Best wishes for a happy, healthy N ew Yea r. MR. AND MRS. SIMON LEFKOWITZ Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. LIZ, JEFF, HALUE & JODIE ROSENBAUM ANNA B. WISE ROBERT & GLADYS YAHIA Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. MARION & SOL STEIN SANDER & EVELYN TOBIAS We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. MAX & ALICE GOLDSMITH & FAMILY lan- ..yn 7111\1 laSIDT1 MO'? nal\1 111U3 62 to all our friends and relatives. to all our friends and relatives. RONNA, ROBYN AND KEN KING PHILLIP, NORMA, ELISE & MARCY YORK AND GLADYS YORK 12,11DT1 i12.117 nav? larlDn 1. 1:115 n' U)'2 to all our friends and relatives. to all our friends and relatives. MARVIN, SUSIE, DANNY, & JEFFREY TUCHKLAPER of N.M.B. Florida • LYNN & WARREN SILVERMAN, NATHAN & JESSICA laron rallo nan I laron cval%3 Mr2 to all our friends and relatives. to all our friends and relatives. MR. AND MRS. HARRY SCHLOMPER ANNE AND SAM SUKENIC AND FAMILY A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. lar\Dn r:wo rlav? to all our friends and relatives. LILLY & MICHAEL WEISS ravo 7114V7 to all our friends and relatives. MORIS AND ELKA TAMA We wish our family and friends a, very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. NEIL, BARB, BARI AND STEPHANIE WATNICK May the coming year be filled with health and happiness foi- all our family and friends. May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all our family and friends. DR. & MRS. LOUIS HIRSCHMAN & FAMILY MR. & MRS. SAM MOSKOWITZ & NICKY & SHERRI BALBERMAN L'Shana Tova Wishing all our tamily and friends a year of health and happiness. MR. & MRS. PAUL L. SHERIZEN & FAMILY A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. MARK & SUSIE IOVAN TRI4COUNTY GLASS JERRY & FRAN UZANSKY MARCI & MARK . May the coming year be one filled with health, happiness and prosperity for all our friends and family. BALKIN PRODUCTS, INC. THE BALKIN FAMILY MICHAEL, DEBBIE, ELANA & AARON 156 Friday, October 3, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS To All Our Relatives and Friends, Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity. RICHARD AND DENISE ZUCKERMAN JULIE AND LINDSAY NEWS Study Probes Yeridah New York — In a unique survey of 71 American Jews who had gone to Israel and then returned to the United States after an extended stay, most said that they had come back because of lack of pro- fessional opportunities, the difficulties of daily life, and estrangement from certain aspects of Israeli society. Nevertheless, they also felt overwhelmingly that the American Jewish community should promote aliyah. The 24-page survey, a joint undertaking of the American Jewish Committee's Institute of American Jewish-Israeli Relations and its Jewish communal affairs depart- ment, was released in a pam- phlet titled To Israel and Back: American Aliyah and Return Migration. It con- cludes that the participants' personal religious and Jewish communal commitments in- tensified after their return to the United States. Heightened Jewish self- consciousness after their ex- perience in Israel was a typi- cal reaction. For a majority of those who returned, Israel appeared to have become more central to their lives than before be- cause they had made per- sonal friends in the country, and Israeli culture continued to influence their lives. Only a small minority indi- cated a less positive attitude toward Israel after their re- turn. They were also nearly twice as likely as before to follow Israeli news more closely. The authors of the survey, Chaim I. Waxman, professor of sociology at Rutgers Uni- versity, and Michael Appel, a student at the University of Michigan's graduate program in social work and anthropol- ogy, point out that the re- spondents indicated that their contributions to the United Jewish Appeal and their purchases of Israel Bonds had increased. Only a small minority (12.7 percent) stated that they would per- sonally discourage others from making aliyah. In this connection, it is of interest that less than half of the respondents had gone to Israel with an initial com- mitment to making aliyah. The majority had immigrated with the intention of explor- ing aliyah as only one of their objectives. Most said they had gone to Israel be- cause they thought the Jewish State would provide them with the opportunity to reinforce their commitment to Judaism and their desire to participate in a Jewish society. Thus disenchantment with Israel as a whole was not a factor in their return, which was rather primarily eco- nomic and familial in nature. The authors conclude: "Israel makes valiant (and usually successful) attempts