sell- ing T-shirts emblazoned with the words "Adolf Hitler Euro- pean Tour 1939-45," a list of countries and dates they were invaded by Nazi Germany. in . World War II, and a picture Hitler sporting a swastika an doing the Nazi salute over a European map. The shirt re- sembles those designed to mark the tours of rock stars. Manuel Prutschi, the CJC di- rector of community relations, said the T-shirt is on sale at several stores in the downtown shopping area. One of them, the Toronto Bargain Centre on Younge Street, took the shirts off the market last week after a CJC official asked them to, ac- cording to Prutschi.