Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 3, 1986 Soviet Jews By MELISSA BIRKS Jewry each y and MIKE JAGNER The spea] Leonid Maken-Limanev, now a mathematics the Soviet U professor at Wayne State University, waited 18 were impriso months to emigrate from the Soviet Union five testify again years ago. Maken-Limanev was a "refusnik"- a Jewish holid Soviet Jew who is not allowed to leave the Sister Ro country. of education When he was in the Soviet Union, Glenn Catholic nun Richter, national chairman of the Student against injus Struggle for Soviet Jewry, saw a book called "WE SI "The Poison of Zionism," with a cartoon the force o depicting the Jewish "conspiracy" as a spider must," she sa web. GeraldT Maken-Limanev and Richter were two of four Metropolitan speakers at yesterday's Symposium on Soviet people's liv Jewry in .Rackham Amphitheatre. The Union. Spea symposium was part of a lecture series that is Teller said," sponsored by the Student Struggle for Soviet college aud 4 plight described1 year. ikers discussed hatred toward Jews in Union. They told of refusniks who ned for teaching Hebrew, refusing to st other Soviet Jews, or celebrating a ay at the synagogue. se Tharing, professor and chairman n in Cedar Hills, New Jersey, is a who has been arrested for protesting stices to Jews. IMPLY cannot stand by idly while f anti-Semitism burns. Protest we aid during her speech. Teller, superintendent of United n Schools of Detroit, told how young es have been ruined in the Soviet aking to an audience of about 200, "It is difficult for me to speak to a ience about my experience in the Soviet Union. In your faces, I see the faces of people trapped in the Soviet Union.' And while it is forbidden to teach Hebrew and Jewish heritage in the Soviet Union, Teller said there are places where such learning exists. "All are done underground, and all are done at the danger of lives," he said. "The underground revival takes place because it is a force of humanity." Maken-Limanev said it is "next to impossible" for Jews to emigrate; Soviet law denies emigration to anybody who is in prison or has access to classified information. Soviet Jews often fall under these categories, he said. And, while Americans are free to challenge such a system by going to court, "if in Russia you go to court, they'll take you to an asylum," he said. "If you think you can face the Russian legal system, maybe you are a little crazy." -o Bli1 Go (Continued from Pagei1) Arian stared at Billi. And Billi threatened to hit him with a baseball bat. . Brian is "6 2," blonde hair, blue eyes, and looks like any other California boy." They were married last year. The marriage license, Billi claims, was obtained from a sloppy clerk who only looked at the picture on his driver's license, even though the license says he is male. rdon dresses for success THE MINISTER never knew, he says. "I made my living for years on the blindness of strangers," he says, putting on his Southern belle accent. The minister was not the only one who was fooled, however. "My husband's parents have no idea I'm not a woman. They're so ecstatic he's not gay." Friday, at Billi's book-signing at Middle Earth, dozens of fans showed up to get their autographed books, calendars, and greeting cards. And there was Billi at the center of attention-posing, teasing, signing, shocking, laughing, and mugging for photographers. He peppers his speech with bawdy suggestions and his. inscriptions with outrageous innuendoes. A man in a ROTC uniform walks in. "I just love men in a uniform," Billi says coyly. His fans loved it. "My son is gay and it just seemed appropriate. I knew John would get a kick out of it," says one middle-aged woman who bought two calendars. "I think he's terrific," says Evan Maurer, professor of art and director of the art museum. "He's unusual, very original, very creative." "He's making art out of his life." NEED MONEY? WORK FOR HOUSING! Jobs with Housing Division's Food Service offer $4.20 /hr. starting wages FLEXIBLE HOURS NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Phone or stop by the Food Service Office of any Hall. Alice Lloyd ..... 764-1183 Clarification Cary Coglianese, campaign manager for state Senate candidate Dale Apley, said that Apley doesn't plan to cut the size of government, as Friday's headline stated, but rather increase private initiative in place of government. ' IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS New radar can track Stealth WASHINGTON-The super-secret Stealth bomber, for all its vaunted ability to evade radar detection, can be spotted by at least one type of sophisticated radar now entering the U. S. arsenal, officials say. The Pentagon has for years advertised the capabilities of the new radar-the Over-The-Horizon-Backscatter, or OTH-B-in the course of winning congressional approval to ring the U. S. coast with an OTH-B network to detect airplanes and cruise missiles. 1 Indeed, the Air Force disclosed with some fanfare last month that it had used its first OTH-B radar unit to track President Reagan's Air Force One all the way to Iceland for his recent summit meeting. The ability of an OTH-B system to detect Stealth aircraft, however, is one capability about which the Pentagon and Air Force have remained quiet. One crack in the silence occurred this summer, when an Australian scientist working on his country's over-the-horizon system discussed the radar's capabilites during a public conference in Canberra. Media effectively educates American voters, poll says NEW YORK-When it comes to learning about candidates, roughly the same proportion of Americans get their news from television as from newspapers. In either case, most say they get enough information to make informed choices, according to a Media General-Associated Press poll. Forty-two percent of the 1,464 adult Americans in the nationwide telephone poll said newspapers were their prime source of information about candidates. Thirty-nine percent said they learned about candidates primarily from television news programs. The rest got most of their news from a variety of sources: magazines, radio, political advertisements, and friends. Many of those who did not get enough information said they wanted more unbiased background information, and they also thought more in-depth coverage, more debates, and personal interviews would be useful. Cadets confined for hazing CHARLESTON, S. C.-Five white cadets at The Citadel have been confined to campus for the rest of the school year and will have to march hundreds of additional hours for hazing a black freshman, the military college said. "There will be a lot of soul searching on the part of those five cadets for the remainder of their tenure at The Citadel and their life," said Lt. Col. Ben Legare, the state school's spokesman. The five donned sheets and towels last week, then entered the room of a sleeping black cadet, shouting obscenities and leaving a charred paper cross behind, Citadel officials said. The five will have to march an additional 195 hours, or about 10 more hours a week than the three hours that most cadets march weekly in the barracks courtyard with an eight-pound rifle, Legare said. The cadets also will have to remain on campus except for legal holidays and school vacations. Dems hope for more seats WASHINGTON-Democrats sounded confident while Republicans seemed less than certain yesterday about the outcome of their battle for control of the Senate, the rmhin prize in tomorrow's elections to choose the 100th Congress and three dozen governors. The candidates themselves were still scouring for support on the final weekend of the nation's costliest midterm campaign. Voters tuned to football games got a heavy dose of political commercials along with the customary ones selling beer. Both sides predicted Democrats would improve their current 253- 180 majority in the House by as many as 10 seats. There was a similar agreement all around that Republicans, who now hold only 16 of 50 statehouses, would gain as many as nine more. Democratic chairman Paul Kirk said he would be greatly surprised if his party doesn't win a Senate majority. Blanchard, Lucas continue last-minute campaigning GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.-Republican gubernatorial candidate William Lucas stressed the historic nature of his bid to become the nation's first elected black governor before a mostly black congregation yesterday in Grand Rapids. Lucas, who spoke to about 200 people at Bethel Pentecostal Church, said he is a role model for blacks who persevere through hard work and study. He paraphrased the Rev. William Abney, saying, "The time has come for us to make a statement." Meanwhile in Ferndale, Gov. James Blanchard, speaking from where he made his first political speech 27 years ago, told his hometown supporters yesterday that he "must win decisively' in tomorrow's gubernatorial election. Vol. XCVii-No'43 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Bursley . . . . . East Quad . . . Couzens Hall. Law Quad . ... . .. 763-1121 ... 764-0136 . . . 764-2142 ...764-1115 Mosher Jordan . 763-9946 Markley Hal South Quad 1 . ..764-1151 ....764-0169 Stockwell 764-1194 Sa. . . . . West Quad . ....764-1111 "Understanding and Mastering the MCA T" A Seminar on the MCAT's Design and the Successful Student's Battle Plan Featured Topics Include: . 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