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May 11, 1990 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-05-11

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

I LOCAL NEWS I

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Akiva Vandalism

Continued from Page 1

An empty fire extinguisher and its contents lie in an Akiva stairway.

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r

windows at Akiva, but no
one entered the building.
Lathrup Village Police Chief
Donald Yerrick believes the
two incidents are related.
To prevent further van-
dalism, the school is install-
ing a motion detector alarm,
Rabbi Shimansky said. The
police are also talking to
school officials about in-
creasing lighting around the
building.
Last weekend's vandals
left behind fingerprints,
sneaker prints and a
photocopy of a hand. Based
on that evidence, police
believe two girls and a boy
committed the crime. ❑

Kahane

Continued from Page 1

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12

typewriter, and poured cor-
rection fluid on a computer,
damaging it, and red ink
over a copier.
Although obscenities were
spray-painted in the office,
Rabbi Shimansky said
"there is nothing to indicate
the vandalism was
motivated by anti-
Semitism."
Nothing was stolen from
the building. Rabbi Shiman-
sky said the estimated
$10,000 in damage includes
$3,000 to clean up the
building. Insurance will pay
most of the cost.
The previous weekend,
rocks were used to break 13

FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1990

"The law would have
banned (former Prime Min-
ister) Golda Meir and
(Defense Minister) Moshe
Arens," the rabbi points out.
He claims the State
Department could have re-
jected his forced request,
which would have kept him
in compliance with the
Israeli law. He is challeng-
ing their acceptance of his
citizenship rejection in
court.
Already barred from
Canada and Great Britain,
Rabbi Kahane believes the
United States will not allow

him to visit if he is not a U.S.
citizen. "There are things I
say that others won't say,
and I have to raise money
here," he says.
The rabbi denies that he is
a racist, preferring to be de-
scribed as a realist. He says
the Israeli law banning him
was a political reaction to a
poll of high school seniors
showing that 42 percent
would vote for him in the
next election. He claims to
have heavy support among
young voters, the Likud
bloc's Sephardic base, in
Continued on Page 14

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