Our Community's Financial
Needs Are Growing...

KUDOS page 45

shop, with a customer apprecia-
tion weekend Sept. 9 and 10.
Ten years ago, Ms. Dunsky, of
Bloomfield Hills, purchased the
store, made some changes and
added a specialty in mastectomy
fittings.
Ms. Dunsky, who had a back-
ground in retailing, was looking
to do something different pro-
fessionally when she learned this
store was for sale.
Outside the job, she is active
in the Michigan Cancer Foun-
dation and Gilda's Club.

KUDOS

Larry Gomezano

imiwo•
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velopment services with the ad-
ministration of Mayor Dennis
Archer.

II

HARRIET DUNSKY is cele-

brating the 60th anniversary of
Bobette, her Waterford lingerie

... And So Are We.

Little Change In Budget

Soon the West Bloomfield area will be able to experience
our unique style of banking as we extend our reach into your
community.

The Israeli cabinet easily ap-
proved the 1995 budget, which
differs little from this year's
spending program except for larg-
er tax cuts and a slightly smaller
deficit.
Only Industry and Trade Min-
ister Micha Harish and Economy
and Planning Minister Shimon
Shetreet voted against the pro-
posal.
As in years past, the budget in-
cludes a series of structural re-
forms aimed at increasing the
economy's competitiveness and

Currently under construction is our newest branch at
Maple and Haggerty Roads. Join us this fall for our Grand
Opening.

Metrobank

11;1

EQUAL HOUSING
LENDER

(810) 474-6400

Do you have an item for "Kudos?"'
Please send it to Steve Stein at The
Jewish News, 27676 Franklin,
Southfield, MI 48034. A picture
would be appreciated. It can be col-
or or black-and-white, but it must
be in focus. If you wish to have the
picture returned, you must enclose
a self-addressed, stamped envelope.

Member
FDIC

its efficiency.
Treasury budget director David
Brodet pointed to the implemen-
tation of these reforms as the tick-
et to a developed economy.
He said that by the end of the
year, the country will reach a per
capita income of $14,000. Should
the pace of reform continue, Mr.
Brodet said, Israel's per capita in-
come will reach $20,000 by the
end of the century, matching the
developed nations' living stan-
dard.

A Burst Of Business

Specialties

We Wish Everyone
A Very Happy And
Healthy New Year.

THANK YOU FOR
YOUR PATRONAGE

KOSHER-PAREVE

kED

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968•NOSH (6674)
1.800-968•NOSH

Out-Of-State
Local & Nationwide Delivery

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46

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Give
someone
hope.

Shia' VOlurine
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hines • Blue Print

ree, No Cost, No Obligation
on in Your Office or Home

Give to the United Way.

.

(810) 589-4700

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FMCS P12.1109.1

Business turnover in Israel
jumped 14 percent in real terms
during the first half of the year,
reflecting a burst of business ac-

tivity, the Central Bureau of Sta-
tistics reported. The increase fol-
lows a 9 percent rise last year and
an 11 percent increase in 1992.

Summer Camps Push
Jewish Identity

Jerusalem (JTA) — Forty-five
percent of the youths who par-
ticipate in Jewish Agency sum-
mer camps in the former Soviet
Union want to live in Israel, while
61 percent want to study here,
according to results of a survey
recently released by the Jewish
Agency.
Before the summer program,
the number who wanted to live
in Israel was 39 percent and
those who wanted to study in Is-
rael numbered 56 percent.
The Guttman Institute for
Practical Social Research sur-

veyed 2,976 youngsters who par-
ticipated in last year's Jewish
Agency camps to assess if the
camps strengthened Jewish iden-
tity and ties to Israel.
The number of youths who ex-
pressed an identification with the
Jewish people worldwide in-
creased over the summer from 79
percent to 89 percent.
The number of those who ex-
pressed a feeling of closeness to
"the concept of Jerusalem" in-
creased from 66 percent to 77 per-
cent.

