VIII MIMI IMMO MT EN fiE INS MN 819 NEI ME LE Mr EN NM WM =RI 1111.111 Mr MB Ell III 5 Family Run Pharmacy CO ° WALDRAKE PHARMACY °Ca% Major Expansion I KEN JACOBS, R.Ph. increased Product Selection I Extended Hours • FREE DELIVERY • SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT , ES:iti 1 El Salvador Continued from Page 36 1 Five 22c STAMPS I for 1.00 (limir 20 sramps) 661-0774 I tM WALDRAKE PHARMACY 1 Now! Buy Direct From The Factory — And Save! NEVER PAY RETAIL AGAIN! VERTICALINDS FREE SHOP-AT-HOME 71 I1 OFF I CUSTOM MADE for all windows & doorwalls. Finest-quality materials made in our own factory. FASTEST SERVICE! LOWEST _ PRICES! 65 WE MAKE THEM! You INSTALL THEM! 1M, yourself with a screwdriver. • • OA 1111N•1••••■•■•111111IP NI •••••• 1 • LIVONIA 33710 PLYMOUTH RD. W. of Farmington Road Daily 10-6 • M. & Th. 10-9 ROSE.VILLE ROYAL OAK 261.6530 4501 N. WOODWARD 2 Blks. S. of 14 Mile Mon. to Sat. 10 to 6 25923 GRATIOT AVENUE at 10 112 Mile Rd. M.-F. 10-9 • Sat. 10-6 549-0038 777.9510 0000 •// al • MEW LOCATION! 21325 TELEGRAPH 1 Elk. N. of 8 Mlle Daily 10-6 • M. & Th. 10-9 325 - 6610 • VERTICAL & MINI-BLINDS - • WOOD-SLAT BLINDS • DECORATOR PLEATED SHADES • PATIO DOORWALL BLINDS • FREE ESTIMATES & MEASURING 35311191 mmi IMMO VP MINN IV IP • 011•1 • • IR • MI • MINN ■fili■ MB ID •■ • V I 11=•••=1 01 MP MIS VD MIN NI It •• SOUTHFIELD samples right to your home. Plus. you still will get factory-to-you prices on... In-Store Special Off • ." SERVICE!. Can't come in? We'll bring our showroom 6-FT. DOORWALL Easy to install C A 880 MINI-BLINDS Custom-made to % fit perfectly UTICA ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 4 • 111•■• 111aNINI ..••••• • • ••■ IMP TROY 13921 HALL ROAD Across Fm. Lakeside Mall . Mon. to Sat. 10-9 3303 ROCHESTER ROAD In Troy Pointe Mon. to Sat. 10-6 SOUTHGATE GRAND RAPIDS 247.1870 MEW STORE! 2709 FORT ST. At Dix Road Mon. to Sat. 10 to 6 283.8288 FOOTSTEPS PODIATRY CLINIC W Friday, January 16, 1987 In •• • 111. • la • Oa • • =I IMP • ••• Inv 524-1883 2889 28th STREET Ridgmoor Center M.-Th. 10-9 • F. & Sat. 10-6 940.1744 13740 W. 9 Mile Next to Oak Park Post Office Medicare and most insurance plans accepted as payment in full. 38 massmissins i„, mulomm-11 1 Mon.-Sat. y a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday I I a.m.-3 p.m. Bali quality! OPINION 0:FP WALDRAKE PHARMACY (corner of Walnut Lake & 1 mile north of J.C.C.) gli e viS IIII 11111111111 on your next prescription or refill from any pharmacy 5548 Drake Rd. West Bloomfield Beer & Wine 11111111111111111 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS FACTORY PRICES! NO FREIGHT OR HANDLING CHARGES! PONTIAC 137 S. TELEGRAPH In Rainbow Plaza Daily 10-6 • M. & Th. 10-9 332.7200 FLINT NEW STORE! G-4205 MILLER ROAD In the Valley Plaza 230-0614 not. Competent translators in- terpreted all the testimony cited at the conference). Among the conference spon- sors or delegates were such other U.S. citizens as Bishop Thomas Gumbleton (Catholic) and Bishop H. Coleman McGehee Jr. (Episcopal) of Michigan; David Cartright, executive director of SANE; nine congresSional representa- tives; Randall Forsberg, foun- der of the Nuclear Freeze Campaign; and scores of repre- sentatives of important human rights, labor, and church organizations from coast to coast. What we saw with our own eyes and heard with our own ears directed the members of the conference to adopt the fol- lowing resolutions in behalf of the many courageous men and woman with whom we spoke and all of their Salvadoran brothers and sisters, and to send the resolutions to the leaders of both governments: • An end to all U.S. military and economic support for the Salvadoran war. • A reinstatement of the dialogue among all parties to the Salvadoran conflict, in- cluding the participation of all sectors of Salvadoran society. • An end to all forms of re- pression against trade unionists, cooperative mem- bers and the population in gen- eral. - Immediate freedom for all political prisoners (over 1,100 now, up from about 660 in 1985), and a full accounting for the disappeared. There should be unconditional respect for human rights, for the organ- izations which defend them, and for the repopulation efforts of the displaced (by bombings and other terror in the coun- tryside). • Satisfaction of the needs of all victims of the recent earth- quake through the fulfillment of the demands presented by earthquake victims, including the immediate distribution of all international earthquake relief aid received by the Sal- vadoran government. • Support for the U.S. Sanctuary Movement which shields those who have come here in hope of attaining the refugee status that we are ob- liged to grant to them under provisions of our national laws which protect victims of war and repression. This last item in particular, it seems to me, should touch the heart and conscience of every Jew in light of our collec- tive memory of the desperate plight of our own people to whom refuge was denied when they fled to our shores from the terror of Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 1940s. I believe sincerely that the tragedy of El Salvador is not a matter of right and left politics. It is a question of right and wrong actions. I am convinced, too, that when the American people come to a true under- standing of what we are doing to crush the great majority of the Salvadoran people with our money and our military pro- gram, they will do everything within their power to bring it to a halt. In the name of all that is de- cent within our cherished Jewish tradition, I hope we will all do what we can to change our present national policies in San Salvador and throughout Central America. 111111=1111111111=1, Castro Permits Five Cuban Jews To Leave New York (JTA) — A rabbi from Caracas recently ob- tained personal permission from President Fidel Castro to bring five Cuban Jews to Venezuela to be re-united with their families there, the Rab- binical Council of America disclosed last Monday. Rabbi Pynchas Brener, spiritual leader of the Union Israelita de Caracas, quoted Castro as telling him he was allowing the Jews to leave "on humane grounds of reuniting families, a worthy cause, and we are going to permit them to leave with you." According to Rabbi Milton Polin, president of the Rab- binical Council, Brener flew to Havana, accompanied by Bishop Alfredo Rodriguez, vice president of the Commit- tee of Relations Between Synagogues and Churches in Venezuela, of which Brener is president. After meeting with Castro and other Cuban officials, and with Jewish community leaders, Brener was permitted to take . the five Jews back with him on the same plane that brought them from Venezuela. The five were identified as Dr. Julio Imiak, Dr. Solomon Mitrani Tmiak and his mother, and Alberto Fernan- dez Vinas and Abraham Shu- jman, all whom have kin in Venezuela. The Cuban auth- orities had previously forbid- den the physicians to leave because of the local shortage of medical doctors. Brener reported that Castro expressed interest in knowing more about the Jewish people and that he had explained to him the history and travails of the Jews, the Holocaust and the importance of Israel to them. Brener said that 12,000 Jews lived in Cuba prior to the revolution led by Castro in 1959. Today only about 1,000 Jews remain in Havana and 300 to 400 elsewhere in Cuba. Brener said he brought with him prayer books and religious items for the com- munity.