I NEWS I If you have sent letters of invitation to your Jewish relatives in the Soviet Union please contact us. Resettlement Service needs this information in order to properly plan for incoming refugees. If we already know about your invitation it is not neces- sary to call. Otherwise, please contact Lydia Kuniaysky or Diana Zolotaryov at Resettlement Service 559-1500 cleaners specializes in WEDDING GOWNS custom cleaning and preservation RESETTLEMENT SERVICE A Synagogue In Greektown Congregation T'chiyah 'SALLY'S DESIGNS I If you want the opportunity to participate, to grow close to a small, warm community, to explore Judaism through adult or children's classes, we invite you to join us and participate in a communal exploration of our tradition. —Egalitarian, member directed services —Children's School —Affiliated with the Federation of Recon- structionist Congregations and Havurot (FRCH) Information on membership and special in- troductory rates are available. Call 548-1696. Please come and see our new fall designer collection of fashions and jewelry 29657 Orchard Lake Road (Inside Antonio's Salon near 13 Mile Rd.) Farmington Hills, Michigan (313) 626-0886 BOUTIQUE Where Family And Tradition Are Foremost! ongregation th Achim JOIN US AT SHABBAT SERVICES • • • • • • • • • • • • • Men's Club - Sisterhood Havurot U.S.Y. Youth Group Shabbat Youth Services Ages 3-17 Cultural Programs Adult Education including clergy led Study Groups Concert Family Shabbat Dinners Library United Hebrew School Branch (in our building) Daily morning and evening services Young at Heart (Senior Group) Yachad (Couples Group) Rabbi Milton Arm Rabbi Emeritus Benjamin Gorrelick Cantor Max Shimansky Reverend Joseph Baras President Ronald Harris Youth Director Linda Kuppe For More Information Call: Philip Vainik, Executive Director 352-8670 21100 West Twelve Mile Road • Southfield, Michigan 48076 ■•_•■• • • • /•• 0.• /MO. • • r. Ji■ ot" Sanctions To Continue Against Syrians Washington (JTA) — The Reagan administration will not remove current sanctions against Syria as long as ter- rorist groups, most notably Abu Nidal's militant Palesti- nian organization, are allowed to operate from Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, State Department officials said last week. The possibility of repealing the sanctions was raised after the department's 1987 ter- rorism report, released last week linked Syria to just one major terrorism incident in 1987, as compared to three in 1986. Although there are no plans to remove the sanctions a State Department source said that some "could be lifted at some point." State Department spokes- woman Phyllis Oakley prais- ed the reduction in direct Syrian involvement in ter- rorism, but said the reduction would not lead to Syria's removal from the depart- ment's list of state sponsors of terrorism. Syria has been on the list since it was first drawn up in 1979. Listed countries cannot receive U.S. foreign aid or goods and technology that would improve their military or terrorist support capa- bilities. Oakley said that as long as terrorist groups train in Syrian-controlled territories, sanctions will be maintained against Syria. Yosef Gal, spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Washington, refused to praise Syria for any recent improve- ment in its stance on ter- rorism. "We have not seen anything to indicate that Syria has changed its policy on support for terrorism," he said. Sanctions against Syria were imposed in 1986 after a British court implicated Syria in the attempted bomb- ing of an El Al Airlines plane in London, which had more than 230 U.S. citizens aboard. Great Britain severed its ties to Syria after the verdict, and maintains only an in- terest section in Damascus. The United States, Canada and West Germany also re- called their ambassadors, but returned them in 1987. The sanctions include bar- ring Syria from participating in export-import bank loans or programs and from receiv- ing subsidized wheat from the Department of Agri- culture. They also bar Syrian Arab Airlines from selling airline tickets in the United States. In a related development, while Syria has not had an ambassador to the United States since 1986, a new U.S. Ambassador to Syria, Edward Djerejian, was sworn in last Wednesday, replacing Wil- liam Eagleton Jr. Djerejian previously served as senior deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern and South Asian Af- fairs. He has also been depu- ty spokesman for the State Department, and has served in Jordan and Lebanon. Justice Department Files Papers Against Nazi Washington (JTA) — The Justice Department filed denaturalization papers in a federal court in Minneapolis last week against of an alleg- ed Nazi guard during World War II. The action in U.S. District Court is the first by the federal government against Edgars Inde, 79. If the lawsuit is successful, the Justice Department can then begin deportation proceedings. Inde is accused of serving in the Arajs Kommando, which Office of Special Investiga- tions Director Neal Sher call- ed a "notorious unit which had as its principle objective the murder of unarmed Jews and other civilians." The group, based in Latvia where Inde was born, aided in the persecution and murder of those persons considered by the Nazis to be racially undesirables or enemies of the Third Reich, the com- plaint said. The U.S. Attorney's office and the Office of Special In- vestigations, which searches for and prosecutes Nazi war criminals, charged that Inde lied and concealed hit past when he entered the United States in 1949 and became a U.S. citizen in June 1955. Inde, who has 20 days to answer the charges, is a retired factory worker the Washington Post reported Tuesday. The Post reported that the proceedings, Inde denied that he participated in killing unarmed Jews and other civilians. __/