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September 07, 1990 - Image 54

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-09-07

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

CONGREGATION
SHAAREY SHOMAYIM
High Holiday Services

NEWS Immimml

Will be held at

Jewish Community Center
Prentis Branch
15110 W. Ten Mile, Oak Park

RABBI PINCHOS BRAUNSTEIN

"In my opinion
Franklin Club
Apartments is
an academy
award winning
place to live.
At Franklin
the residents
receive "STAR"
treatment."

AND

DR. MORDECHAI WALDMAN

Bill Kennedy
Actor & TV Host

Franklin Club Apartments Luxury Retirement
Community offering an Established Tradition of
Excellence at affordable prices. From $640
including utilities, additional services & amenities
available.

For information contact 353-2810

LIN •
T NTS

CLUB

can

28301 Franklin Rd.
Southfield, MI 48034

DISCOUNTS

sell jewelry. • •

Will Officiate
Traditional Liturgy.

RABBI LEO Y. GOLDMAN
Will Deliver the Sermons.
For reservations call the of-
or
547-8555
fice,
542-4444 or members of
the ticket committee:

Traditional Hebrew English
Prayer Book Available Free.
Our Daily services and classes
throughout the year are held
every morning and evening,
15110 W. 10 Mile, Oak Park.

but t NOBODY provides SE.RV ICE and
Anybody
like Weintraub. 'THERE IS .P. DIFFERENCE.

" 29536 Northwestern Hvvy., Southfield
Hours: M - F 10 - 5:30
10 - 5
,.Sunset Strip
Sat

BOOKS
We Buy and Sell
Good Used Books

LIBRARY BOOKSTORE

545-4300

Open 7 Days

A Selective Jewish Dating Service

Books Bought
in Your Home M. Sempliner

Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results
Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060

54 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1990

Instant Photo Favors
For Your Party
Michelle
Patti
855-5269
626.4782

"Where You Come First"

Kosins

Uptown
Southfield Rd. at
11 1/2 Mile • 559-3900

Big & Tall
Southfield at
101/2 Mile • 569-6930

Joblessness
In Israel Rises

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel's
already gloomy job picture
could darken considerably in
the years ahead, according
to the latest forecast by the
Ministry of Labor and Social
Affairs.
The rate of unemployment
may reach 15 percent by the
end of 1992, the ministry
reports. In absolute terms,
this means more than
250,000 Israelis
unemployed, compared to
165,000 currently without
jobs.
The forecast, prepared by
the ministry's director gen-
eral, Shmuel Slavin, was
presented this week to the
ministerial employment
committee and a committee
of directors general that
deals with immigrant ab-
sorption.
According to the dismal
forecast, some 45,000
Israelis will join the pool of
unemployed labor for each of
the next three years. And
this does not take into ac-
count the new immigrants
who will arrive.
The immigrants are ex-
pected to add from 80,000 to
90,000 names to the roster of
unemployed Israelis every
year. That estimate is based
on a predicted immigration
rate of 150,000 to 200,000
every year.
Some 1,025,000 Israelis
are employed in the private
sector and another 450,000
are employed in the public
sector.

Soviets Receive
Yiddish Books

New York (JTA) — Twelve
hundred miles may seem
like a long distance to travel
to deliver a book, but three
American Jews felt that
their mission was worth the
trip.
Aaron Lansky, Kenneth
Turan and Janice Rubin
delivered more than 6,000
previously forbidden
Yiddish books to Jewish
groups in Latvia, Lithuania
and Estonia.
Sponsored by the National
Yiddish Book Center, head-
quartered in Amherst,
Mass., the expedition
brought urgently needed
Yiddish primers, classroom
texts and library volumes to
newly established Jewish
schools in the Baltic states.
After renting a truck in
Stockholm, the group trav-
eled to Tallinn, the capital of
Estonia, where they picked
up the books that had been
previously shipped.

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