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. .%., ‹, ,