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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

November 02, 1990 - Image 70

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-11-02

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

N EWS Immml•••

MI IN
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UNDER
ONE ROOF





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New York (JTA) — A new
chromosomal engineering
technique by the Weizmann
Institute of Science's
Department of Plant
Genetics has produced an
unprecedented increase of
up to 40 percent in the yields
of Israeli durum wheat, used
for making pastas, and an
increase of up to 15 percent
in the yield of Israeli bread
wheat.
The novel techniques, first
used in wheat harvests on
experimental breeding plots
near Rehovot, were de-
veloped and refined by Pro-
fessor Moshe Feldman and
Dr. Eitan Millet. The
technique is based on the
transfer of genes from wild
wheat to cultivated
varieties.
Although wild wheat pro-
duces smaller yields than
cultivated wheat, its grain
protein percentage is almost
double that of the cultivated
species. Feldman and Millet
determined which genes in
wild wheat are responsible
for its high grain protein
percentage, identified the
chromosomes in which they
reside and successfully
transferred these genes to
cultivated wheat.

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70

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1990

Official Gets
Freedom Award

Washington (JTA) —
Despite human rights im-
provements for Soviet Jews,
advocacy work on their
behalf is "far from being
completed," a senior State
Department official said this
week.
Richard Schifter, assistant
secretary of state for human
rights and humanitarian af-
fairs, spoke to the National
Conference on Soviet
Jewry's leadership assembly
here after receiving its 1990
Light of Freedom award.
Mr. Schifter said that 25
Jews remain long-term
refuseniks in the Soviet
Union, although he ac-
knowledged that number is
a far cry from the 14,000
refuseniks included on a
1986 NCSJ list presented to
Soviet officials at the super-
power summit that year in
Reykjavik, Iceland.
Mr. Schifter added that the
Soviets have yet to remove
one of their barriers to
emigration, that of the
power of family members to
block relatives from leaving
if they rely on them for fi-
nancial support.

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