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December 14, 1990 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-12-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

WHATEVER THE BOOK SAYS YOUR TRADE IS WORTH

ileA

I NEWS I

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PLUS . . . DRIVE ANY OF THESE

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/ 2
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cFcrite . z'

FORD

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at 10 Mile Rd.

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FORD

24750 Greenfield Rd.
Oak Park, MI 48237

0

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46

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1990

Shamir Urges Waiver
Of U.S. Trade Sanctions

Washington (JTA) —
Israeli Prime Minister Yit-
zhak Shamir added his voice
to those calling on President
Bush to consider waiving
U.S. trade sanctions against
the Soviet Union as a reward
for the large number of
Soviet Jews being allowed to
emigrate.
Israel is "happy" some
150,000 Jews have arrived
from the Soviet Union this
year, Mr. Shamir said on the
CBS-TV program "Face the
Nation."
"We are grateful to the
Soviet Union, we are
grateful for this change of
their policy, for allowing
these people to come now,"
he said.
"I think for this reason it
is time to suspend for a year
or so the Jackson-Vanik
Amendment in such a way to
facilitate trade relations
between Soviet Russia and
the United States," he said.
The National Conference
on Soviet Jewry issued a
statement last week also
urging Mr. Bush to grant a
one-year waiver of sanctions
contained in Jackson-Vanik.
The amendment to the
Trade Act of 1974 links U.S.
most-favored-nation trade
benefits for the Soviet Union
with increased emigration.
The Union of Councils for
Soviet Jews has opposed
such a waiver at this time,
contending that the Soviet
Union should first codify
promised emigration
reforms and then prove that
they have been
implemented.
Although both Soviet
Jewry umbrella groups have
been testifying before con-
gressional committees for
two decades, this was the
first time they had appeared
before an agriculture com-
mittee.
Both the National Con-
ference and the Union of
Councils told the subcom-
mittee that they support
providing the farm credits,
but they differ sharply on a
waiver of Jackson-Vanik
sanctions.
A waiver for a year "would
be fully consistent with the
objectives of the legislation,
which are to contribute to
the goal of truly free emigra-
tion," Shoshana Cardin,
chairwoman of the National
Conference, told the sub-
committee.
She said that by the end of
the year, some 180,000
Soviet Jews will have
emigrated, a figure that

could double in 1991.
Mrs. Cardin maintained
that pressure must continue
on the Soviets to allow free
emigration, to let long-term
refuseniks emigrate, and to
end restrictions on emigra-
tion for such reasons as
access to state secrecy or fi-
nancial obligation to
relatives opposed to a family
member leaving.
She said that if the presi-
dent grants a one-year
waiver, "the National Con-
ference will vigorously
monitor Soviet emigration
performance," working with
the Bush administration and
Congress.
Extending the waiver
"would have to be fully
justified by the continued
movement toward the goal of
truly free emigration," she
said.
Up to now the Jackson-
Vanik "was used as a stick"
to force Soviet, compliance
with international human
rights agreements. But now
it can be "used as a carrot"
to encourage further im-
provements, Mrs. Cardin
said.

U.N. School

Makes Apology

New York (JTA) — The
United Nations Interna-
tional School, a
U.N.-affiliated high school,
could benefit from "a course
of study that will convinc-
ingly demonstrate the
horrors of Hitlerism and
war," according to Dr.
Han-is Schoenberg, director
of U.N. Affairs of B'nai
B'rith International.
Dr. Schoenberg offered
that suggestion in response
to an apology from the
school's director, Dr. Joseph
Blaney, for quotations that
appeared in its 1990 high
school yearbook from Adolf
Hitler and another from the
German philosopher Hegel
glorifying war.
The school, known as
UNIS, is a private institu-
tion operated mainly for
U.N. personnel.
According to Dr.
Schoenberg, its student body
includes the children of for-
eign and U.S. diplomats,
staff and employees of the
United Nations Secretariat
in New York and the chil-
dren of international busi-
nessmen.
Dr. Blaney wrote that the
quotes submitted by a
graduating senior "were not
intended to give offense."

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