Now Open! ARE YOU OUT OF CONTROL? Are You Concerned About Your Health? Are You A Yo-Yo With Your Weight? If you answer YES to one or more of these questions . . . I believe I can help you change that. CITIZEN WATCHES Dance Studio Barry Douglas Call 6-81=41-01 ()CITIZEN LEEMONS' FINE JEWELERS 29310 Orchard Lake Road (Just South of 13 Mile Road) 851-0160 M-F 10-6, Thurs. 10-8, Sat. 10-5 'ALL IN STOCK • NO LAYAWAYS • ENDS 11-15-87 Get ready for cooler weather with the ottest look III outerwear. The distinct feel of genuine leather, created by the world's top designers. Only at Detroit's Leather Leader—Milano Faidane Town Center Dearborn 58 FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1987 MILANO FUR & LEATHER 271 W. Maple Birmingham Refusenik Slepaks Get Permission To Leave New York (JTA) — Refuse- niks Vladimir and Maria Slepak, who have been seek- ing to leave the Soviet Union for the past 17 years, were in- formed by Soviet emigration officials last week that they had been granted permission to emigrate. News of the development first reached the West via an Associated Press report from Moscow and was later con- firmed by the National Con- ference on Soviet Jewry, which contacted the Slepaks directly by telephone. They said they will leave for Israel as soon as they "sell their car and have the money for the tickets,' according to the reports. Vladimir Slepak, a former Prisoner of Conscience and a leading Moscow activist on behalf of Jews seeking to repatriate to Israel, is the latest in a string of prominent Soviet Jewish refuseniks to be granted permission to emigrate. The USSR has allowed a number of prominent refuse- niks to emigrate recently, in- cluding Ida Nudel, and these moves have been interpreted in the West as part of a Kremlin strategy to improve its human-rights image on the eve of U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz's visit to Moscow and perhaps weeks away from an expected sum- mit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The Slepaks' involvement with Jewish activists in Moscow goes back to the in- ception of the movement, in the late 1960's, during the renaissance of Jewish solid- arity with Israel that came after the Six-Day War. Vladimir Slepak was among the first group of Jews in the USSR to petition the United Nations by letter for the right of Jews to be repatriated to Israel. He led demonstrations and met with foreign digni- taries, journalists and visitors from abroad. Vladimir and Maria Slepak first applied to emigrate in April 1970. Their first refusal came in June of that year, on the basis of Vladimir's work as a radio engineer, which was deemed "secret work." From that time on, they were under constant surveillance and even house arrest. Their apartment was repeatedly searched and their books and belongings were confiscated on more than one occasion. Slepak was one of the original founders of the unof- ficial Moscow Helsinki Moni- toring Committee, which he started in June 1976, along with Anatoly Shcharansky, Yuri Orlov, Andrei Sakharov and Yelena Bonner. In 1977, his son, Alexander, was permitted to immigrate to Israel, joining Maria's mother there. In 1979, their son Leonid followed his brother to Israel. The two brothers currently reside in the United States. In 1978, the Slepaks were arrested for hanging a banner outside their Moscow apart- ment window that said, "Let Us Go to Our Son in Israel." For this, Vladimir was sen- tenced to five years' exile in Siberia, on charges of malicious hooliganism. Maria, a radiologist who is known by her nickname, Masha, was given a three- year suspended sentence, but volunteered to share her hus- band's exile. The couple returned from exile in 1982. Israel Press Still Struck Tel Aviv (JTA) — The strike by Israeli radio and television journalists continued last week, with the output of broadcast news rationed. But electronically wired house- holds — the majority in this country of little over four million — still have a substantial menu of enter- tainment and information from which to choose. The Israel Broadcast Auth- ority (IBA), whose news- writers and newscasters are striking for higher wages, still provided wall-to-wall "good" music, "pop" music, talk shows nd documentaries on its four radio bands. For television viewers there are the usual reruns of American sitcoms, action-adventure series and late night "adult" soaps. Boy Scouts Irving, 'Mx. (JTA) — The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) has added a Jewish study pro- - gram for its first-grade members, Tiger Cubs, culminating in the Macabee emblem. An estimated 7,000 Jewish boys belong to the program either in units sponsored by Jewish institutions or in non- religious units, according to the BSA Jewish relationships office.