EUROPA I DETROIT EUROPA Congregation Shaarey Zedek 1992 11TH ANNUAL SPRING FILM FESTIVAL at 27375 Bell Road • Southfield, MI Thursday, April 9, 1992 7:00 p.m. A HEROIC SURVIVOR'S ODYSSEY X•7I,I7,111111f4 EUROPA EUROPA A must-see movie about a German Jew who became trapped in Europe by the shifting front lines of World War II. 0 COMMUNITY INVITED • NO CHARGE • REFRESHMENTS SPONSORED BY CULTURAL COMMISSION Linda Zalla, Chairperson Eileen Wittenberg, Chairperson Film Division A HEROIC SURVIVOR'S ODYSSEY 1 DESIGNS IN DECORATOR LAMINATES ra re re re For High Quality Formica Always At A Great Discount - SPECIALIZING IN: • Wall Units • Bedrooms • Dining Rooms • Credenzas • Tables • Offices ALSO SPECIALIZING: • Woods • Glass • Stones • Lucite &TOM DESIGNED WOODWORK rin ff :@ ,0 ,;(0- 0 A classic chair rail... A unique chair to bump the rail... A special room for the chair that bumps the rail... IT DOESN'T HAVE TO COST A FORTUNE . . . ONLY LOOK LIKE IT! CALL LOIS HARON 851-6989 Allied Member ASID Uncommon woodwork and trim for the exceptional home around the room that holds the chair that bumps the rail. Timeless design... Installation that endures. • Bloom God Bloom • • Registered Electrologists • Come and let us remove your unwanted hair problem and improve your appearance. Near 12 Mile Rd. bet. Evergreen & Southfield 559-1969 Appt. Only. Ask For Shirlee or Debby \... ■ ••••• ■■ 18 FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1992 Call Bruno Trentacost to view our portfolio. 10 years of designs and installations. From one-of-a-kind pieces to complete trim and woodwork for many exclusive, fine homes. (313) 628-1406 Lynn Koppinger, El Al Israel Airlines' Michigan sales manager, was honored recently for 25 years of service to El Al and Israel tourism. Amnon Linn-Lipzin, director, Israel Government Tourism Office, presented a plaque to Ms. Koppinger. They were joined by David Tavor, regional manager, Chicago, El Al Israel Airlines and Steven Kalt, vice president of Bee Kalt Travel. NEWS I U.S. Accuses Footwear Maker Washington (JTA) — The U.S. Commerce Department is accusing L.A. Gear, the athletic footwear company, of violating federal laws bar- ring acquiescence with the Arab boycott of Israel. The purported violations are possibly one of the last involving Kuwait. They took place in July 1987 and January 1990, when the Los Angeles-based outfit provid- ed names and background data on its manufacturers to an unnamed company in the emirate. Before leveling the public accusations, the Commerce Department "entered into settlement discussions with L.A. Gear," said a Com- merce Department official. Those discussions "did not reach a successful conclu- sion" and prompted the government to issue a "charging letter," the offi- cial said. In a statement released last week, L.A. Gear disputed that "it has engag- ed in any unlawful activity" and said it "believes that it has meritorious defenses to the allegations raised." If the administrative law judge hearing the case, Hugh Dolan, finds L.A. Gear to have violated boycott laws, it could face penalties of up to $460,000 and be de- nied export privileges. It is "highly likely" that Mr. Dolan will significantly reduce the number of penalties from 46, said Will Maslow, general counsel to the American Jewish Con- gress and editor of its Boycott Report newsletter. Mr. Maslow said Mr. Dolan issued a ruling to that effect Nov. 27 in the case of Martin Brothers, an export trading company. Mr. Dolan has lumped together simultaneous viola- tions, such as those incurred when an Arab country, on a single sheet of paper, asks for, and receives, informa- tion on several companies. But in that case, which Martin Brothers is appeal- ing, Mr. Dolan ruled that the company would lose its ex- port privileges for at least six months. That marked the first time a U.S. company would face a sweeping ex- port ban for violating U.S. anti-boycott law, enacted in the mid-1970s under pressure from Jewish groups. The groups are lobbying members of Congress to in- crease from $10,000 to $50,000 the maximum penalties for each boycott violation, as promised to them last year by then- Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher. Mr. Maslow said that any violations by L.A. Gear are of "no great significance" because since the Persian Gulf War, Kuwait has stopped asking companies to assure that they comply with the 41-year-old boycott of Israel. A Commerce Department official said that "since the Gulf War, Kuwait has not been enforcing their boycott.