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November 06, 1987 - Image 52

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-11-06

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

I BEHIND THE HEADLINES I

NTH

RUMMAGE SALE

Fine Leather & Exotic Skin

Handbags • Belts • Briefcases • Wallets • Jewelry

Mon.Thru Sat. 10-6

w 4

Thurs,10-8

29555 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield

de

352-5616

SCAN/U.S.

Brasch Imports

SUNDAY,
NOVEMBER 8, 1987

9 A.M. TILL 4 P.M.

AKIVA HEBREW
DAY SCHOOL

27700 SOUTHFIELD ROAD
LATHRUP VILLAGE

brace m. weiss

Jewelers

26325 Twelve Mile Rd.

scandinavian furniture

Southeast corner Northwestern

Behind Gabe's Fruits
In The Mayfair Shops

IMPORTING THE FINEST
AT WAREHOUSE PRICES
buy quality

720 W. Eight Mile, 1/4 Mile West of Woodward, Ferndale

Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Thurs. 10-8:30

". . look for the Flags"
543-5410
OPEN M-T-F-Sat. 10-5; Th. 10-8; Sun. 12-5. Closed Wed.

353-1424

THE BRIGHT IDEA

said

THE JEWISH NEWS

354 6060

as a gift

-

TYPEWRITER I ADDING MACHINE • COPIER REPAIRS • COMPUTER RENTALS
I BANKRUPTCY ASSETS — BURLINGTON R.R.

20% TO 758/o OFF

Typewriters

$49.95

0
w
i- • WOOD OFFICE DESKS & CREDENZAS $249.96, Reg. $900
n_
• OFFICE PARTITIONING $49.96, WERE TO $200, MANY SIZES AVAIL.
w • BANQUET TABLES 5',6',8', BEGINNING AT 949.96
0
0 • NEW CORRECTING TYPEWRITERS 9169.96
IBM's $119.96
a • COMPLETE COMPUTER FURNITURE DEPT., BIG DISCOUNTS!
co
ui • IBICO BINDING MACHINE $269.96 (Big discounts on binding supplies)
• EXEC. CHAIRS USED S49.96, NEW 589.96 • SECRETARY DESK W/CHAIR 5149.95
O ,
- - 1*, • • PLAIN PAPER COPIER 5499.96 • COPIER 5199.96 • ASST. REFRIGERATORS 599.96
cc 1
H
s, 'c • BRAND NEW IBM SELECTRIC III 5699.96 • DECOLLATORS 5349.96 • CHAIRS 59.96
• DESKS 549.96 • FILES 569.90 • LARGE SELECTION OF LATERAL FILES IN STOCK, BEGIN AT 549.99
cc

OOTHE FAMILY
- SLIGGTS IS THAT

MEMORIAL

CONTRIBLI I IONS
BE MADE
TO TEE.
AMERICAN
CANCER
SOCIETY

Q1E1 .

I—

LL

• SHREDDING MACHINES

Complete /Prin er

• NEW OVERHEAD

(HEAVY DUTY)
$399.96

WORD PROCESSOR

$499.96

PROJECTORS
$249.96

BETTER BUSINESS EQUIPMENT

231 W. 9 MILE ROAD

1/2 Block West of Woodward
Ferndale
548-6404

Daily 9-5:30, Sat. 9-4

PRESENT
THIS AD
FOR FREE
GIFT

Delivery
Available

—words that mean people
want to honor a loved one
and want to help _conquer
cancer. Send a Memorial
Gift to your local
ACS Unit.

30235 W. TEN MILE ROAD

Farmington Hills 474-3375
Mon. Thru Fri. 10:30-5:30
Sat. By Appt.

NOT ALL MERCHANDISE AT BOTH LOCATIONS

MARV
SAYS

CUSTOPA
WALL
MIRROR
SOECIAL___„
ISTS

SAVE FROM
20% TO 50%*

TUB & SHOWER
ENCLOSURES
MIRRORED
BIFOLD OR
SLIDING DOORS

(

(INSULATED
GLASS
REPLACED

• TABLE TOPS
• STORM DOORS &
WINDOWS
• PATIO DOOR WALLS
REPLACED
• STORMS & SCREENS
REPAIRED

MOBIL
AUTO
GLASS
SERVICE

VISIT OUR
SHOWROOM

'Suggested List Price

SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph
353-2500
Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park

LONG TERM
C.D. SPECIAL
$50,000 to $100,000
1 YR.
9.50
2 YRS. 10.10
5 YRS. 10.60
10yRs.11.00%

• FSLIC INSURED

• MONTHLY CHECKS

• RATES SUBJECT TO
CHANGE

Ask for Randy, please

1.800-321-6669 (u.s.)
1.800-441-1189 (TX.)

Refuseniks

Continued from Page 49

gates at all, let alone to all
within a matter of a single
month?
There are, according to Dr.
Galia Golan, an expert on
Soviet affairs at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem,
three primary targets for this
act of unprecedented largesse.
The first is a general au-
dience in the West, and his in-
tention here is to reinforce
dramatically the impression
that he is indeed proceeding
down the road to democrati-
zation — that he is sensitive
to the question of human
rights, a man to be trusted.
The second target is
Jerusalem, where his inten-
tion is to send the message
that he is prepared to go some
way towards meeting the
prerequisites laid down by
Peres for Soviet participation
in any future Middle East
peace process (the restoration
of diplomatic relations and
large-scale Jewish
emigration).
The third — and most im-
portant — target is the
United States; specifically the
business community —and,
most specifically, the Jewish
business community, from
which he expects tangible,
economic rewards.
Golan believes that Gor-
bachev's primary intention
beyond the public relations
and diplomatic dimension of-
his act — is to secure a
grateful constituency in the
United States that will ac-
tively lobby for financial
credits and most-favored-
nation status for the Soviet
Union.
One of the earliest and most
direct effects of the campaign
for emigration by Soviet Jews
and their supporters in the
West was the passage in Con-
gress of the Jackson-Vanik
Amendment in December
1973.
This amendment directly
linked the expansion of trade
between the United States
and the Eastern bloc with
"respect for the right to
emigrate."
Now, by his dramatic ges-
ture — by doing the un-
thinkable and allowing the
leading Jewish activists of
that period to leave —
Gorbachev is hoping to create
a reverse lobby that will cam-
paign to repeal the amend-
ment and shower him with
economic benefits.
It was no coincidence, say
Israeli observers, that Nudel
was released into the care of
American Jewish oil magnate
Armand Hammer, president
of Occidental Petroleum, who
personally brought her to
Israel in his private Boeing
airliner.
Hammer, aged 89, forged

his extensive commercial con-
tacts with the Soviet Union
through his old friend,
Vladimir Illich Lenin, and is
noted for his vigorous opposi-
tion to any linkage between
Soviet performance in the
field of human rights and
United States trade and
credit restrictions.
Over the years, Hammer,
who personifies the Western
capitalist, has had close deal-
ings with every Soviet leader,
assiduously developing a
ramified network of in-
dustrial interests in the
Soviet Union.
Gorbachev is clearly hoping
to appeal to the capitalist in-
stinct of United States in-
dustrialists; to persuade them
that Hammer — his financial
success through joint projects
with successive Soviet
regimes and his resolute op-
position to U.S. trade restric-
tions — is a model to be
emulated.
The message, say the ex-
perts, is that Gorbachev will
play the West's game if they
will help him play his. It is a
message that Sharansky and
other Soviet Jewish activists
fervently hope will be treated
with extreme caution.

NEWS L

Ethiopia Rejects
Peres Request

Jerusalem (jTA) — Ethiopia
has reacted negatively to a re-
quest by Foreign Minister
Shimon Peres to allow the
emigration of 15,000 Jews
still living there, it was
reported last week.
Peres told the Conference
on the Demography of the
Jewish People here that he
made the request in a
meeting last month in New
York with his Ethiopian
counterpart, Berhanu Bayih.
"But the minister reacted
negatively," said Peres. "He
argued that if the Jews were
permitted to leave, the
Moslems and the Christians
would ask to do so."
But Peres added that the
minister conceded that Chris-
tians and Moslems had not
asked to leave the country.

Files Preserved

New York — Archival collec-
tions detailing histories of
three organizations that
helped Jews during two World
Wars will be preserved on
microfilm at Yeshiva Univer-
sity, thanks to a grant from
New York State.
Files from the Central
Relief Committee 1914-1918,
the Vaad Hatzalah, and
Rescue Children, Inc., will be
microfilmed in the project.

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