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August 12, 1988 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-08-12

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

I

West Bloomfield
On The Boardwalk
Orchard Lake Road
South of Maple
Mon.-Wed. & Sat. 10-7
Thurs. & Fri. 10-9
Sun. 12-5 • 626-3362

...

agj

Downtown
Birmingham
111 S. Woodward
South of Maple
Mon-Wed. & Sat. 10-6
Thurs. & Fri. 10-9
Sun. 12-5 • 647-0550

2523 W. MAPLE ROAD
BIRMINGHAM

433-3070

The City of Southfield presents

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'*A*

qk4

Sun

,

Sou

Civic Center Plaza/

(Everg

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Oad)

• Live E
rtai
• FoocOoot

1 - 2:15 p.m. The Amazement Park Revue (Cedar Point)

2:30 - 4 p.m. National Frog Jumping Championships

4 - 5 p.m. Wayne State University Jazz Band

5:45 - 6:45 p.m. Ursula Walker & Buddy Budson








ALSO:
Jugglers
Mimes
Magician
Fun characters in costume
Free balloons
Free drawing for prizes

.ZrommxrPV't 4

StrA4La.,

,

1111FIELD
a

affair

Game booth proceeds
benefit sponsoring
non-profit organizations

For more information, contact the
City's Housing and Neighborhood
Center, 354-4400.

rninAv

Al

te-r

4t1 4/100

I

Send it for less
at

AL ALAN%

Southfield
"The Original"
In The
New Orleans Mall
10 Mile & Greenfield
Mon.-Thurs. & Sat 10-5
Fri. 10-9
Sun. 12-5 • 559-7818

UP FRONT

44

Vt,

OP'

Candidate

Continued from Page 5

ones.
Those
cinemas
Pressburger wants to build
would screen Friday night
films if residents wished, he
said.
Pressburger is not willing
to extend personal preference
to Jerusalem's Palestinian
minority. For the mayoral
hopeful, Jerusalem's unity
comes before Palestinian
self-determination.
"They have every right to
live in Jerusalem," he said.
"But they have no right on
Jerusalem. I don't know that
they will agree, but
Jerusalem will never be
divided."
He criticized what he
described as Kollek's pater-
nalistic treatment of the city's
Arabs. If elected mayor, all
Jerusalemites would be
treated alike, with equal
rights and responsibilities,
Pressburger said.
As mayor, he would force
Palestinian merchants to
choose between following the
uprising's leaders and the
laws of Jerusalem, he said.
Anyone who honored the
general strike and closed his
doors before the legal closing
time would have to reapply
for a permit.
The Palestinians are very
much on Pressburger's mind
and in his plans for the
Jerusalem of the future. "I'm
planning for the year 2010,"
he said.
By then, he predicts, the ci-
ty's population of 470,000 will
grow to 1,250,000 Arabs and
Jews. Add the populations of
Ramallah, north of
Jerusalem, and Bethlehem,
south of the city, and
Pressburger comes up with a
figure of 1.5 million.
That's where the subway
comes in.
If a Jerusalemite who lives
in one of the outer suburbs
(such as Neve Ya'akov or Gilo)
wants to shop or see a film in
the city center, he must take
a 45-minute bus ride to travel
the six miles, Pressburger ex-
plained. Downtown streets
are clogged with traffic. A
subway would fix the
problem.
The system would have
north-south and east-west
axes. A spur would link up to
the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv
railway, bringing Tel Aviv to
within a quarter-hour's ride
from north Jerusalem.
He insisted that his plan is
not fantasy, nor is the way the
subway would be financed.
While subways across the
United States are chronic
money-losers, Pressburger
says his subway would pay for
itself after 30 years. Those 1.5
million persons would fuel
the system.
Pressburger would hire a

Shmuel Pressburger:
Challenging Teddy.

company to build the subway.
The company would own the
system until the municipali-
ty had reaped enough profit
to buy it back. The subway is
the key to Pressburger's plan
to tie Jews and Palestinians
together in peaceful coex-
istence in a Greater Land of
Israel.
"lb live together, we need
transportation together," he
said.

Mitzvah Heroes

Continued from Page 5

invited to nominate Mitzvah
Heroes by sending the in-
dividual's name, together
with a brief description of his
good deeds, to The Jewish
News. Nominations must be
received by Sept. 16.
A distinguished panel of
judges will then select the
honorees, profiles of whom
will be included in the Mitz-
vah Heroes section.
The Jewish News will fur-
ther honor the Mitzvah
Heroes by making a contribu-
tion to charities of their
choice, in the honorees'
names.
"We encourage our readers
to help us with this project,"
Horwitz said. "Righteous
men and women are the
Jewish community's greatest
treasure, and it's time we
honored our Mitzvah Heroes
in Detroit."

e\)

Detroit Hosts
Jewish Teens

Thirteen Jewish teens from
France, Ireland, Israel, Col-
ombia, Venezuela and Mexico
are being hosted this
weekend by Detroit's B'nai
B'rith Youth Organization.
The teens will attend services
and an oneg tonight at Thm-
ple Israel, will visit Green-

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