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In Franklin Shopping Plaza 70 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1990 FREE Municipal Bonds Listing Receive Weekly Report Member SIPC IG Ethvards & Sons, Inc I t 371/071 WN41`. 1467 BOB MORIAN 313 3364200 1-800-3654200 Tel Aviv (JTA) — Immi- grants are pouring into Israel in record numbers, but tourists are staying away in droves. The Hotel Association said Monday that tourism was down by 50 percent in September and that some 2,000 hotel employees were dismissed. A severe blow was a Swiss Foreign Office advisory in October warning Swiss na- tionals not to travel to the Middle East for the time be- ing. Switzerland has been one of the biggest sources of Eu- ropean visitors to Israel. An Israel Food Festival, an an- nual tourist promotion event to have opened in Lausanne this month, was canceled. But more than 111,000 immigrants have arrived in Israel so far this year, the vast majority from the Soviet Union, and at least 70,000 more are expected by the year's end. Those figures were provid- ed Oct. 22 by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir to the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. But an aliyah of nearly 200,000 could be a mixed blessing, given the perilous state of the Israeli economy. The Bank of Israel, the country's central bank, disclosed the same day that inflation doubled during the second quarter and is now running at a 23 percent an- nual rate. Olim arriving in the weeks ahead may find a country paralyzed in many sectors by labor strife. The hotel owners, mean- while, are offering their premises to serve as tem- porary absorption centers for arriving immigrants. They are stressing the temporary nature of their offer. As soon as tourism recovers, the olim would have to go. I NEWS I Jews Deplore Bush's Hussein-Hitler Contrast Washington (JTA) — Pres- ident Bush's assertion last week that Iraq's use of Western hostages as "human shields" had no parallel during the Third Reich has offended Jews across the political spec- trum. The fur began to fly after Mr. Bush, speaking at a po- litical rally in Massachusetts Nov. 1, blasted Saddam Hus- sein's decision to place hostages at Iraqi military in- stallations and other strategic sites. "I don't believe Adolf Hitler ever participated in anything of that nature," the president said. Mr. Bush later defended his statement: "I was told that Hitler did not stake people out against potential military targets," he said. He also claimed that Hitler, unlike Hussein, respected "the legitimacy of the em- bassies." In Los Angeles, Rabbi Ab- raham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesen- thal Center, called Mr. Bush's statements "an outrage." Hitler's acts were, in fact, "much worse" than the atrocities perpetrated by Saddam Hussein, he said. Rabbi Cooper pointed out that Hitler indeed placed concentration camp workers at strategically located munitions factories. Those human targets were killed when Allied forces bombed Nazi weapons plants, he said. The Wiesenthal Center of- ficial said that while he understands the president's need to prepare the country for the possibility of war with Iraq, Mr. Bush "doesn't have to make statements that are not factual and try to draw (Saddam Hussein) as a bigger monster." Mr. Hussein "is not Adolf Hitler — at least he isn't yet," Rabbi Cooper said. In New York, Albert Vorspan, senior vice presi- dent of the Union of Ameri- can Hebrew Congregations, agreed. While "Mr. Bush is to be commended for effectively leading the world against the brutal aggression of Saddam Hussein," the pres- ident's "rhetorical Com- parison arguing that the Iraqi despot is even worse than Adolf Hitler is overblown and offensive," he said in a statement. "To compare him with the monster who organized the Holocaust" is "insensitive