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August 08, 1986 - Image 28

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-08-08

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

SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE

NEWS

Large Seiection Starting
at $150000

50% OFF

Continued from Page 26

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USSR-Israel

354-6356

O


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Absolutely adorable hand-crafted
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policy — at least that enun-
ciated by Peres and Labor —
favors international accompani-
ment for future peace diplomacy.
While the pundits speculate
about the motives behind the
latest Kremlin move, senior
Israeli officials are cautious in
their prognostications, preferr-
ing to await the results of the
talks.
But Peres hes made it clear
that the Israeli side to the talks
will raise the issue of Soviet
Jewry. This can be justified even
in the context of strictly con-
sular talks since some of the
Soviet Jewish refuseniks have
asked for and been_awarded
Israeli citizenship and are thus
— at least from Israel's stand-
point — the legitimate subjects
of the activities of a future
Israeli consul in Moscow.
Do the Helsinki talks there-
fore presage an alleviation of
emigration restrictions on
Soviet Jews? Not necessarily, ac-
cording to one well-placed
observer, former Ambassador to

the United Nations, Prof.
Yehuda Blum.
Blum, an expert in interna-
tional law, suggested that the
Soviets may be intending to
establish consular ties with
Israel in order, in part at least,
to ward off international pres-
sure on the issue of Soviet
Jewry.
Once such ties are in place,
Blum noted, the Kremlin would
be able to tell Western states-
men to mind your own business:
the issue can be dealt with
directly between Moscow and

Aviv_
It is possibly for this reason

the most famous refusenik
of all, Natan Anatoly Shchar-
ansky, has seemed distinctly
cool about the new Soviet diplo-
matic overture.
In statements in Jerusalem,
Shcharansky urged the Israel
government to make any official
relations conditional upon tangi-
ble improvements in the condi-
tion of Soviet Jews in general
and refuseniks in particular.

Shcharansky Says Family
Allowed To Leave USSR

Jerusalem (JTA) — Anatoly
Shcharansky says his family will
be allowed to leave the Soviet
Union in three weeks. In an in-
terview last Sunday with Israel
Radio, Shcharansky said he had
spoken by telephone to his
mother, Ida Milgrom, and she,
her voice choked with tears, had
told him she was being allowed
to join him in Israel together
with his brother, Leonid, and his
family.
He said the permits had been
issued as a result of pressure in
the West. And, reacting to the
reports of imminent consular

talks between the USSR and
Israel, Shcharansky warned
against hasty establishment of
such ties. He urged that any ties
be made conditional on easing
emigration restrictions.

Israel Radio's Washington cor-
respondent reported, however,
that White House sources did
not expect Milgrom and her
other son to be allowed out in
the near future. The correspon-
dent said these sources expected
the Soviets to use the issue as
leverage in connection with up-
coming U.STUSSR talks.

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28

Friday, August 8, 1986

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Prof. Peretz Lavie of the Technion's Sleep Diagnostic Lab, the only lab
of its kind in the Middle East, is researching sleep-related breathing
disturbances and their association with high blood pressure.

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