12 Friday, September 14, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS We Specialize In ROCK 'N ROLL THEME BAR MITZVAHS, BAT MITZVAHS & PARTIES. Large selection of popular Rock T-Shirts, posters buttons & video fashion accessories. And of course Jelly Bellys & all your favorite candies! BIRMINGHAM SWEET SHOPPE 266 E Maple, Birmingham 644-4320 a famous maker's finely tailored pure wool coat that usually costs $240.00 is $129.99 at donlevv's back room coming thurs., sept. 20th to 29121 northwestern hgwy. at 12 mi le rd., southfield doitlevym backloom LIGHT SIDE Seeing the lighter side of the Israeli elections BY CARL ALPERT Special to The Jewish News Haifa — The results of Israel's elections were pretty awful, but there were some light moments as well. Which Paper Do You Read? Ac- cording to Haaretz: On election day a young lady in Tiberias stripped to the waist opposite the polling station and did a belly dance, with Labor Party stickers across her chest. The Likud pro- tested. According to Iediot Ahronot: On election day a young lady in Tiberias stripped to the waist, and pasted Likud labels on her nipples. The Labor Party pro- tested. Mystery and Explanation. One of the mysteries in the election re- sults was the vote for Meir Kahane in many Arab villages. For example, Umm El-Fahm, 8 votes for Kahane; Baka Al- Garbiya, 5 votes; Kafr M'rar, 10; Beersheba Bedouin precinct, 21. Who did they think they were vot- ing for? One explanation: Arabs deliberately voted for Kahane to blacken Israel's reputation abroad. Father's Instructions. A boy in Kiryat Motzkin argued with the precinct election officials that his father, who is abroad, had authorized him to vote in his stead. The boy brought a written order signed by his father, but the officials refused to permit the proxy. "How can I tell my dad I failed him?" wailed the lad. It's the Price Not the Politics. In Mitzpe Ramon, a Likud stron- ghold three years ago, the Labor candidate was encouraged. This year they did not throw tomatoes at him. He was quickly disil- lusioned. "Who would throw to- matoes when they are so expen- sive," one of the townspeople told him. A Hard Day's Work. Long after the polls had closed, no report had been received from Tel Aviv pre- cinct No. 935. Police who were sent to investigate discovered that the precinct chairman, exhausted from his long hours on duty, had taken the results home with him and had gone to bed with them. The totals were quickly re- covered. Moshe Kapayr. The hard facts of political life here: In Israel the affluent tend to vote for the Left, and the working class for the Right. Prisoners' Rights. A group of prisoners appealed from jail to the courts for the right to exercise their privileges as citizens and to vote in the elections. The High Court of Justice ruled there was something to their request, but called upon the Knesset to pass the appropriate legislation cover- ing such cases. This year, the court ruled, no vote. A Labor propagandist nevertheless spread the report that many prisoners had actually voted, and the re- sults, smuggled out of jail, showed that all the criminals were for the Likud. High Tension. The most thril- ling expectancy was that Menahem Begin would come out of retirement, and at the last mo- ment sound a stirring call to his followers to vote for the Likud. Labor prepared a number of al- ternative courses of reaction. One of them had former President Navon appearing on TV, calmly Rosh Hashana "Ruach" (Spirit) Start the New Year Off Right by Joining the J.C.C.! During the month of September we're offering $50 off any 1 year general membership and $100 off a club membership. By becoming a Health Club member, you can enjoy our new Nautilus Fitness Center at your convenience! Besides all of the Center's regular activities, our weight room has been redone with new olympic weights, bar bells, dumb bells and weight lifting classes. And we've got aerobic classes, a track, an indoor pool, racquet courts and more! Just call 661-1000, ext. 166 for more information on your membership. welcoming Begin bck to political life, and then in matter-of-fact fashion, narrating for him all the awful things the Likud had done to the country since Begin had gone into seclusion. Begin never appeared, and Navon never made the speech, which had already been taped. Voting by the Clock. In the Arab village of Deir Hana there was fear of bloodshed if members of two feuding clans showed up to vote simultaneously. It was agreed that members of one clan would vote only in the morning, and the others only in the after- noon. Peace was maintained. In the Bedouin precincts in the Negev, only males voted during the day; females came out to vote only in the closing hours. How Much is a Non-Vote Worth? The Neturei Karta of Meah Shearim, who do not recog- nize the government, carried on a campaign to urge people not to vote. According to one report, they paid fifty shekels to any Jew who for 24 hours would deposit with them his Identity Card, without which he could not vote. Illiteracy ,a Handicap. The regulations state that only a handicapped person may have an escort go into the polling booth with him to help. In Kiryat Gat the precinct chairman ruled that an illiterate person was "handi- capped" and could therefore take another person with him behind the curtain. An immediate appeal was launched to the courts, which ruled in favor of the chairman. The Camera Never Lies .. Much. The general level of the pre-election commercials on TV was not high, but credibility of Labor sank to new lows when sev- eral of their presentations were "exposed" by the Likud as decep- tions. For example, the Labor voice caustically attacked the Likud government for policies which were resulting in industry after industry going to rack and ruin. The picture showed scene after scene of twisted, rusted frameworks, a ruinous sight in- deed. The next night the Likud videocast revealed that the Labor pictures had been shot in the scrap iron junkyard of the steel mills. NEWS Israel set to export limes and bananas Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israeli far- mers are preparing to export two new fruits they have now started harvesting — limes and red bananas. Although Israel has long been known for its citrus, limes are newcomers to the coun- try, and do not even have a special name in Hebrew. Menahem Davidson, chief ag- ronomist of the Mehadrin Citrus Company, said last week that some 60 acres of limes have been planted in recent years and the first eight acres are now bearing, with some 25 acres expected to bear fruit next year. (