NEWS • • IT'S OUT!!! • • • "The Sisterhood" by Marci Cohen* The True Story Of The Women Who Changed The World! • • • Signed Copies Available At ‘4'‘14CECI ORMAN JEWELRY 855-8850 14 Mile Rd. at Farmington • Simsbury Plaza • Simon & Shuster *Ceci's Sister FOR ALL YOUR GIFT NEEDS SWEET 16 BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY SHOWER-WEDDING BAR/BAT MITZVAH 8herwcud 8tudTo8 FINE FURNITURE & ACCESSORIES ALWAYS 20% OFF TEL-TWELVE MALL • 12 MILE & TELEGRAPH • SOUTHFIELD DAILY 10-9 • SUNDAY 12-5 • 354-9060 FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1988 Dutch Leaders On Visit To Israel Jerusalem (JTA) — Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers and Foreign Minister Hans van den Broek of the Netherlands have agreed to establish a joint working group with Israel to consider the route Jewish emigrants will take leaving the Soviet Union. Holland is directly con- cerned because its embassy in Moscow issues Israeli visas to Soviet Jews who have ob- tained exit permits. The Netherlands has represented Israeli interests in the USSR since Moscow broke diplo- matic relations with Israel in 1967. The Israeli Cabinet decided recently that in the future, Jews leaving the Soviet Union on the strength of Israeli visas must pick them up at the Israel Embassy in Bucharest, Romania, from where they are to fly directly to Aviv. According to reports of last Monday's meeting, Lubbers objected to the scheme on grounds that Soviet Jews should have freedom of choice about where to settle. The issue also has sparked con- troversy in the Soviet emigre community here and among Jewish leaders overseas. The Israelis say that Soviet Jews would be free to settle elsewhere, if they so wished, after coming to Israel. But once they arrived in Israel, they would lose their refugee status and could be forced to wait several years for entry into the United States or other Western countries. The Cabinet decision would be moot without Dutch, Soviet and Romanian cooper- ation. Peres seemed hopeful that the proposed joint work- ing group would produce an understanding. Meanwhile, the six mem- bers of an Israeli consular delegation due to go to Moscow are expected to receive their entry visas momentarily. They will pick them up at the Hague en- route to the Soviet Union. Israelis hope the delegation eventually will be allowed to issue visas, a routine consular function. The Soviets insist that is not within the purview of their visit, for the time being. The Israeli delegation will reciprocate the visit of the Soviet consular team that has been in Israel since June 1987. , Reform Rabbis Urge Support For Pollards COMPLIMENTARY GIFT WRAPPING 42 I New York (JTA) — In a resolution passed unanimous- ly by the executive board of the Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR), Reform rabbis called upon the entire Reform movement to express support for Jonathan Pollard, who is serving a life sentence for selling classified intelligence data to Israel, and for his wife, Anne, who is serving a five-year sentence as an accomplice. CCAR is a 1,500-member worldwide organization of Reform rabbis. The organiza- tion last week proposed that major Jewish and Christian organizations "encourage the United States government to re-evaluate the Pollard case, and to insure that the Pollards be treated with fairness and equity during their incarceration?' Specific concern focuses on what the CCAR describes as inadequate medical treat- ment for Anne Henderson Pollard, who suffers from a rare gastrointestinal disorder. Only when her condition reached the verge of being im- mediately life-threatening did she receive care from a Mayo Clinic physician at a prison near Rochester, Minn., according to the CCAR. Jonathan Pollard recently ended a week-long hunger strike to protest his wife's health care and to call atten- tion to his own deteriorating conditions in prison. Conservative Rabbis Ordained New York (JTA) — The Con- servative movement in Israel, known there by the Hebrew name Masorati (traditional), will ordain the first Israeli- trained rabbis to serve the Israeli Conservative com- munity in ceremonies at the Mt. Scopus campus of Hebrew University, a spokesperson for the Jewish Theological Seminary, the spiritual base of the Conservative move- ment here, said last week. Leaders of the Conservative Jewish movement in America are planning to attend the ceremonies, which were