Save 20%-25% A Yemenite grandfather and his grandson study together. Our Anniversary Sale Gets Better Every Year. It's Heslop's 18th Anniversary! To cele- brate, we're holding our biggest Anniversary Sale yet, with savings of 20% to 25% on near- ly everything in our stores. Don't miss out on these savings — because a sale like this only comes around once a year. Sale dates July 22 - August 1st. SAVE 2096-25% on dinnerware. Fine china and everyday dinner- ware by Fitz & Floyd, Gorham, Block, Dansk, Lenox, Mikasa, - • Noritake, Royal Doulton, Royal Worcester, Spode, Wedgwood and more.* SAVE 20%-25% on crystal stemware. Atlantis, Gorham, Lenox, Mikasa, Noritake, Sasaki, Schott Cristal, Wedgwood and more.* SAVE 20%-25% on elegant flatware. Sterling, silverplated, goldplated and stainless flat- ware by Fraser, Gorham, Mikasa, Oneida, Reed & Barton, Retroneau, Towle, Yamazaki and more.* SAVE 20%-25% on gifts and collectibles. Porcelain figurines, crystal keepsakes, silver- plated treasures and more.* 'Offer may not be combined with any other discount and does not apply to previously discounted merchandise. Other restric- tions may apply. Please ask your salesperson for details. Ann Arbor (313) 761-1002 Lansing (517) 321-6261 Roseville (313) 293-5461 Dearborn Heights (313) 274-8200 Grand Rapids (616) 957-2145 Livonia (313) 522-1850 Novi (313) 349-8090 Sterling Heights (313) Kalamazoo (616) 327-7513 Okemos (517) 349-4008 Troy (313) 589-1433 Southfield (313) 357-2122 247 - 811 Rochester (313) 375-0823 Hang Your Television... ff WALL • Many Models & Colors Available • Simple Installation • Perfect for home & office • Dealers Wanted • Retail/Wholesale For sales information, call — Midwest Television Communications - 313-960-3737 41111=111111111MMII 4•111111 41•111 ■1■ .6111101111/ 200 Yemenite Jews Made Secret Aliyah Jerusalem (JTA) — About 200 Yemenite Jews have secretly immigrated to Israel during the past year, the government publicly disclosed for the first time this week. The Yemenites, most of whom have close family relatives already living in Israel, are presently housed in absorption centers in Rehovot and Ashkelon. The government had until now kept the operation secret out of fear that disclosure would jeopardize the welfare of Jews remain- ing in Yemen as well as the chances of bringing more of them here. The chairman of the Jew- ish Agency's Immigration and Absorption Department, Uri Gordon, visited the newcomers in Rehovot and said at a news conference there that some 900 Jews remain in Yemen, most of them in the capital of Sa'ana. He said they are not in any danger. Other reports put the number of Jews remaining in Yemen at close to 1,500. The newcomers have re- tained their traditional garb and appearance: the men with long curled sidelocks, beards and big colorful yar- mulkes, and the women in long dresses. In deference to their tradi- tions, they are being taught Hebrew in segregated ulpan classes. The absorption of the Yemenite Jews has been the subject of bitter controversy between fervently Orthodox parties inside and outside the government. Degel HaTorah, a faction of the opposition United Torah Judaism Front, claims the immigrants are being deliberately stripped of their Orthodoxy by ex- posure to the secular side of Israeli life. Degel HaTorah blames the Sephardic Orthodox Shas party, a member of the governing coalition, for these supposed problems. But a Shas party official directly involved in the Yemenites' absorption, Deputy Housing Minister Aryeh Gamliel, hotly denied these accusations — as do government and Jewish Agency officials. Jewish Graves Are Vandalized New York (JTA) — In an an- ti-Semitic attack unusual for Finland, vandals have over- turned and smashed gravestones in a Jewish cemetery in the western town of Turku, the World Jewish Congress reported this week. About 125 headstones were toppled and some broken, according to a report from the Finnish news agen- cy. Only the left side of the cemetery was hit, said a Jewish source from Turku who asked not to be iden- tified. "It was preplanned; they had all the equipment they needed," he said. Finnish authorities said they had no leads to identify those responsible for the at- tack on the cemetery. But the source from Turku said there has been a small group of neo-Nazis active in Finland since the 1970s. So although there is "no evidence, there are ideas" who did it. ❑ cL\