1 - FENBY-6TEIN Talent Agency DOCTOR DISCO "May Good Health, Good Friends & Happiness Be With You Through The Coming Year" wishing everyone a happy new year and a joyous holiday season 553-9966 Lynn & Jerry Fenby Marguerite Plaunt Carol Conover Dolores Thuman Connie Broderick Leslye Mattler JANET RANDOLPH, MOE SELL & STAFF WISH ALL OF OUR FRIENDS "A HAPPY & HEALTHY NEW YEAR" book comers 27 1 . tray first center building • suite 115 26955 northwestern highway southfield, michigan 48034 phone: 313 / 262-1560 A Happy, Healthy NEW YEAR Bush Speaks To Bigots George & Roselie Ohrenstein and the Staff of Ohrenstein Jewelers Harvard Row Lahser & 11 Mile Norman Allan Esther Man' Lawrence Allan Danielle Allan Nancy Sturman FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 Continued from preceding page Wish All Their Customers & Friends 855-5571 Allan Family Wishes aft their relatives, friends and customers, a very Happy ct Healthy New Year! 112 Deli Wars generations, the real deli rivalry has been fought on Essex Street, Houston Street, Second Avenue, Queens Boulevard and Flatbush Avenue. "The cognoscenti ap- preciate that if you want the best, you don't hang out at the Stage or the Carnegie... The Carnegie and the Stage sell stardom. Their pitch is, `It's not what you eat, but who you eat it near.' Who can quarrel with that — if you're more interested in Woody Allen than living of the fat of the land. For me, it doesn't cut the mustard." "your specialist in party directing" The +1914-1985 MEDIA MONITOR Ilmmimm ■•■ •• 353-3146 In their "Beltway Bandits" column in the current issue of The Nation, Washington cor- respondents David Corn and Jefferson Morley assert that Vice President George Bush spoke last month to two groups which "have been home to fierce anti-Semites." Such emigre groups, say Corn and Morley, have been "consistently embraced" by the Reagan Administration for "their anticommunism, overlooking the anti- Semitism and the pro-Nazi backgrounds of prominent members. Traveling down this road, President Reagan wound up at Bitburg." The occasion for Bush's speech was a Captive Nations banquet in Warren, Michigan. The dinner was sponsored by the Captive Na- tions Committee and the American Friends of the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Na- tions. In 1985, according to the writers, Edward Rubel, a director of the Captive Na- tions Committee, protested deportation proceedings against Karl Linnas, a former Nazi concentration camp commandant. In a letter to Secretary of State George Shultz, Rubel accused the Justice Department of col- laborating with the KGB and "Jewish Zionists." He also described the USSR under Stalin as "exclusively run by Marxist Zionist Jews?' A 1981 list of officials of the American Friends of the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Na- tions, report Corn and Morley, included a Byelorussian Nazi collaborator, a former member of the Romanian Iron Guard and a past member of the pro-Nazi Bulgarian Legionary Move- ment. A keynote speaker at the group's 1985 conference attacked the Justice Depart- ment's Nazi-hunting Office of Special Investigations and assailed its "lawyers of Jewish origin." How Should Israel Respond To PLO? The call by several PLO leaders to create a provisional Palestinian government that would recognize Israel has been dismissed by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. In an interview on Israel TV, Shamir said, "Ideas such as this do not bring peace closer. They push it further away?' Neither a Palestinian state nor a Palestinian govern- ment, said Shamir, are "ac- ceptable to anyone in Israel?' Creating a Palestinian state, he said, even one that recognized Israel, would be part of the PLO's "doctrine of stages" adopted by Yassir Arafat's organization 10 years ago, according to Shamir. The first stage would establish a Palestinian state in the West Bank. The second stage, said the prime minister, "would continue the war [against Israel] until the Jewish state was eliminated and replaced by a 'democratic, secular state?" "Could anyone," asked Shamir, "be so naive as to believe that anyone in Israel will accept this?" Editorial writers at Ha'aretz took issue with the prime minister. "Reactions [to new Palestinian stands] such as 'words, words, words' or definitions like 'crossword puzzle' will not make do any more," they wrote. "The sooner our leaders digest the new reality and prepare their responses to it, the better for us all. "Only the fools among us could still believe that Israel will be able to ignore demands [by the interna- tional community] for a substantial Israeli response to statements coming out of [PLO headquarters in] Tunisia and stemming from the reality of intifida in the field." . ••••ii MUSIC I Klezmer Music Spreads In U.S. BEN GALLOB Special to The Jewish News N ew York — At least 30 American towns and cities are home to at least one Jewish music- making group, a Klezmer band, according to the latest issue of the Book Peddler, the newsletter of the National Yiddish Book Center. These unique Jewish music makers have historic ties