100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 16, 1988 - Image 54

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-09-16

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

I BACKGROUND I

I DAVID M. DEUTSCH

TRENDS

HAPPY HOLIDAYS

FALL FASHIONS
ARRIVING
DAILY

Din -
[photographic

"Elegant Photography
For Every Occasion -

APPLEGATE

471-4446

352 4244

-

Borg's Barbers

For Men • Women • Children

HOLIDAY SPECIALT MEN

or WOMEN

Boys or Girls
I Wash, Conditioning,
10 Years or Under I Cut & Blow Dry
Wet or Dry Cut
I
Styling

11 '00
NOW $ 41, Reg. 8.0

I

w/coupon Exp. 10-15-88

I

NOW

w/coupon Exp. 10-15-88

VI E00
$A00
mlir on Pedicure
NOW - .a.. Reg. 44.00 I I SAVE
By Appointment Please
W/coupon Exp. 10-15-88
I
W/coupon Exp. 10-15-88

Coupons Void on Saturdays. *Long hair extra.
Hours: Daily 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. • Saturdays 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Q 855.8250
33330 W 14 Mile Rd. • At Farmington Rd. • In Simsbury Plaza • Next to A & P

358-2333

HOURS:
Mon.-Thurs 9-7
Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-5

PASSPORT PICTURES

6.95 2

354-6060

ManicurelPedicure

PERM*

Set For $

Call The Jewish News

$r7i00
%iv Reg. 16.001

I Men or Women
Men or Women
Includes Wash, Cut &
$ 00
I SAVE 1
...on Manicure
Blow Dry Styling

1

IPIID$

GET REMITS

Sets For $12.95

"Must Be Done At The Same Time"
2 photos per passport (with coupon)

SALLY'S DESIGNS'

Please come
and see
our new fall
designer collection
of fashions
and jewelry

Wendy Gell's exclusive
Roger Rabbit & Jessica Pins

29657 Orchard Lake Road
(Inside Antonio's Salon
near 13 Mile Rd.)
Farmington Hills, Michigan
(313) 626-0886

BOUTIQUE

SAVE BIG BUCKS

$3.00 OFF 36 exposures $2.00 OFF 24 exposures
$1.00 OFF 12 exposure or disc on developing and

printing of 110,-126, 135, C-41 color prints

20% OFF On All Photo Albums
20%-50% OFF on Frames
10% OFF on Posters

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR
YOUR LIFE

American Heart
Association

(From Your Old Negatives or Photos)

FULL PHOTO SERVICES INCLUDING: BLACK & WHITE, ENLARGEMENTS & PORTRAITS
29179 Northwestern Hwy. at 12 Mile Rd. in Franklin Shopping Plaza

Keds

HANSEL 'N' GIKTEL

Reebok

Toddler U

Nickolodeums

Esprit

Jumping Jacks

Bellini

BACK
TO
SCHOOL"
"88"

Shoo be Do

247 W. Maple
Birmingham, MI 48011
646-4722

Weebok

Nike

LA, Gear

Open Sundays

*OVER 60 YEARS OF KIDS FITTING EXPERIENCE ON OUR FLOORS*

54

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1988

WE TAKE EXCEPTION
TO WHAT YOUR
MOTHER TAUGHT
YOU.

YOU SHOULDN'T EAT
EVERYTHING PUT IN
FRONT OF YOU.
You should avoid foods high in
cholesterol. It's a fact, a high
blood cholesterol level sub-
stantially increases your
chances of developing heart
disease. By cutting down on
fatty, rich foods, you can do
yourself a big favor. You could
lower your blood cholesterol
level and reduce your risk of
heart disease.

For more information about a
planned and balanced diet,
contact your American Heart
Association. We'll give you
some free advice on how to
plan a diet good for life.

Israel Election

Continued from Page 52

may prove

to be an election
liability.
Not a single woman ap-
pears on the Herut list in a
viable position, and the
Liberal party likewise elected
a male and Ashkenazi-
dominated list. The final
Likud list also includes places
for Tami's Aharon
Abuhatzeira and Ometz's
Yigael Hurwitz. Supporters of
electoral reform, like
Minister of Communications
and Economic Planning Gad
Ya'acobi, described these par-
ty conventions as circuses. "A
constituency system," he ex-
plains, "would allow the peo-
ple rather than party central
committees to select Knesset
members."
The smaller parties also
had their problems. The Na-
tional Religious Party moved
further to the right, putting
the hawkish Avner Sciaki at
the head of its list instead of
the more moderate Zevulun
Hammer, who considered set-
ting up his own party then
decided against it. However,
as a result of the NRP's
rightward shift a new centrist
religious party will contest
the next election.
There will also be a new
centrist liberal party in the
election. Rafael Eitan,
formerly of the right-wing
Techiyah will head his own
Tzomet list, while the faces in
Techiyah and the left-wing
Shinui and Citizens Rights
Movement will remain the
same. Ultra-Orthodox Agudat
Yisrael's list is selected by its
rabbinical sages and as a
result, leader Avraham
Shapira has been asked to
stand down. Former Labor
Arab MK Abed el Wahab
Daroushe will head his own
independent Arab list, while
left-wing Mapam, headed by
Yair Tzaban, will not include
Mohammed Wattad who has
joined the Hadash Com-
munist party.
On most issues, Labor and
Likud agree. On economics,
both support capitalist
reforms as opposed to the
traditionally socialist
framework. Even with respect
to the intifada, both parties
concur that violent distur-
bances must be put down but
on the "Who is a Jew?" ques-
tion, the Likud tends to sup-
port the religious parties cal;
for the recognition of only Or-
thodox conversions.
The major election issue is,
of course, the future of the ad-
ministered territories. Labor
supports territorial com-
promise, negotiated with Jor-
dan in the the framework of
an international conference.
"If Israel is to remain Jewish
and democratic," said Foreign
Minister and Labor leader

Shimon Peres, "then
demography dictates that ter-
ritorial compromise is a
necessity."
The Likud espouses a
Greater Israel policy, in-
cluding Judea, Samaria and
Gaza. They, however, also
want direct talks with Jor-
dan, but have not indicated
whether territorial conces-
sions are possible. "An inter-
national conference will be a
disaster for Israel," says
Prime Minister and Likud
leader Yitzhak Shamir. "It
would result in the world's
powers imposing a solution on
us."
Many pundits see the up-
coming election as a
crossroads in Israel's ex-
istence, for, depending on who
is elected we will see attempts
to create either a smaller, but
Jewish democratic society, or
a larger, nationalist, religion-
oriented society. Despite a
more hawkish atmosphere in
Israel at present in response
to the Arab uprising, the opi-
nion polls indicate that once
more the elections will be
inconclusive.

World Zionist Press Service

''''°••11 NEWS

Allies Ban
Party In Berlin

Bonn (JTA) — The neo-Nazi
National Democratic Party is
not welcome in West Berlin.
The Allied military corn-
manders have banned the
NPD from .participating in
the January 1989 elections
for the town parliament. The
NPD was not permitted to
hold its convention in West
Berlin or any other
gatherings.
This was in line with
longstanding Allied policy to
prohibit any neo-Nazi ac-
tivities in West Berlin. The
western portion of the divid-
ed city is still under the
overall authority of the
Western Allies — the United
States, Britain and France.
The NPD is legal in West
Germany, but at present is
not represented in the federal
or state parliaments.

Kalmanson Is
Hadassah Head

Chicago — Carmela Efros
Kalmanson of West Hemp-
stead, N.Y., was elected na-
tional president of Hadassah,
at the organization's 74th Na-
tional Convention in Chicago.
She succeeds Ruth Popkin,
who had held the post since
1984.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan