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THIS ISSUE 50c
H NEWS
SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY
SEPTEMBER 5, 1986 / 1 ELUL 5746
N o- I nterest Loans
For Neighborhoods
Project will provide up to $6,000 for Oak Park,
Southfield home purchases
The Neighborhood Project, to
encourage Jewish families to locate
and remain in neighborhoods in Oak
Park and Southfield, is opening an
interest-free loan program. Any
Jewish home buyer purchasing a re-
sidence within the project's bound-
aries is eligible for a loan based on
ten percent of the home purchase
price, up to $6,000.
The applicant must qualify for a
mortgage, identify a loan guarantor
and plan to live in the house. He-
brew Free Loan Association, a
member agency of the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation, will help administer
the program.
According to the Federation's
Neighborhood Project director, Har-
riet Cooper, there are no age or in-
come limitations for the loan appli-
cants. "Inquiries into the program
have come from pe--sons in all in-
come brackets," she told The Jewish
News. There has been a lot of inter-
est in the loan program. And people,
as they have read about the
Neighborhood Project, have been
discussing where they want to live."
Continued on Page 22
Violinist Seeks
Family's Aliyah
DAVID HOVEL
Staff Writer
I
4# 01A,,
Stormy Seas
Forty years seem like yesterday
for a crew member of the 'Exodus'
Anna Rosnovski had an extra
item on her agenda before she went
on stage with the Israel Philhar-
monic Orchestra at Meadowbrook,
Aug. 28: she wanted to talk about
her sister_
The 46 year old violinist and her
sister had applied together to emi-
grate from the Soviet Union in 1974.
Rosnovski said she was allowed to
leave "after two weeks." Her sister
Elena Keiss-Kuna, an electrical
engineer, was refused an exit visa
Amazing Marketplace
Births
B'nai Mitzvah
...
Business
... . .
_ Engagements
Obituaries
Danny Raskin
Singles
Synagogues
Women
Youth
86
83
83
34
76
102
57
84
30
44
85
because she knew "state secrets."
Keiss-Kuna lost her job after
her application to emigrate. "She
has been unemployed for 12 years,"
Rosnovski said. "After her first ap-
plication the Soviets said, Wait five
years,' and after five years it was,
Wait ten years,' and after ten years
it was 15 years."
Rosnovski feels that time is
running out for her family, who lives
in Leningrad. Elena's first husband,
a non-Jew, left her when she decided
to go to Israel. Their son, Andrei
Keiss, turns 17 this month. In an-
Continued on Page 24
GOING
PLACES!
Where to go,
What to do
Page 55