FOR SALE IN DEARBORN ONE MILLION SQUARE FOOT BUILDING ONE FLOOR ON 38 ACRES (The Size of 38 Football Fields!) (Former De Soto Assembly Plant) • 7 Railroad Sidings • 30 Truck-Loading Docks • Modern One Million Gallon Water Tower * 4 Miles East of the Southfield X-Way * 1 Mile North of 1-94 * 3 Miles South of 1-96 * 11/2 Miles from the World's Largest Manufacturing Complex, The Ford Rouge Plant * 6 Miles from General Motors' Pole Town Plant Call Harold Finegood, Owner (313) 933-1490 J 1 ) Sarah-Lill SINAI HOSPITAL Sinai Hospital and the American Autoimmune Related Diseases Association, Inc. are proud to present a free public seminar on autoimmunity Autoimmune Diseases: "The Body Phantoms" 1 - 4:30 p.m., Sunday, November 21, 1993 Sinai Hospital Zuckerman Auditorium 6767 W. Outer Drive, Detroit, MI 48235 (between Greenfield and Hubbell) Scheduled Topics Include: "Genetics of Autoimmunity" - Noel R. Rose, M.D., Ph.D. "Coordinating and Accessing Specialists" - Steven L. Rabinowe, M.D. "Living with Invisible Chronic Disease" - Mary Seigel, Ph.D., and Paul Donaghue, Ph.D., Co-authors of Sick and Tired of Feeling Sick and Tired Space is limited. To reserve a seat, please call 493-6363. Aims Papandreou's Return Brings Back Hope Athens (JTA) — Andreas Papandreou's surprise return to power as prime minister of Greece has brought back memories within the country's small Jewish population of anti- Israel, pro-Palestinian sen- timents that permeated the Socialist leader's earlier regime. Jews and Israelis are hop- ing that this time around the Papandreou administration will be more favorable toward Israel and Jews, building on the greatly im- proved relations forged by the just-ousted regime of Constantine Mitsotakis. Mr. Papandreou's Pan- Hellenic Socialist Movement staged a stunning comeback in the national elections, winning by a 7.5 percent margin over Mr. Mitsotakis' liberal New Democracy Par- ty. The Socialists captured 171 of Parliament's 300 seats, enabling Mr. Papan- dreou to stage a dramatic return to power after corrup- tion charges and scandal drove him from office four years ago. During his previous term as prime minister, which lasted from 1981 to 1988, Greek Jews believed that his policies were not only anti- Israel but anti-Semitic as well. He is remembered for free- ing several Palestinian ter- rorists from prison and call- in g them "freedom- fighters." His government's attitude last time around was con- sidered ironic. Most Greek Jews, who number less than' 5,000 out of a population of almost 10 million, had thought the So- cialists would be favorable to Greek Jews and Israel. Never in the history of Greek politics had a government had so many Jewish connections as that one had. Mr. Papandreou, a world- renowned economist during the 1960s and 1970s, owed a large debt of gratitude to a Jew — Stanley Sheinbaum, an American economist who saved Mr. Papandreou from the junta of the Greek colonels in 1967. Three other members of Mr. Papandreou's former- government also had close ties to Jews. Greece's foreign minister at the time, John Haralam- bopoulos, had an Israeli son from his first marriage to an Israeli woman. And Mr. Papandreou's spokesman, John Rubatis, was married to an American Jew, as was his finance min- ister, Gerassimos Arsenis. Mr. Papandreou's "Jewish connections" went even fur- ther, since his father, George, who himself had been a Greek prime min- ister, had been smuggled to Egypt during the Nazi oc- cupation of Greece by an underground Jewish organ- ization. Despite all these connec- tions, things did not turn out as Jews had expected. Jews remember a remark Mr. Papandreou made on national television while having Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yassir Arafat standing at his side. Mr. Papandreou had told Mr. Arafat that the Israelis During his previous term, Greek Jews believed that his policies were not only anti-Israel but anti-Semitic as well. are doing to you what the Nazis did to them." And of all the foreign policy promises he made at the time, many Greek Jews recall that the only one Mr. Papandreou did keep was not recognizing Israel. Small wonder that the local Jewish community here has taken a wait-and- see attitude toward the So- cialists this time around. Most members of the community will admit that international circumstances have changed, thereby forc- ing the Socialists to change, too. Nissim Mais, president of the Central Board of Greek Jews, commenting on the Socialists' return to power, remarked that Jews in Greece and throughout the Diaspora are troubled by "racism and fascism." The Socialists' position on this, he said, "is well- i known." Most political and diplo-