For The UNBEATABLE DEAL see LARRY KAPLAN UP FRONT New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing Wan Continued from Page 5 THE UNBEATABLE DEALER 28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696 UHS Establishes Across from Tel-12 Mall (313) 355-1000 (313) 355-6414 resignation as UHS adminis- trator, but has agreed to stay on for the coming year in a part-time capacity. Renee Wohl is continuing as direc- tor of the Midrasha College of Jewish Studies and will re- port to Mrs. Kriechman. "Bea Kriechman knows her business and she cares," Dr. Goodman said. "She will work inside the system and be our number one profes- sional." Dr. Goodman said out- reach and other inter-agency responsibilities will -take a back seat at UHS this year to "re-organization and educa- tion, which will be primary." United Hebeew Schools has named its superintendent search committee, which met for the first time this week, and has asked for help from the placement service of the Jewish Education Service of North America. "We are also networking," Dr. Goodman said, "with all kinds of offi- cial and unofficial sources. "We are looking for a top person, and someone like that is committed through the fall. Then they would probably have to give a few months' notice." She said the interim organization plan is designed to give the agency time to hire the right person. Having an acting high school princi- pal, she said, will allow the new superintendent to hire his own person for that as- signment. Modem-Day Moses Continued from Page 5 NEW 1987 CAVALIER NEW 1987 CORVETTE LOOK, SHOP, GET YOUR BEST DEAL BUT DON'T BUY UNTIL YOU SEE THE UNBEATABLE DEALER! 10 Friday, June 19, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ence and regular communica- tion with Soviet Jews, arguments that Jewish life in the Soviet Union is improv- ing fall apart. Rabbi Adolph Shayevich of the Chorale Synagogue in Moscow op- timistically stated at a New York breakfast for Jewish leaders that glasnost "has been received very positively by the Jewish community of Moscow." Shtern views this atti- tude as blind op- timism."There are some people who never learn any lesson. In our history we al- ways have a few guys who remain optimistic even when facing the worst enemy." At first glance, the list of improvements cited by Rabbi Shayevich seems impressive. A kosher restaurant will be built beside the Chorale Synagogue and will be oper- ated by the synagogue. A self-employment law will allow Hebrew to be taught and the mikveh attached to the Marina Rosha synagogue is undergoing repairs and re- storation. Soviet authorities have granted permission for the importation of 5,000 copies of a Hebrew-Russian Bible which are sold for 10 rubles each to synagogue members. Most impressively, nearly 900 exits were granted last month. Shtern skeptically sees token gestures of temporary appeasement. He called Shayevich "a . KGB appointed person" who had received the "proper security clearance. " Truly religious Jews in Moscow don't consider him a person at all. I'm not ques- tioning his credibility. There's nothing to question," he added. He commented that the kosher restaurant would pro- vide lovely dining for tourists and that the reopening of the mikveh had as little spiritual significance and would merely result in "two more KGB people trained as rab- bis." Shtern said he objected to the underlying implica- tions of the "improvements" as being alternatives to emigration. Such a mind set allows for the belief that many Jews wish to stay. The difficulties imposed upon those who request visas is the central deterrent for Jews not asking to leave, not satisfaction with the system. Supporting his argument with his colorful anecdotal style, Shtern referred to re- fusenik Vladimir (Zeev) Meshkov's metaphor. "Those who raise the question of desire and un- willingness to leave resemble an onlooker who, seeing as prisoners make their way out of prison through a narrow gate and under the fire of guards, states that out of -a thousand of inmates mere fifty rushed to the gate and draws the conclusion that the others do not want to leave and feel in prison much bet- ter than out of it." As for the 900 exits granted last month, Shtern exhibits extreme skepticism. "I don't believe the Soviets are really serious about per- mitting more and more and more Jews to leave," he said. Telephone conversations indicate that the increased emigration was an atypical wave on its way down. "You can stay within one policy and make small fluctuations or you can change the pol- icy." Shtern described the sudden increase in exits granted as "manipulation within the same policy." The new emigration regulations effective as of January-•1, 1987, represent maintainance of the same op- pressive policy, at best. The regulations proclaim everyone is free to come in