A scholars and have been ne- glected." Jewish archives are known to exist in Moscow, Len- ingrad, Lvov and other cities in the Soviet Union. These "treasure troves of documents and artifacts will someday enable scholars to rewrite the history of Jews in Eastern Europe," said Ismar Schorsch, chancellor of ITS. "The basic source of the problems that our society is now facing is in lies and si- lence about previous historical facts," said Basov- skaya. "The guarantee of our future progress is in the edu- cation of a new generation of young people who under- stand and value truth and honesty" and fight past "lies and silence about our past history," she said. C FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1990, 7:00 p.m. SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1990, 11:00 a.m. SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1990, 12:00 noon I N 0 Exhibition begins Friday, May 11, 1990, 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. and continues daily through Friday, May 18, 1990, until 12:00 noon. Special preview Wednesday, May 16, 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Illustrated catalogs available at the gallery for S10.00, postpaid $10.00, express mail and overseas $21.00. Annual subscriptions $50.00. Call or write for a free illustrated brochure. OVER 1400 FINE OFFERINGS *NOW ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENTS FOR UPCOMING AUCTIONS AUSTRIAN 19TH CENTURY HAND-PAINTED AUSTRIAN 19TH CENTURY HAND-PAINTED JOHN GEORGE BROWN, OIL ON CAN- ARTHUR STRASSER ORIGINAL BRONZE SCULPTURE, PARIS, 1880, H. 25" ENAMEL GILT METAL COACH, H. 9", L. 12" ENAMEL GILT META_ CORNUCOPIA, H. 16" VAS, 30" X 25" Soviets Face Arrest In USSR New York (JTA) — Soviet Jews who settle in the ad- ministered territories would be arrested and charged with war crimes if they were to return to the Soviet Union on a visit, a top Soviet offi- cial said recently. Yuri Reshetov, chief of the Soviet Foreign Ministry's Department of International Humanitarian Cooperation and Human Rights, made the statements in separate meetings with Ido Dissen- chik, editor of the Israeli dai- ly Ma'ariv, and with Paul Flacks, executive vice presi- dent of the Zionist Organiza- tion of America. Reshetov warned Flacks that if Soviet Jews "are channeled to live in the oc- cupied territories, Israel is jeopardizing their lives." Flacks said Reshetov, citing the 1949 Geneva Con- vention, stated if the status of Palestinians in the ter- ritories are threatened by the settlement of Soviet Jews there, those who return to the Soviet Union "will be charged with war crimes." "How seriously the Soviet Union will follow that or whether it's an official policy is not clear," Flacks said. "If a Soviet Jew comes back for a holiday on the Black Sea and we have cer- tain information that he or she took part in war crimes, we shall regard him or her as a war criminal," Reshetov told Dissenchik. PAIR OF LOWESOFT CHINESE PORCELAIN TABLE LAMPS, H. 31", EX. MATILDA DODGE WILSON SEVRES PALACE URN, H. 31" CHARLES KVAPIL, OIL ON CANVAS, 25" LILA CABOT PERRY, OIL ON CANVAS, 29" X24" X21" PIERRE TOUSSAINT, OIL ON CANVAS, 24" ITALIAN CARVED \M-IfTE MARBLE FOUNTAIN ONE OF THREE CAROUSEL HORSES FORM TABLE LAMP, H. 14" X 19" 11FFANY BRONZE NAUTICAL DESK SET, 1920, 4 PIECES WARREN SHEPPARD, OIL ON CANVAS, 20" MARIO BUCCELLATI 18Kr YELLOW GOLD PLATINUM AND DIAMOND RINGS OFFERED TIFFANY DORE BRONZE AND ENAMEL BOIL, DIAMOND AND SOUTH SEA PEARL PIN, SATURDAY INCLUDING 1.78CT AND 2.23CT DIA. 11" X 30" ROUND DIAMOND RINGS L. 31/2" 409 East Jefferson Avenue Detroit, Michigan 48226 (313) 963-6255 or 963-6256 FAX # (313) 963-8199 (Across from the Ren Cen) Fine Arts Appraisers and auctioneers since 1927 Lawrence F. DuMouchelle Ernest J. MuMouchelle Joan D. Walker Norman DuMouchelle FREE VALET PARKING ALL AUCTION DATES THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 69