100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

April 17, 1981 - Image 28

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-04-17

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

41 1P111111111111111111111111 1 111111.1111111.11.1111111111111111111111P

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

28 Friday, April 17, 1981 •

HIAS' Seeks
Ex-Russians

Henry, Helen, Martin & Harriet Matter
and the staff of

M LTER

NEW YORK — HIAS, the
Hebrew Immigrant Aid
Society, is seeking to locate,
Jews who lived in or around
the communities • of
Baranovichi, Stolpchi or
Mezvish, in Byelorussia
(White Russia) during the
period 1941-1944 about a
matter of importance.
Call or write Joseph
Edelman of HIAS about this
matter at 200 Park Ave. S.,
New York, N.Y., 10003,
(212) 674-6800.

Designers of Fine Furs
Complete Fir Service

.e.A.tior—sac

OF HARVARD ROW

Wish Their Customers & Friends

A HAPPY PASSOVER

Phone: 358-0850 11 Mile & Lahser



Best Wishes for a happy,

healthy and joyous Passover

to the entire community

DO AD

Zit

SALES and
EXPERT SERVICE

ART MORAN PONTIAC

353-9000

29300 TELEGRAPH

JUST NORTH Of TEL•TWELVE MALL

1HE S1DDLT R O1' "12I -IF
_ CONCENTRATION CAMP

Out of the horrible ye-arS of World War II, of the Nazi terror,
and the death camps, have. come inspiring tales of bravery and
heroism. One of these is about a Prayer Book composed in an
extraordinary, wondrous manne•.

pr, ,soner, .. A Camp Treol.oka , alt'nouv torturt:d..md
the
scmen,., •, Keep on acccent
,
CalEntl.r,itar•

.'he hay .

Poe5

71

e.uil be ,riere

`. r•

r);./

:no: rS h0.2

Creaitd. tjw1 SCrar,

(r -teat
t
11

,•1e

J/R/Cr,,c'

:ctbef ,



IT:Secret at

tre ,r1b 1 : , S11•

lamvir,t , •■•■ka
tiuy

c 1,

"

,11

,Nr), I co 'It

ti,11•K



r)(2 , 1aZ3t1, ,,,J1»,r);41in,..) , 1h( pt•t-i0k.r.,
On a flash hi.; 11, Jett o
J lecvtnt $••V_ICe•
C,•1,„;•es..), atic,t)



Uaf

1

pie (A..y.)tll , /ca.;
C. Lc rd.

JERUSALEM (JNI) —
The number of Israelis liv-
ing below the poverty line
has been rising steadily
since 1978 after a decade
which saw a consistent re-
duction of the poverty gap,
the Central Bureau of
Statistics reported. The in-
creasing poverty is attrib-
uted -.to inflation-spurred
erosion of the real value of
child allowances and other
National Insurance Insti-
tute benefits.
The number of families
with incomes below the
poverty line rose from two
percent in 1977 to 3.3 per-
cent in 1978 and 3.8 percent
in 1979. Researchers expect
the soon-to-be-released
1980 figures to show a simi-
lar increase, due to an infla-
tion rate hovering around
130 percent.
The poverty line is set at
one-fifth of the average
worker's income.
Poverty among Israeli
Jews, however, remains
a fraction of the level in

Nuclear Advocate

JERUSALEM (JN1') —
From every aspect, the time
is ripe for Israel to buy nu-
clear power plants, Techn-
ion President Amos Horev
has told a Knesset subcom-
mittee on nuclear power
generation.
Israel can buy nuclear
power plants at increas-
ingly convenient terms to-
day, Horev explained, be-
cause their foreign man-
ufacturers have excess
production capacity. Horev
also reported on technologi-
cal innovations which
would reduce the cost of
producing electricity and
decrease Israel's depen-
dence on foreign oil. Israeli
know-how could provide
auxiliary installations or
even complete plant compo-
nents, Horev stated.



JERUSALEM (ZINS) —
An Israeli industrial
worker makes less per hour
than similar workers in 11
industrial countries accord-
ing to a survey by the Israel
Ministry of Commerce.
The Israeli worker earns ,
$3.80 per hour. Average
rates for other countries
are: Sweden, $11.40; Ger-
many, Holland and Bel-
gium, $11.30; the U.S.,
$8.20; Canada, $8; Italy,
$7.40; and Japan, $5.60.

Pesach Discount

ge31 W/34 3 for

a

h appy and ioyou3

P

a33over to ail

Mr. and Mrs. Max Stottman
Mr. Phillip Stottman
and Families



Diaspora communities
such as the U.S. A 1975
study by the city of New
York found 20 percent of
that city's Jewish popu-
lation living at or near the
poverty line set by the
U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics.

Likewise, 1973 studies
found similar statistics in
Los Angeles, Philadelphia,
Miami, Chicago, San Fran-
cisco and Boston.

TEL AVIV (ZINS) —
From 1971 to 1980, 250,000
Jews left the Soviet Union,
which is 13 percent of the
Jewish population, accord-
ing to the 1980 census. Of
these, 160,000 came to Is-
rael, about two-thirds of the
total.
Soviet immigration com-
prised nearly half of the
aliya in the decade just
ended.

Respect the stranger —
and remain suspicious.

BUCKLES UNL= IMITED

~

MASADA

BUCKLES

Solid Brass, Made in Israel.
Also 20 more Israeli im-
ported buckles.

BUCKLES

PEARL SCISSORS

"THE BUCKLE LADY"

$920

$A50

3 for 512.50

—Ir

2240 COOLIDGE

.

EACH

Farmington

Monday thru Saturday 10-6 -- Free Parking
5 BLKS. N. OF-11 MILE

35171 Grand River

545-6885

474-0055

1 /2 blk. E. of Drake

Drakeshire Shopping Center

BERKLEY, MI. 48072

r

IIMO

MI NMI =I MI NM MI NMI 11.1

" Vo.
,s
,'s. .%.,

‹, ,</ c < •(`


-, ..•()
c).., -
'
4
C.
"LZ/AA\ ' • Z ` ' 0

,v,

\4 & <1;\
'
,<(./4
t x '

c.) \ , ;z,,

‘?-

0,
\)s
P ° QT 11/4.

4k■

d‘

'' N

«,k/

I

,



c,
8,`'z'
e
AA cb
■ TL 4, ok rIC'
^
A

I

a 'S

CI

,,

0

v ,,,,,\,,- ,c2 /

\



I

,(4 ,-

A.)

I

1

I

Lower Wages

c.3ch
ronemp2 ,,
ekieljd

. I di..W/
enit ,tY,
• /. 5

t,,,•

■ 1

c j

Soviet Emigres

Israeli Poor Are Growing

JERUSALEM (JNI) —
Israeli consumers will re-
ceive financial aid from
large food chains and food
processors to help ease the
expense of - Passover cele-
brations. A price-cutting
campaign on basic products'
for Pesach will reduce costs
by 10-25'percent.

Koch Gives View

NEW YORK — Mayor
Edward Koch told the
American-Arab Association
for Commerce and Industry
on Tuesday that Jordan is
the Palestinian state and
that he opposes the creation
of a Palestinian state be-
tween Israel and Jordan.

NOW OPEN.

FINEST
LUXURY CAR SERVICE CENTER

in the Detroit area.

Dedicated. to providing

High Quality Repairs

to the discriminating owner of

Jaguar—M.G.—Triumph
Rover—Mercedes—Audi
BMW and
other fine automobiles

Accepting Appointments

SAMPLE AUTO SERVICE Inc.

14611 W. 11 Mile Rd.
548-3366
Oak Park

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan