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April 11, 1986 - Image 49

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-04-11

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

Jilt

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WM'S
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ACTING INSTRUCTION

i

by their husbands during their
three-week stay. '
Persons working or stationed
at the base ranged in age 18-65,
but according to Kroll, the
group developed a sense of un-
ity. For Kroll, 45, and Newman,
42, the age differences were
barely noticeable. Kroll said
that she was able to relate to
people the age of her own chil-
dren and learn from them.
The women's jobs were unskil-
led — cleaning and restoring
parts for tanks. Although both
admit the work was not glamor-
ous, Kroll said what was impor-
tant "was the .people-to-people
contact."
A typical day began at 6 a.m.
At 7, they began working, clean-
ing parts until breakfast at 8:30
a.m: They were allowed 45 min-
utes for breakfast, 45 minutes
for lunch, and the work day
ended at 4 p.m. Dinner was
served at 5:15. •
Kroll and Newman described
the food as well prepared but
not plentiful. They were served
a lot of eggs and only received
meat four times a week. Most of
the civilian people on_the base
were poor people from a
neighboring town who took the
unskilled work because of free
transportation and two free me-
als.
On their last day; the volun-
teers were given a party. "It was
so painful to leave," Kroll said.
Newman agreed: "I have never
felt like this. I haven't gotten
over it." Both women would like
to repeat the experience and
Newman feels that she could
never return to Israel as she
had before. "We could never go
back as regular tourists."
"What we did was not skilled,
but it was necessary," Kroll em-
phasized. "It's so difficult to de-
scribe the essence of the pro-
gram.because the basic essence
was the appreciation expressed
by the Israeli people and the
fact that we felt like we were
doing something worthwhile."

Israelis Favor
Unity Coalition

Tel Aviv (JTA) — A majority
of Israelis want the Labor-Likud
unity coalition to continue on
the basis of the rotation of
power agreement under which
Prime. Minister Shimon Peres
will turn over his office to Yit-
zhak Shamir next October 13,
according to a public opinion
poll taken by the Hanoch and
Rafi Smith Research Center,
published last Monday.
. But the same poll found that
Israelis, by a 61 to 29 percent
margin, saw reasons that would
justify breaking up the coali-
tion.
Among the respondents, 54
percent favored the rotation of
power agreement, up from 47
percent in a poll conducted last
August. Nineteen percent would
like to see the coalition continue

under the leadership of Peres,
down from 24 percent in August.

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Artists. — Public Speaking for confidence. Stage Tech-
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