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October 16, 1987 - Image 48

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-10-16

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

NEWS

You are cordially invited to a bountiful feast celebrating the fall harvest.
An afternoon of epicurean delights presented by 36 of Michigan's premiere chefs.

Sunday, November 8, 3 7 p.m.

-

Southfield Pavilion, Southfield Civic Center, 26000 Evergreen Road.

$30 per person advance ticket (by mail by October 30)
$35 per person at the door

Tickets available at City's Information Center
at the Civic Center (through November 6).

Co-sponsored by the City of Southfield
and the Michigan Chefs de Cuisine Association.
Proceeds benefit the Michigan Chefs de Cuisine Association Scholarship Fund.

Hot and cold hors d'oeuvres, entrees, desserts, pastries and Michigan wine.

Experience the ultimate—Experience Michigan's finest cuisine.

Nudel Expected To Arrive
In Israel By Private Jet

New York (JTA) — Former
refusenik Ida Nudel is ex-
pected to arrive in Israel
aboard the private jet of in-
dustrialist Armand Hammer,
and Secretary of State George
Shultz will be meeting them
at Ben-Gurion Airport, Lynn
Singer, executive director of
the Long Island Committee
for Soviet Jewry, said last
Monday.
Last October, Hammer flew
Jewish dissident Prof. David
Goldfarb to the United States
in an unprecedented move,
bypassing the normal exit
procedures required of
emigrating Soviet citizens.
Singer, who spoke to Nudel
twice, said that Nudel had
received this information
from the Soviet authorities,
but that she had not yet
spoken to Hammer himself.
According to associates of
Hammer at his offices at the
Occidental Petroleum Cor-
poration in Los Angeles,
Hammer is on "an extended
trip" and could not be reached
for comment. Shultz was
scheduled to arrive in Israel
for talks with Prime Minister
Yitzhak Shamir and Foreign

Minister and Vice Prime
Minister Shimon Peres.
Nudel's arrival will coincide
with his visit.
Nudel received her official
permission to leave the Soviet
Union via registered mail.
She had been notified on Oct.
2, just hours before the start
of Yom Kippur, that she was
getting her exit visa after a
16-year wait that included ex-
ile to Siberia and the Molda-
vian city of Bendery.
The 56-year-old Nudel, orig-
inally from Moscow, was in
the Soviet capital on the eve
of Yom Kippur for a hearing
on whether she would be per-
mitted to return to live in
Moscow when she received
the unexpected notification
that she would be allowed to
emigrate. She returned to
Bendery to get all her paper-
work in order and returned to
Moscow, where she has been
staying with another long-
time refusenik, Judith Rather
Bialy.
Nudel's sister, Elana Frid-
man, has been living is Israel
for 16 years. She resides in
Rehovot with her husband,
Aryeh and son, Yakov.

Israeli Killed In
Jerusalem's Old City

RESPONSE CARD — MICHIGAN THE BOUNTIFUL
November 8, 1987, 3-7 p.m.
Southfield Pavilion, Southfield Civic Center

NAME

ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

TELEPHONE: (home)

(work)

ZIP

Number of tickets:
@ $30.00 each. Total enclosed:
Advance ticket deadline: October 30, 1987

Return this form, with check payable to Michigan Chefs de Cuisine Association, to:

MICHIGAN THE BOUNTIFUL
Community Relations Department
City of Southfield
26000 Evergreen Road
P.O. Box 2055
Southfield, Michigan 48037

SOUTHFIELD

The Center of It All

For more information, contact Southfield Community Relations Department, (313) 354-4854.

48

FRIDAY, OCT. 16, 1987

Jerusalem (JTA) — Funeral
services were held here last
Sunday for an Israeli student
and newlywed who was fatal-
ly shot in the Old City. Yigal
Shahaf, 24, an electronics stu-
dent who worked as a guard
at night, was shot at close
range near the Via Dolorosa
while strolling with his wife
of four months and a couple of
friends from Netanya.
Jerusalem police are hold-
ing seven suspects in the
murder, but there is no in-
dication that any of them was
directly linked to the
shooting.
The funeral for Shahaf took
place barely 24 hours after
the attack. Shahaf's wife,
Ronit, seemed unable to
grasp the tragedy. She mum-
bled, "We were so happy
together," as Shahaf was laid
to rest. Among those attend-
ing the funeral were Jeru-
salem Mayor Teddy Kollek
and Deputy Minister Ronni
Milo. Shahaf had only recent-
ly been discharged from
lengthy service in the air
force, where he worked as a
technician.
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir told Israel Radio after

the murder that Israel should
consider introducing the
death penalty in face of the
attack against Shahaf and
other terrorists attacks.
In the meantime, tension
continued in the Old City
following a declaration by the
"Temple Mount Faithful," a
Jewish radical group, of their
intentions to pray on the Thrri-
ple Mount.
The site of the First and
Second Temples is presently
the location of the Dome of
the Rock (the Mosque of
Omar) and the El Aksa Mos-
que. The Dome of the Rock is
the third most holy site in
Islam, after Mecca and
Medina.

Javits Award
Is Established

Washington — B'nai B'rith
has established the Jacob K.
Javits Leadership Award.
"The award honors those who
exemplify, in spirit and deed,
the high ideals said moral vi-
sion that are the legacy of
Jacob Javits, the late senator
from New York," a B'nai
B'rith statement said.

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