I NEWS I INVESTMENTS RETIREMENT PLANNING Alan G. Yelensky Registered Representative The Very Best 3000 Town Center Suite 2400 Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 353-5600 Conneticut Mutual Financial Services, Inc. An associate of the Reagan Stresses Human Rights, Meets Refusenik Alliance Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company and its subsidiaries/affiliates, Hartford, Ct For the fuller-figured fashion conscious woman who cares. of Detroit thellAiMIWAIL Orchard Lake Road, South of Maple, West Bloomfield 6895 Orchard Lake Road On the Boardwalk West Bloomfield, MI 855-0133/4 Then I awoke at Cocktails. The dream is yours 30 FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1988 Breast self-examination — LEARN. Call us. i'AMERICAN SOCI CANCER ETY New York (JTA) — President Reagan continued to press the Soviet Union on its human rights record in a meeting with Soviet activists, including 17-year refusenik Yuli Kosharovsky. "On human rights, on the fundamental dignity of the human person, there can be no relenting. For now we must work for more, always more," said Reagan in remarks Monday broadcast live in the United States on network television. The hour-long meeting took place at Spaso House, the Moscow residence of U.S. Am- bassador Jack Matlock. The president's remarks were the second in one day to address the human rights issue. Earlier, while visiting Moscow's Danilov Monastery, he called for increased religious liberty in the Soviet Union and the reopening of thousands of churches and banned congregations. Reagan seemed to be pay- ing little heed to a rebuke by Soviet leader Mikhail Gor- bachev. Gorbachev welcomed Reagan to their fourth sum- mit conference by arguing that the U.S. president had ig- nored the changes that have been implemented under the new Soviet leadership. But Soviet complaints about American leaders ar- riving in Moscow to lecture the Kremlin on human rights may have persuaded the White House to cancel another scheduled Reagan meeting with Soviet refuseniks. The president reportedly had been planning to make a surprise visit to the Moscow home of Yuri and Tanya Zie- man, who first applied to emigrate in 1977. When word got out about the scheduled visit, crew_s of painters, street cleaners and maintenance workers arrived at the Zie- man residence to spruce up the surroundings. Reporters also gathered at the site. But the president never showed up. U.S. officials would not comment on the reasons for the cancellation. New York Newsday, however, quoted an unnamed admin- istration official as saying that Soviet authorities threatened that if the meeting took place, the Ziemans would never be released. In his meeting with dis- sidents and human rights ac- tivists, Reagan told the ac- tivists that he believed "this is a hopeful time for your na- tion," citing the release of more than 300 political and religious prisoners from Soviet labor camps since Gor- bachev assumed leadership. Nevertheless, the president declared that "the basic stan- dard the Soviet Union agreed to almost 13 years ago in the Helsinki Accords, or a genera- tion ago in the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, still need to be met." Kosharovsky, who first ap- plied to emigrate in 1971, joined two dissidents, a former political prisoner and a Russian Orthodox priest freed last year after six years in jail, in the meeting with Reagan and his top advisers. "Despite democratization, our lot has not improved," Kosharovsky told Reagan. "The government continues to deny our right to teach and learn our culture." North American Soviet Jewry activists arrived in Moscow for meetings with the press, refusenik families and Soviet officials, according to Jerry Goodman, executive director of the National Con- ference on Soviet Jewry. Goodman said leaders were scheduled to arrive in Moscow during the week. Some would be travelling directly from the United States, he said, and some from Helsinki, where before the summit they con- vened to advocate the inclu- sion of human rights issues on the summit agenda. According to one report reaching New York, Rabbi Avi Weiss of New York, national chairman of the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, held a small demonstration in Red Square calling attention to the concerns of Soviet Jews. Weiss reportedly was in Moscow on a one-day excur- sion from Leningrad, where he flew after the Helsinki - meetings. Court Considers Cross Removal Washington (JTA) — Federal District Court Judge Thomas Hogan heard argu- ments in a case to determine whether or not a 65-foot il- luminated cross from a U.S. Marine Corps base in Hawaii should be ordered removed. Judge Hogan is not ex- pected to make a decision for several months, according to a spokesperson for the Jewish War Veterans of the USA