NEWS 1st Anniversary Celebration (tc 10 % OFF WHOONLEACLALKES ► El • Expires 7/31/90 Mon.-Wed. 10 o.m.-6 p.m. Thurs.-Sat. 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Continued from Page 74 • 1%- • Chocolate Raspberry • German Chocolate Cake • Brownie Cake • Pecan Crust Cheesecake • Apple Walnut • Chocolate Swirl Cheesecake 7 Russian Midwest 66 • • - 207 South Main 4 1 Block South of 11 Mile Royal Oak A 544-0995 MasterCard V :43:4rWM4PMR,WMMOMMN,MMWMM4WMMWWWft1W.:'WN, w . A mm, Mek A , • 6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. • W. Bloomfield • 851-9666 SUNDAY 8 TO 3 OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 TO 6 THE FINEST SMOKED FISH & DELI TRAYS EAT SMOKED FISH LIVE BETTER. HAND CUT NOVA LOX . „::• •• Hook into the . Quality, Variety & Service ..cJ,\,....- ' SEAFOOD COOKING DEMONSTRATION Saturday, July 14, 10 a.m.-12 noon By Chef Roger Sutton of the Peabody's Restaurant Free Recipes & Samples! Open to the Public Ideal for the Grill: Fresh Hawaiian Sliced -NOVA LOX $i 295 Exp. 7-23-90 mm ... . . 8 J 1 - ----t-- 12 Wes' From, : - 12, . § 1 .. it 17- 9 Mies , From N MAHI MAHI $595 lb. .5_ . • . TO GO BRAND NAME BULBS FOR EVERY TYPE OF FIXTURE, DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME OR BUSINESS. *Hard to find specialty bulbs *Energy saving bulbs *Assistance with effective & efficient alternative lighting. CALL FOR FREE CATALOG 661-4400 FREE DELIVERY-MIN. $50 ORDER MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED Exp. 7-23-90 SUPERIOR FISH CO. 4 ,, 1̀2. (?) 11 Mile0 to -' 5 — 0, mks , 1-696 F Quality House of Quali Serving Metropolitan Detroit for Over 40 Years FREE Recipes Mon.-Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-1 WE SHIP FURNITURE 309 E. Eleven Mile Rd., Royal Oak • 541-4632 TRY BOTTLED WATER WITHOUT THE BOTTLE 3 4 PER GALLON FREE 5 DAY TRIAL CALL: 478-3842 76 FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1990 promising at the time. The Jewish community in Lin- coln, the state capital, helped out by taking two families and four single men every two months. Besides the IRO, the Chicago-based Jewish Agriculturalists' Aid Society was also instrumental in moving Jews to the prairie states. The society was con- fident that the peddler or tailor from the East Coast cities would have no difficulty earning a living as a farmer. Between 1888 and 1908, 430 farms in the Midwest were settled by a total of 1,874 Jews. The most pop- .ular state was North Dakota, where 40 percent of the new farmers settled. The society wanted them to homestead, thinking that when the Jews saw the soil being improved by their own efforts, they would settle permanently on the farms. But such was not the case. Most who came to try their hand at farming stayed less than 10 years. Many left after two to three years. ❑ Jewish Telegraphic Agency '90 Soviet Jewish Influx To Israel Passes 50,000 UP I R UP , , - I# , . •..• .....FISH CO "interesting letters from immigrants themselves — from Omaha Jews seeking help in bringing friends and family, and from potential employers." According to Gendler, more than 2,000 Jews were settled in Nebraska through the IRO. An IRO agent in Omaha would correspond with an IRO agent in the East who was trying to move Jews out of crowded situa- tions in which they were unemployed. Usually before a family or wage-earner could be sent to Nebraska, jobs had to be found for them by the Omaha agent. It was impor- tant that the newly arrived Jews in Nebraska not become charity cases. Many brought to Omaha were pleased with their new liv- ing conditions and wanted relatives and friends to join them. According to Gendler, when the port of Galveston, Texas, opened in 1907, the IRO there wanted to send immigrants to Omaha. But the job situation was not 6453 FARMINGTON ROAD W. BLOOMFIELD 855-5822 MAPLE (at CRANBROOK) BIRMINGHAM 433-3070 Jerusalem (JTA) — Soviet Jews continued to arrive in Israel at a record pace last month, comprising all but a small number of olim from various parts of the world. Out of 12,600 immigrants who arrived here in June, 11,015 were Soviet Jews, the highest monthly total ever. The numbers were reported by the Jewish Agency for Israel and by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry in Washington. An additional 182 Jews left the Soviet Union for the United States in June, ac- cording to the New York- based Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, which assists those who have received permission to come to America. So far, 37,563 Soviet Jews have come to the United States since the beginning of the fiscal year last Oct. 1. The U.S. refugee quota for the fiscal year is 50,000 from the Soviet Union, about 40,000 of whom are expected to be Jews. The U.S. limits have resulted in a sharp influx of Soviet Jews to Israel. In January, a little more than 4,500 arrived here. In May, the monthly number had climbed to 10,202, which was exceeded by more than 800 in June. That brings Soviet im- migration to Israel during the first six months of 1990 to approximately 50,000, ac- cording to absorption min- ister Yitzhak Peretz. Jewish Agency officials said that 165,000 were ex- pected by the end of 1990. Roughly one million Soviet Jews, a third of the estimated Jewish population of the Soviet Union, now hold invitations from Israel, which enables them to apply for exit visas, Sara Frankel, a senior official in the government's Liaison Bu- reau for Soviet Jewry, told visiting American Jewish leaders here last month. In Washington, the Na- tional Conference said that while it is gratified by the record exodus of Jews from the Soviet Union, "we are reminded that cases of long- term refuseniks remain outstanding, and that the USSR continues to impose superfluous obstacles on those desiring to emigrate." Frankel put the number of refuseniks at 180. She said most have been waiting for visas for several years.