PLAY STRUCTURES For Fun at Home Extra Heavy-2uty Construction Lifetime To Las Sold With or Without Installation r rices From $650 to $1650 Visit Our Display in West Bloomfield at 7549 Pontiac Trail 1/2 Mile East of Haggerty Road. easily aren't They recognizable as Jews. The lesson learned from the Holocaust, Rudner said, "is a pretty awful one. People can learn how thin the veneer of civilization is, and how easi- ly it can break under the right conditions. Once it breaks there's something harsh, terrible, and rough underneath. When it does happen, it's like the astronomer's Black Hole. It's the reverse of everything you imagined was good and true and right. "But you also learn that life is very precious, and despite the horror of that event, ex- traordinary things took place. It's ironic that one has to con- front so much death and suf- fering to come to an under- standing of life. That's the saving.thing of it all:' New Disturbances Erupt In West Bank Jerusalem (JTA) — Distur- bances erupted anew in the West Bank as an Arab resi- dent of the Nur es-Shams refugee camp, near Tulkarm, was wounded by Israel Defense Force soldiers who entered the camp to break up a demonstration, and a 16-year-old Israeli teenager was stabbed as he walked through Jerusalem's Old Ci- ty. Military sources said the soldiers were attacked by stones and bottles, and were forced to open fire to extricate themselves. The IDF is in- vestigating last week's inci- dent. Curfews were imposed on the Daheishe refugee camp, near Bethlehem, and the Jalazoun camp, near Ramallah, after demonstra- tions there. A gasoline bomb set an Israeli taxi afire bet- ween the Arab village of Sur Bahir and the Israeli neighborhood East Talpiyot in Jerusalem. No one was hurt. A -general strike was ob- served throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip to mark the 40th day since the assassination of Khalil a- Wazir, known as Abu Jihad, the military commander of the Palestine Liberation Organization. He was gunned down April 16 in a commando raid on his villa in suburban Tunis. Israeli agents are widely suspected of the attack. In another incident, 16-year-old yeshivah student, Hanoch Albeck, was stabbed in the back with a butcher knife in Jerusalem's Old Ci- ty. He was reported in stable condition and out of danger at Hadassah Medical Center. Police detained 27 suspects for questioning. They said an initial investigation indicated the attack was random and unprovoked. Albeck was assaulted while walking through the spice market in the Moslem quarter of the Old City to his home in the Jewish quarter. In another development, Israeli authorities, alleging that the editorial staff and publisher of a left-wing newspaper belonged to a ter- rorist organization, released one of the suspects from custody but indicted two others. Hadas Lahav, an editor of Derech Hanitzotz, which was shut down three months ago, was named on the charge sheet as one of the prosecu- tion's 29 witnesses. She insisted to reporters upon being freed that she had not and would not turn state's evidence. Most of the other named witnesses are agents of the General Security Ser- vices, known as the Shin Bet. Assaf Adiv, identified as publisher of the newspaper, and Yaacov Ben-Efrat, its chief editor, were arraigned in Jerusalem district court. House Passes Foreign Aid Bill Washington (JTA) — The U.S. House of Representatives passed by a 328 to 90 vote a $14.3 billion foreign aid bill, which includes $3 billion in economic and military assistance for Israel. The Israel aid, all of it in grant rather than loan form, provides $1.8 billion in military aid and $1.2 billion in economic assistance for the 1989 fiscal year, the same amount as in recent years. The bill passed last week, which now goes to the Senate, would allow Israel to spend $400 million in Israel, rather than buying the goods and services from the United States, as required in all foreign aid provisions. ■ For Additional Information Please Write or Call: Guffrey Products 7549 Pontiac Trail West Bloomfield, MI 48033 (313) 624-7962 In Brighton (313) 229-9646 An Outstanding Retirement Community... •Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom Luxury Apartments •Companionship •Daily Activities •Community Dining Room •Free Transportation Service •Gracious Surroundings •Annual Family Picnic •Optional Maid Service •3 Complete Meals Available •Optional Linen Service •Air Conditioning •Beautifully Landscaped Setting With Sidewalks • Storage Lockers • Helpful Management & Staff •Fully Equipped Kitchens •Country Store •Beauty Salon •Wellness Center •Wired For Cable TV •Security & Maintenance Service •Convenient Location •Warm Family-Like Atmosphere •Worship Services •Greenhouse •Registered Dietician .• Monitored Emergency Call System • Rental Rates From $740 Including Utilities • Furnished Apartments Available For Short Term Lease FREE MOVING For new apartment rentals.* Contact rental consultant for details at 353-2810 *Valid with this coupon through July, Aug., Sept. & Oct. 1988 Some Restrictions May Apply FRANKLIN CLUB APARTMENTS 28301 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan 48034 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 15