NEWS I IMPORTED ITALIAN NIC OLE T TI LEATHER 2 DAYS ONLY! FRI., APRIL 13 SAT., APRIL 14 r TAKE AN ADDITIONAL- 10% OFF I: L. WITH COUPON ONLY VALID FRIDAY, APRIL 13 & SATURDAY, APRIL 14 mi. mem mow =Nu si ■ No= Elm mom iimin Elm Nom TEL-TWELVE MALL 12 MILE & TELEGRAPH SOUTHFIELD DAILY 10-9 • SUN. 12-5 354-9060 iiveas-,1 ■ 42-Alsro•ue— DIRECT FROM BARRY DOUGLAS, DIRECTOR 3080 Orchard Lake Rd. PARIS Keego Harbor, MI 48320 6.81-d-01 The " Lambada " Group Classes Only 6 Classes for $3000 10-Week Introductory Ballroom Dance Course HALL FACILITIES AVAILABLE FOR RENT 64 FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1990 3000 Viltin teed Offer REGISTER NOW 681-4101 Don't Fear Pogroms, Says Elena Bonner New York (JTA) — Fears of anti-Semitic pogroms in the Soviet Union are unfounded, but Jews have cause to fear increased nationalism among the Soviet working classes, according to Dr. Elena Bonner, human rights activist and widow of Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov. "The current level of anti- Semitism is no different from the constant level we have always had in the Soviet Union," Bonner said. "I know I'm saying some things that may not be pop- ular to the American Jewish community, but I just don't believe the rumors about pogroms," Bonner said through an interpreter. "What is a pogrom?" she asked the crowd of reporters rhetorically. "A pogrom is when the homes are burned with five children trapped inside, when women are raped in streets and in- dividuals are wrapped in carpets and set alight. "The Jan. 18 central writers union situation was not a pogrom," she said, re- ferring to an incident in Moscow where anti-Semitic hoodlums roughed up a group of writers and threatened more violence in the future. Bonner insists American Jews should be less alarmed about the threat of pogroms and more concerned about the "National Socialist type of movement now growing in the Soviet Union." She said this movement is particularly dangerous be- cause it is supported by elements of the government as well as by the populist working classes. Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev "has not spoken out on the issue of anti- Semitism," said Bonner. "We can't forget Hitler and his thugs, the way they began in the beer halls of Germany. I hope Gorbachev will go down in history as the author of perestroika and not of another genocide." But the genocide that Bonner spoke of was not in reference to anti-Semitic pogroms, but the activities that have occurred in Armenia and that she fears may occur soon in Lithuania. "I am amazed by the posi- tion of the United States and the European governments" toward Soviet actions in Lithuania, she said. "Final- ly, after 50 years, one Balkan government has found the strength to declare independence, and Washing- ton is silent" except to say that it hopes "Gorbachev will not use force. "Force is often used in our country," she said. "We don't have a bloodless perestroika, as you think in the West." Bonner has written a letter to Bush urging the United States to open diplo- matic relations with the Lithuanian government. She has received no re- sponse. Israeli Arms Firms Listed Paris (JTA) — Two Israeli firms are among the 100 largest arms exporters in the Western world, according to a recent study by the Stockholm-based Interna- tional Peace Research In- stitute. It ranks the government- owned Israel Aircraft In- dustries 58th and Koor In- dustries 94th on the list, which is headed by such American giants as McDon- nell Douglas, Lockheed and General Dynamics. IAI, which manufactures planes, missiles, gunboats and electronic equipment, exported more than $800 million worth of arm in 1988, the Swedish study says, a 21 percent decline compared to 1987. Koor, owned by Histadrut, Israel's labor federation, manufactures mainly mis- siles and electronic equip- ment. It shipped out $360 million worth in 1988, a 14 percent increase over the previous year. Ironically, Koor In- dustries, which also manufactures a large array of civilian hardware, is in bankruptcy. The Israeli firms' revenues are minuscule, compared to American arms manufac- turers like Raytheon, which has exports in excess of $3 billion a year. The list included 12 British firms, 10 French and nine West German arms manufacturers. There were five Japanese companies headed by Mit- subishi and Kawasaki, which build combat planes, warships, missiles and elec- tronics.