A A • N AND PRECIOUS GEMS... • N I CLOSE-UP CONTEMPORARY WOMENS FASHIONS ALWAYS 20 %-60 % on PREVIEW OUR SPRING & SUMMER LINE Sidney Krandall &Sons is internationally known and respected throughout the estate and jewel industries for conducting transactions in an equit able and discreet manner. Immediate cash for at diamonds and precious gems. Appraisers availabl* by appointment for estates of all sizes. Inquiries fro individuals and estate attorneys welcome ,4 Sidney Krandall & Sons JEWELERS • TROY, MI (313)362-4500 a kenzie Continued from preceding page tit„ \x- hontcrs square ♦ farmingtcm hills orchard lake rd. at 14 mile 855-4464 mackenzie's SALE 20% - 50% OFF On almost our entire stock of Spring and Summer Traditional Menswear APPLEGATE SQUARE • NORTHWESTERN BETWEEN 12 - 13 MILE a enzie' -.,41.; ; ;N< Aeks Media Doctor I mackenzie's oma , ' 4 , 101•7,4 41 :1k: Press closed!' Among the cases he is handling, Fink is defending author Stephen King and Columbia Pictures Industries in a copyright infringement case. An Ann Arbor man is claiming that King stole his story to write the movie "Christine.” Fink also plans to file copyright violation claims for Detroit Renaissance against Sassoon Inc., which allegedly copied a logo from a Detroit Grand Prix poster. In between briefs and court appearances, Fink reviews story proposals for the newspaper and, if necessary, reads stories before they are published. He juggles several cases at once, and admits he doesn't hand over enough work to other associates. "One of my problems is that I don't delegate enough," he says. "I guess I just want to make myself feel indispen- sable?' Yet Michael Gruskin, who has been working under Fink's supervision since he joined the firm about a year ago, disagrees. Fink, he says, is a great teacher and allows him to tackle challenging cases. Fink holds great respect for one of his law firm's founders, Jason Honigman, and for U.S. District Judge Avern Cohn, who respects his interest in the media and occasionally sends him related materials to read. "He is very articulate and very knowledgable," Cohn says of Fink. "He is well respected. His skills are enhanced by the fact that he has been in newspapers!' Fink claims he never wants to retire. He loves to work and is a self-professed workaholic. Somehow, he makes it to most of his children's extracur- ricular activities. He's the one in the suit. He relaxes by staying out of the office on Saturdays, and running around town looking for new electronic gadgets to purchase. And about once a week, he catches a movie — with, of course, a beeper on his belt. ❑ . I NEWS I Israelis Deny Deal With Romania Over USSR Jews ,Weather - -.M/orld's Tory 'Oily at Detroirs . th 'Leader — Milano ) , 26 FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1988 Jerusalem (JTA) — A story by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that the United Jewish Appeal would pay the Romanian government $80,000 for each Soviet Jew flown to Israel via Bucharest was vigorously denied by the Jewish Agency and the Foreign Ministry. The story reported that Simcha Dinitz, chairman of the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization Execu- tive, flew to Romania last week to wrap up the deal. Jewish Agency officials con- firmed that Dinitz was in Romania but they denied the allegations by Haaretz. Israeli sources attributed the story to certain circles that want to torpedo the re- cent Cabinet decision to tight- en Israeli policy on issuing visas. It would require Jews leaving the Soviet Union on Israeli visas to fly directly to Aviv after picking up their visas at the Israeli Em- bassy in Bucharest. That decision, which would deny Israeli visas to Jews who are not committed to resettl- ing in Israel, raised a storm of controversy here and abroad. Although Dinitz and Jewish Agency Board of Gov- ernors Chairman Mendel Kaplan backed it enthusias- tically, leading Diaspora philanthropists are vehe- mently opposed to the idea. Meanwhile, represen- tatives of HIAS, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, made it clear they would oppose any change in American im- migration laws that would give refugee status to Soviet Jews arriving in Israel. Under current U.S. laws, the refugee status accorded Soviet Jews exempts them from the quota restrictions that apply to most foreigners seeking to immigrate to the United States. Soviet Jews compelled to go directly to Israel presumably would lose that refugee status and then be less likely to qualify for residency in the United States. HIAS was reacting to a report by the syndicated American columnists Row- land Evans and Robert Novak that such changes in the im- migration laws are under way in Washington in reaction to the Israeli Cabinet decision. In Washington, an official with the State Department's Bureau for Refugee Programs would not comment on the Evans and Novak report. A spokesperson for the U.S.