NEWS FOOTSTEPS PODIATRY CLINIC 13740 W. 9 Mile Next to Oak Park Post Office SPECIAUZING IN LASER THERAPY IN ADDITION TO THE TREATMENT OF Bunions Corns Callouses Q Ingrown Nails Diabetic 111 Warts Foot Care Pediatric El Heel Pain Sports Foot Care Medicine Medicare and most-insurance plans accepted as payment in full. DANIEL S. LAZAR, D.P.M. 548-6633 From hammer & nails to Paul Associates and everything in between. HERALD WHOLESALE 20830 Coolidge, Oak Park, MI 48237 2 Doors N: of 8 Mile 313/398-4560 8-5:30 MON./FRI., 8-3 SAT. EVERYTHING FOR YOUR HOME. 22 FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1987 Blacks, Arab-Americans Denied Entry To Israel Washington (JTA) — The State Department expressed concern Monday about several complaints received from Palestinian-Americans and U.S. blacks who say they were denied entry to Israel or had their passports con- fiscated while trying to enter. "We've raised the issue with the government of Israel .. . stressing that all American citizens are entitled to equal treatment under the laws of foreign countries and that we oppose any discrimination against any of our citizens on the basis of race, religion or ethnic background," said State Department spokesman Charles Redman. Redman was responding to a New York Times article which reported Monday that the U.S. Embassy in Thl Aviv and the Consulate in Jerusalem are urging the State Department to issue a travel advisory warning Arab-Americans and black Americans that they may en- counter harassment in trying to enter Israel. The American Arab Anti- Discrimination Committee (ADC) reports that 30 American-Palestinians were turned away this summer and another 50 had their passports revoked. Most of these individuals were travel- ing to Israel to visit parents in the territories. Asher Naim, minister of in- formation at the Israel Em- bassy in Washington, said that the • cases were not a Liver Triansplant Patient Flies - Home To Israel London (JTA) — Moran Kadosh, a four-year old Israeli girl flown to England for a liver transplant in April, flew home last week after recover- ing from the operation which saved her life. Moran's case hit the head- lines when passengers on the El Al jet bringing her to Bri- tain spontaneously donated 4500 pounds Sterling to help her parents meet the cost of her treatment. Before leaving London Moran's mother paid tribute to the doctors and nurses at the Rodenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge and the generosi- ty of the passengers who had accompanied them to Britain. "She looks so well, just like a normal little girl," said Mrs. Kadosh. result of Israeli discrimina- tion against Palestinian- Americans. "These are in- dividuals who we have reason to believe form a security pro- blem and their intentions are not just to visit and leave Israel, but they have other agendas," Nairn said. "This is a prerogative of any govern- ment to- accept or reject anyone who comes to its shores." Naim said black Americans have been turned away because they are suspected of belonging to the Black Hebrew Israelites, a sect which claims its members are the only true Jews. Ida Nudel PeSsimistic About Visa Tel Aviv (JTA) Soviet refusenik Ida Nudel believes that she and other long-time refuseniks are being used by the Soviet leadership as bargaining chips for future East-West negotiations, it was reported here last week. Nudel acknowledged that more exit visas are being granted to Soviet Jews, but is pessimistic about her own chances of receiving a visa soon. She was interviewed by JTA Bonn correspondent David Kantor, who is accom- panying West German Presi- dent Richard Von Weizsacker on his visit to the Soviet Union. Nudel has been denied a visa on grounds that she is privy to state secrets. She worked years ago for a scien- tific institute doing micro- biological research. "The on- ly secret I know is that the Soviet Union is 100 years behind the U.S. and Japan in microbiology," she told the reporters. Boys Town Awarded Grant Philadelphia — Boys Town Jerusalem has been awarded a $700,000 U.S. grant from the Agency for International Development (A.I.D.) through the Office of the American Schools and Hospitals Abroad (ASHA) to acquire additional technical equipment for its College of Applied Engineer- ing. Every dollar awarded by A.I.D./ASHA will be matched 2:1 by Boys Town supporters throughout the U.S. and brings the value of the 1987 project to $2,100,000.