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July 07, 1989 - Image 40

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1989-07-07

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

NEWS 1

A new choice for the frail elderly

Independent Living with
Supportive Services

A new caring alternative for
the frail elderly is now
available of the exciting new
and elegant West Bloomfield
Nursing and Convalescent
Center.

• Deluxe semi private or private
mini suites all with private
baths and a beautiful view of
a courtyard or wooded
grounds.

-

Israel To Institute
New Border Checks

It's called Independent Living • Town Center Plaza with a
snack shop, beauty salon,
with Supportive Services. It's
flower and gift shop and an
the choice between
old-fashioned ice cream parlor.
independent living and skilled
nursing care for the elderly
• Fine dining in an elegant
person who needs the
essentials of living such as
dining area with meals
housekeeping service, meals,
prepared by an executive chef
laundry service and
and served by a courteous,
medication, if needed.
friendly staff
Licensed nurses are on duty 24
hours a day.
• Exciting and varied activities,
planned and supervised, to
Residents in this program can
keep residents involved and
enjoy a relaxed, elegant
happy
atmosphere that includes:

Honor us with o visit. Weekdays 9 o.m-8 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday, noon-5 p.m.

An Affiliate of William Beaumont Hospital

• Pastoral and weekly Sabbath
services provided by Rabbi
Moshe Poker

Ar
aJW,r1,9 6445 West Maple • West Bloomfield, Ml

Phone: 661-1600

Centel'

*MIS ilnle's

annual

SIDEWALK
SALE!!

• THURS.-FRI.-SAT. •
• JULY 13-14-15 •

Racks & Racks of
BARGAINS! BARGAINS! BARGAINS!

terthiS

Maple-Lahser

646-4475

DETROIT FRIENDS OF CHINUCH ATZMAI
TORAH SCHOOLS FOR ISRAEL

Invite the Community
To A Reception
In Honor of

RABBI ABRAHAM PAM

Tuesday, July 11, 8:30 p.m.

at the home of

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Berlin
18251 Onyx, Southfield

40

FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1989

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel will
implement a new system to
screen Palestinians from the
Gaza Strip who wish to enter
the country, barring those
with criminal or security
records.
The plan has been approv-
ed by Gen. Yitzhak
Mordechai, commander of the
southern region, Ha'aretz
reported last week.
As of June 6, any Gaza
Strip Arab who wishes to
enter Israel to work, trade,
tour or for any other
legitimate purpose must
report to assembly centers
designated by the civil
administration.
These will be schools or
other centrally located public
buildings.
Once there, they will be
subject to questioning by
members of the civil ad-
ministration, the police, the
Israel Defense Force or other

security forces.
The prospective entrants
will have to present their ID
cards for security and police
checks. If their records are
clean, they will be issued
magnetized ID cards valid for
a limited time, which will
allow them to travel freely in
Israel without being arrested.
The authorities plan to
issue more then 150,000 en-
try cards to Gaza Strip
residents in the next two
months.
Mordechai said the grounds
for rejecting an applicant, will
include anyone with a police
criminal record, a security
record, a conviction for par-
ticipating in a serious distur-
bance, conviction for sex-
related crimes or membership
in a terrorist organization.
Arabs released from ad-
ministrative detention pro-
bably will not be granted en-
try permits.

Hebrew U. Professor
Slain Near Museum

Jerusalem (JTA) —
Jerusalem police are inclined
to dismiss Palestinian na-
tionalism as a motive in the
murder of Hebrew University
professor Menahem Stern,
one of Israel's most
distinguished academicians,
whose body was found in the
bushes next to the Israel
Museum last week.
But the investigation of the
crime has only just begun and
nothing can be ruled out, ac-
cording to Jerusalem police.
Stern was fatally stabbed
Wednesday shortly before his
body was discovered at about
9:30 a.m., by a group of first
graders who were on an
outing to the museum.
Knife wounds in his chest
indicated Stern was killed on-
ly minutes before, and
although papers and
documents were scattered
near the body, nothing ap-
pears to have been stolen, ac
cording to police and Shin Bet
agents who arrived at scene.
"We don't see a reason to
start with the nationalistic
motive. Very few Arabs
wander around in this area,"
the district commander told
reporters.
An Israel Museum
employee told police he had
seen a suspicious looking
man in the vicinity that mor-
ning, whom he described as a
Jew, about 40.
The only known facts in the
case so far are that Stern left

his home on Tchernikovsky
Street in the Rehavia section
at 8:30 a.m. and, as was his
habit, walked to the National
Library at the Givat Ram
campus of the Hebrew
University.
Stern was a tenured pro-
fessor of Jewish history at the
Hebrew University and con-
sidered an authority on
Hellenistic and Roman
culture and an expert on the
period of the Second Temple.
Stern was also chairman of
the Israel Historical Society
and a member of the editorial
board of its quarterly
magazine, Zion.
Stern was born in
Byalistok, Poland, in 1925
and immigrated to Palestine
in 1938.

AJC Cancels
Trip To China

New York (JTA) — The
American Jewish Committee
has canceled plans to send a
delegation to China in
September.
It acted to protest the
Chinese government's use of
force against student activists
in Beijing on June 3 and its
subsequent repression of the
movement for democratic
reforms.
AJCommittee President
Sholom Comay wrote last
week to the Chinese am-
bassador.

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