CLOSE-UP Affording the best is not the question...finding the best is. Voices Continued from preceding page sian, he is a former member of the communist party, a self-described agnostic, and enjoys jokes about the in- ternational "Jewish con- spiracy." He recently requested in- formation about Israel for his sister who will move there to join her friends. He and his family will stay put. He remembers that his mother understood some Yiddish. That weak link is apparently the final one in the chain of Jewish life of his family. When she was 15, his old- est daughter Natasha asked her mother a question. "Is Papa Jewish? Does that mean that I'm Jewish?" Soviet citizens declared their nationality at the age of 16. Natasha Katznelson, now a 25-year-old heart re- Committed to the Happiness, Health, Security & Well-Being of each of our Residents A first ... Apartment living in a Skilled Nursing Facility Family owned and operated for over 33 years Medicare approved Overlooking two beautiful lakes CALL 363-4121 For our limousine to pick you up for a personal tour of our facility 6470 Alden Drive, Orchard Lake BROKEN WINDSHIELD Domestic cars only Call for your appointment Offer Expires 2/15/92 110111ffilii'"Iu r1 PURITAN AUTO GLASS SERVICE CENTER 21545 Telegraph (Between 8 and 9 Mile) 355-1200 28 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1992 With the gray clouds of a Moscow winter day above, and its brown slush below, the car drove on. Its passen- gers sat silent for a moment, the statue of Lenin fading into the dull skyline behind us. ❑ Czech Tanks To Syria Stopped By German Ship Bortz Health Care SIMMS 0 /31111,41111 As our car passed the tow- ering statue of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin on Leninsky Prospekt, Mr. Katznelson re- sponded without hesitation. "No, never," he said. •'''''mw°11.1 NEWS I For the discriminating person requiring an elegant environment $50 OFF WHEN YOU PAY WITH CASH OR $50 OFF YOUR DEDUCTIBLE WITH CASH searcher, did not declare her nationality as Jewish. Communism did not de- stroy the Jews here, but it virtually annihilated Ju- daism. At the conclusion of a nine-day visit from a guest, Mr. Katznelson was asked if Jews would ever have a nor- mal life here. mninnitnnnirmuntni Bonn (JTA) — A German freighter bound for Syria with a cargo of Soviet-model T-72 tanks was intercepted by a German navy frigate in the western Mediterranean last month and forced to return to a German port. Legal action may be taken against the ship's owners, government sources said. A senior aide to Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Bren Schmid- bauer, said the incident should serve as a warning that Bonn fully intends to implement its new, more str- ingent regulations against the illegal export of arms. According to information released here, the ship, Gotewind, loaded 16 T-72 tanks at a Polish port on Jan. 12. The tanks were manufactured in Czechoslovakia, which has had large-scale arms trans- actions with Syria. They may have been part of a shipment specifically denounced last month by Czechoslovak President Vaclav Havel, who vowed it would be the last. Government sources here said about 300 tanks were involved in the deal. They implied that ships of various flags were transporting them, along with other weapons systems, ammuni- tion and spare parts to Syria. The Gotewind called brief- ly at Hamburg before sailing for Syria. It was intercepted in international waters near Malta by the German navy frigate Bremen, which was participating in NATO war games in the area. The frigate used its two helicopters to locate the vessel with the illegal cargo. It was ordered to return to Germany and was reported due at Kiel or Hamburg in the next five days. Legal experts here differ over whether the diversion was consistent with interna- tional law. But a govern- ment spokesman rejected criticism, saying the princi- ple of preventing the illegal trafficking in arms took priority. Meanwhile, an investiga- tion has begun in Kiel into the activities of the Gotewind's owners, the Karl-Heinz Basse shipping company, which is based in Rednsburg. The owners could face up to four years in prison if con- victed of violating export regulations and transpor- ting arms illegally. In a radio address from Prague on Jan. 26, Mr. Havel warned that the con- tinued export of heavy weapons to countries like Syria posed a danger to Czechoslovakia. "I am not pleased with our deliveries of tanks to Syria at all," he declared, adding, "We have been assured that the present deliveries are the last ones."