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February 09, 1990 - Image 52

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-02-09

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

I BUSINESS I

Chelsea Community Hospital presents:

MIGRAINE & OTHER HEADACHES

What's New And What You Should Know

IA1 May Open
Illinois Plant

Special Guest Speaker: JOEL R. SAPER, M.D., F.A.C.P.

Author, Educator, & Headache Authority

Tel Aviv (JTA) — The
government-owned Israel Air-
craft Industries may open a
plant in Illinois.
The IAI is negotiating
with the state, whose gover-
nor, James Thompson, is
presently in Israel with a
delegation of 50 Illinois
businessmen.
Thompson's press secre-
tary, David Fields, said the
governor hopes to initial an
agreement when he visits
the IAI plant in Lod this
week. The delegation is on a
nine-day mission to promote
foreign investments in their
home state.
The planned American
subsidiary would be located
in Rockford, a city less than
100 miles northwest of
Chicago, and would be used
to recondition U.S. Army
helicopters for sale to third
countries.
IAI is not new to the
United States. It already has
an aircraft maintenance
plant in Miami, Fla.
Fields said Illinois is offer-
ing special incentives —
which he did not specify —
to induce investments, and
several other American
states are doing the same.

Director of the Michigan Head•Pain & Neurological Institute

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1990

• Who Gets Headaches and Why
• Myth, Fact and Fiction of Headaches

• Headaches, Women, & Hormones
• Headaches in Children

• What Patients Can Do for Themselves

• Headaches & Stress

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6:30 - 7:00 p.m. Educational Material Distribution & Refreshments
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8:00 - 9:00 p.m. Questions & Answers, General Discussion

CALL 475-4004

To Register or for Additional Information

Women's Health Center
Chelsea Community Hospital
775 South Main Street
Chelsea, Michigan 48118

There is no charge for this
lecture thanks to a generous
educational grant from
Sandoz Pharmaceuticals

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FIREPLACE

This is a test advertisement.
If you bring in this advertisement
you will get an additional
10% OFF the sale price of
any fireplace glass door.

Offer expires February 12, 1990.

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Call The Jewish News

354.6060

52

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1990

1

He said he hoped Rockford
gets the IAI plant, which
would generate 150 jobs.
The project hinges on IAI
getting the U.S. Defense
Department contract for
reconditioning helicopters.
The Israeli industry has bid
against competing firms.
The successful bidder will
not be known until April.

Bill Glogower

BILL GLOGOWER has
been named vice president of
sales for Teitel Brokerage, Inc.

South African Jews
Pleased With Reforms

New York (JTA) — New
hope for political reform in
South Africa is giving the
Jews in that country a more
upbeat vision of their future,
said B'nai B'rith Interna-
tional President Seymour
Reich after a recent visit
there.
Reich, who is also chair-
man of the Conference of
Presidents of Major Ameri-
can Jewish Organizations,
met with South African
President F.W. deKlerk,
who announced a series of
sweeping reforms.
DeKlerk said that black
nationalist leader Nelson
Mandela would soon be
released from prison and
that 36 banned opposition
groups, including Mandela's
African National Congress,
could now operate legally.
During his visits to the
Jewish communities of
Pretoria Cape Town and
Johannesburg, Reich said he
did not sense the atmosphere
of "foreboding" he felt on
previous trips.
In recent years, scores of
South African Jews, an-
ticipating unending racial
strife and instability in their

country, have emigrated,
settling in Israel, the United
States or Australia.
Now, with the prospect of
peaceful political reform and
the possible end of sanctions
that have led foreign firms
to leave South Africa, those
in the Jewish community
are beginning to believe that
there may be a future for
them in South Africa, Reich
said.
"President deKlerk
assured me that the process
of political evolution, while
not subject to any timetable,
is under way and irreversi-
ble," Reich said. "He is
committed to negotiations
leading to power-sharing."
But deKlerk warned Reich
that political change will
not be meaningful without
the foreign capital.
Leaders of the Mass Dem-
ocratic Movement, the polit-
ical arm of the African Na-
tional Congress, gave Reich
the opposite message, telling
him that economic sanctions
imposed by foreign nations
have been effective in
pressuring the white South
African government toward
political reform.

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