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November 27, 1981 - Image 44

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-11-27

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

44 Friday, November 21, 19131

Nobel Laureate
to Live in Israel

Miami Beach Elects Norman Ciment

MIAMI BEACH — The
new mayor of Miami Beach,
Norman Ciment, is a Sab-
bath observant Jew who de-
feated the incumbent mayor
on a platform of law and
order and better city serv-
ices.
Ciment and his wife have
three sons who attend the
Greater Miami Hebrew

JERUSALEM (JNI) —
Haim Ben-Avraham,
better-known throughout
the world as Christian
Enfanson, 1972 Nobel Prize
winner in chemistry, has
come from the United
States to settle in Israel fol-
lowing decades of work with
the Weizmann Institute.

Under Supervision of
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NORMAN CIMENT
Academy. The family are
members of Beth Israel
Congregation and Ciment is
a past president of the
largest Men's ORT chapter
in Florida. He is also a
member of Bnai Brith.

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ing politely, as in talking
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—Atwell

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Specials Good thru December 3

for

REHOVOT — Scientists
are now paying between $10
and $100 for laboratory
mice and rats to be used for
research, according to Dr.
Asher Meshorer, head of the
Animal Breeding Center at
the Weizmann Institute.
The scientist needs spe-
cial animals for his experi-
ments and just as the
equipment he needs must be
made to specification, so the
laboratory animal must be
bred and then kept in exact
conditions to ensure uni-
form results, Dr. Meshorer
said.
Not only are the mice
bred to genetic specifica-
tions, taking care that cer-

tain inherited traits are
preserved, but they are also
kept in strict isolation.

Most stock is derived
from colonies where the
original pairs were deliv-
ered straight into a sterile
isolator by caesarian sec-
tion, then kept through-
out their lives in a con-
trolled environment,
where no bacteria can
come in contact with
them.

Food and bedding is deli-
vered to the isolator
through an air lock that re-
sembles a mini-spaceship
and all care is performed
from outside by the use of
inserted sleeves with rub-

Film Stars Israeli Actress

By LOUISE

(Copyright 1981. JTA, Inc.)

gry, humors her when
she's dejected and begs

bar gloves, according to Dr.
Meshorer.
The reasons for these pre-
cautions are simple: bacte-
rial experiments cannot be
performed on infected ani-
mals; immunological exper-
iments demand freedom
from certain chemicals that
might confuse the results
and most cancer experi-
ments, as well as a host of
others, depend on
genetically-susceptible or
resistant strains.
The Weizmann Institute
Breeding Center maintains
colonies of strains of
genetically-thilored ani-
mals, including "nude mice"
which have no hair and no
thymus gland, cancer-prone
mice, cancer-resistant mice,
leukemia-prone mice and a
host of others, including
animals kept over a period
of several years for research
on aging.
According
to
Dr.
Meshorer, the science of
tailor-made animals is only
beginning and the Weiz-
mann Institute is in the
forefront of the production
of the right animal for the
right experiment, produc-
ing half a million animals
per year for scientists in Is-
rael and abroad.

The Finance Ministry of her father not to send her
Israel recently held a recep- mother away to a
tion to honor Gila Almagor sanitarium.
as "one of Israel's finest ac-
It's an incredible story —
tresses."
the young child looking
The recent film, "The after the needs of a parent.
Thin Line," in which she The film is filled with
stars, has just premiered in warmth, poignancy and
the United States. The re- compassion. It is by no
views have been excep- means morbid or maudlin;
tional, including that of just a depiction of what a
Variety which states: troubled mind endures and
"Several scenes are the effect it has on one's
standouts — the performers loved ones.
blend so completely into
their roles — that it's not
& Sect/ rated
Vcude 4
possible to resist the reality
of their situations. Specifics
. 22101 Coolidge 4111*.4
of life in Tel Aviv and at the
1 Block So of 9 Mi
kibutz where the young girl
is sent to school, ring as
completely realistic."
The movie's locale is set
We Bone-Skin-Grind-Fish Free
on the outskirts of Tel Aviv.
It is the story of a beautiful,
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sensitive, high-strung
young woman (played by
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Almagor) who gradually
shows signs of instability
and depression. Always
To top off that delightful
meticulous in her habits,
Thanksgiving meal (if it's milchig),
she becomes careless about
her household chores —
bring out C'EST BON!
forgetful about where she
puts things — and gets
quite hysterical when she
cannot find her 11-year-old
daughter (Aya Veirov) at a
local beach. When the child
emerges from the bat-
hhouse, the mother is un-
able to compose herself.

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Her youngest girl, a
nine-year-old (List
Pansky), seems to be the
only one who can act as
an intermediary between
her now despondent
mother and father (Alex
Peleg). Patiently, the
child - encourages her to
eat when she's not hun- -

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TEL AVIV (JNI) —
Twenty-five black Bedouin
goats, superior milk pro-
ducers and a plentiful meat
source, have been shipped
from Tel Aviv University to
Kenya. The hearty breed,
capable of thriving in desert
conditions, will be main-
tained under a joint agricul-
tural production project
with the United Nations.

Architecture in general is
frozen music.
Friedrich von Schelling

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