I NEWS I 30th Anniversary Sale Help Us Celebrate! 0ff % 5 O . Manuf. List Price All Decorative Lighting Fixtures, Table and Floor Lamps • Traditional • Colonial • Contemporary 10% Off All Ceiling *******************1 * * .. Free Drawing for 44 Lamps! * Ceiling Fan & T ******************** Sale extends thru Sept. 2, 1990 Fans Brose Lighting Supply, Inc. 541-1765 • SUMMER HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30. Thur. 9-8. Sat. 9-3 1965 Woodward Avenue, Berkley (3 blks North of 11 Mile) "While Supplies Last • I VISC Greg ORCHARD MALL 851.5566 ORCHARD LIC RD N. OF MAPLE WEST BLOOMFIELD SHOES MarNreard EVERGREEN PLAZA 559-3580 12 MILE & EVERGREEN SOUTHFIELD DANCE STUDIO Enroll Now .. . Tap • Jazz • Ballet • Modern • Boys' Classes • Baby Rhythm in Tiffany Plaza Northwestern & 14 Mile Call 737-2611 SUMP PUMP failure OR POWER OUTAGE IS NO PROBLEM IF YOU HAVE AN AUTOMATIC JET PUMP. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE H. B. LEWIS PLUMBING 66 FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1990 Kharkov Returns Shul After Nearly 70 Years $149.50 352-9350 CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354-6060 New York (JTA) — The municipality of Kharkov, a city in the Soviet Ukraine, returned a synagogue to the Jewish community there last week with fanfare and good wishes. Present at the Aug. 21 ceremony were Soviet offi- cials, at least one Israeli and two American Jews: Sidney Kwestel, president of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, and New York City Coun- cilman Noach Dear. The ceremony, televised in the Soviet Union and an- nounced in local news- papers, included fluttering Israeli flags. "Glasnost has given us the ability and the opportunity to help our Jewish brethren in the Soviet Union," said Mr. Dear, who was involved in efforts to get the syn- agogue back. Ivan Kaglov, vice presi- dent of the Ukraine, prom- ised the assemblage that the republic was changing. "One vital part of that change is to forever bury the horrid past that has characterized Ukrainian-Jewish relations over the past centuries," he said. Kharkov, a center of the Zionist movement before the Holocaust, has been the scene of numerous official anti-Jewish activities over the years, including numer- ous arrest of worshipers, the closure of a matzah-baking factory by police in 1960 and the plowing over of a Jewish cemetery in 1967 to make a public park. Charles Levine, an Israeli public relations agent who attended the ceremony, said, "A very different mood is prevalent, at least for now, as a changing Ukraine seeks overseas Jewish support for its rapidly evolving poli- cies." The Orthodox Union in- tends to bring the Kharkov shul under its wings, said Mr. Kwestel. Mr. Kwestel, whose organ- ization represents Orthodox synagogues in the United States and around the world, and Mr. Dear, who repre- sents a committee to preserve Jewish places of worship in the Soviet Union, are the latest of several American Jewish activists to take interest in helping the Kharkov Jewish commun- ity, numbering some 70,000, retrieve the shul, taken from the Jewish community in the 1920s. The quest to take back the shul has been a special pro- ject of the Jewish Federation of Cincinnati, which sent a delegation to Kharkov in May. The Cincinnati federation adopted Kharkov as a twin city and offered to help the city's Jews, several of whom asked American Jews for help in renovating the syn- agogue, which had been used as a health club and a sports center. Rabbi Zev Scharfstein, a member of the Chabad movement who is a leader of the Cincinnati Vaad Hoier, or community religious council, said the Kharkov municipality had offered to return the synagogue to the Jewish community if a replacement for its sports center would be provided. Rabbi Scharfstein said the Cincinnati federation was trying to raise funds to buy a prefabricated building, manufactured in Sweden, to replace the sports club. 1DF Soldiers Are Charged Tel Aviv (JTA) — Thirty- one members of the Israel Defense Force were found guilty of desertion by a court-martial this week, but there were apparently mitigating circumstances. Punishments varied from prison to probation. The soldiers, nearing the end of their three-and-a-half years of compulsory military service in the army, navy or air force, were sent to a training base to prepare for future reserve duty in the artillery. They charged that although IDF veterans, they were treated like raw recruits at the training base and insulted by their in- structors. They also com- plained that the food at the base was unpalatable. When the base commander refused their request for an interview, they walked off the base but were soon ar- rested by the military police and held as deserters. Three were sentenced to 21 days in military prison. Three others were confined to barracks for three weeks. The rest were released on promise of good behavior.