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June 08, 1990 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-06-08

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

I INSIGHT I

New
Arrivals

J

European crafted cribs
and furniture plus
unique bedding and
accessories provide the
ideal background for
that Very Important
Baby. Bellini also offers
youth furniture that
grows with your child.

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1 Block North of 14 Mile

644-0525

ri

F

Creates
- Nails
, The Way
Nature Intended .. .

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"more than
just a car
wash"

■ STYLES, LENGTHENS &
STRENGTHENS your own nails
to the length you want.
■ NO MESS, NO MIXING, as easy
as applying nail polish.
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home for about $2.00
■ HELPS PREVENT Your nails
from chipping, splitting and
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■ SOFT and SAFE U.V. lamp bonds
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■ POLISH is optional over LUMt.
■ Contains NO FORMALDEHYDE.
■ Resists fungus growth, lifting,
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nail bed.
■ Can be used with tips for instant
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■ Bonds to acrylic nails — can be
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No more band aids while waiting
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■ Tested and proven in professional
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Stop in at any one of our 10 locations, or call 353-4700.

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Present this ad for a T1
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36

FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1990

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Displacing Israelis

Continued from preceding page

their apartments to olim
(immigrants). A pressure
group called Young People
Without Housing has al-
ready formed in Be'er Sheva,
and similar groups are
taking shape in Haifa, Tel
Aviv and other cities. Their
goal is to pressure the
government into offering
help to young Israelis — es-
pecially those who have done
their military service —
equal to that being given the
immigrants.
Competition in the job
market is also a potential
concern for many young
people. At present, most of
the immigrants are still
learning Hebrew, and few
can compete effectively with
native-born Israelis, but
there is worry that the flood
of highly educated and expe-
rienced olim will eventually
dominate some professions,
particularly engineering
and medicine.
"These doctors and engi-
neers may be great for the
country's future," said a re-
cently demobilized soldier
named Charlie. "But what
about me? I wanted to go to
medical school. Now its im-
possible for doctors to earn a
living here. In a few years, if
this keeps up, there'll be one
on every corner. People like
me will have to go abroad to
make a living."
It is, in fact, ironic that one
of the by-products of the
mass immigration could well
be a growth in the number of
native- born Israelis who
emigrate. In a survey recent-
ly conducted by the Israeli
army, 22 percent of new

recruits said that they in-
tended to leave Israel per-
manently after finishing
their military service. Most
educators agree that the
primary reason for such
emigration is the sense
among young people that
economic opportunities in
Israel are limited.
Economists here point out
that mass immigration will
eventually be an economic
benefit to the country, and
enlarge the national pie for
veteran Israelis as well as
new olim. Some Israelis
have already found jobs in
construction-related in-
dustries or in commercial
ventures that cater to the
newcomers. But there is
little doubt that, in the short
term, the resettlement of
hundreds of thousands of
penniless immigrants will
place a burden on already
over-taxed Israelis, and
sharply reduce the resources
available to young couples
and students.
Under the circumstances,
friction is inevitable. But
despite the grumbling and
the emigration, most Israelis
are prepared to remain in
the country, and to pay the
price of absorbing the
newcomers.
"The Russians are Jews in
trouble, and if Israel is about
anything, it's about helping
Jews," said a 23 year old Tel
Aviv woman named Micki.
"My rent has already gone
up, and it may be harder for
me to find a job, but that's
life. After all, this is my
country, but it's their coun-
try, too." ❑

'Kill Them All,' Terrorists
Ordered In Tel Aviv Raid

Tel Aviv (JTA) — One of
the leaders of the seaborne
terrorists captured in an
aborted attack on Israeli
beaches last week painted a
picture of mass murder and
mayhem that would have oc-
curred had any part of their
plan succeeded.
Ahmed Muhammed Yusuf
— code name "Abu
Ashash"—identified as
deputy commander of the
mission, told Israel Radio in
an interview Tuesday that
their orders were to "wreak
havoc" on Tel Aviv's
beachfront hotels and sur-
rounding residential areas.
According to the
Jerusalem Post Foreign Ser-
vice, Israel Radio's Arab af-
fairs reporter Aharon
Barnea quoted Yusuf as re-
lating that they were or-
dered to shell hotels and
houses from the sea, with

107 mm Katyushas, 23 mm
cannons, and machine guns
and then kill every person
they saw. They were ordered
to enter the Sheraton hotel
and kill everybody there as
well.
"Don't leave anyone alive.
Kill them all . . . children,
women, elderly people,"
Barnea quoted Youssef as
having reported.
He also disclosed the close
involvement of Libya's
military authorities in plan-
ning and training for the
speedboat attack on May 30,
the Shavuot holiday.
It was carried out by the
Palestine Liberation Front,
a constituent group of the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization headed by Mohamm-
ed Abul Abbas.
Abu Ashash, 28, said he
and 20 fellow-terrorists
trained for 18 months at a

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