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May 11, 1990 - Image 70

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

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

NEWS

ALL SWIMWEAR
ON SALE

40% OFF

AT

MALL
Orchard Lake Rd. at Maple Rd.
851-1260

Mon., Ries., Wed. & Fri. 10-6; Thurs. 10-9; Sat. 10-5:30

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HAIR
GYM
and Nail Salon

If your hair and nails are not becoming to you .
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HAIRCUT SPECIALS

NAIL SPECIALS

$28
Perm only
Perm. and Cut . . $35
Perm, Cut
and Style
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Cut and Style
(Shampoo Incl.). $18

Acrylic Nails . .$25/Full set
Solar Nails . . .$30/Full set
$10
Manicures
$25
Pedicures
Nail Designs Air Brushing
Nail Wraps

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— All work performed by licensed professionals --

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(Just

East of Orchard

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-

70

FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1990

STRETCH LIMO $ 160
SUPERCRUISER $ 220
-certain restrictions apply

TREND

Applegate Square

SPRING SALE

Thursday, Friday & Saturday
May 3-5

Men's & Boys'

2-4244d

Semantics Still At Center
Of B'nai B'rith Rift

New York (JTA) — B'nai
B'rith Women has agreed to
consider changing the lang-
uage of a resolution that
caused the initial rift bet-
ween its organization and
B'nai B'rith International,
but it is unclear whether the
change of wording would
necessarily lead to a
substantive change in the
BBW-BBI relationship.
"What we've done is to
dramatically show that we
are willing to come part way.
The ball is once again in
their court," said Hyla
sky, outgoing president of
BBW.
The women's Delegate
Assembly, while calling for
negotiations, has voted to
amend its original declara-
tion of autonomy, but only if
BBI affirms the women's
organization's status as an
"independent, self-
governing Jewish women's
organization affiliated with
B'nai B'rith International."
Over 400 delegates of the
women's organization
gathered in New Orleans for
their annual biennial con-
vention to discuss the future
of their 92-year-old relation-
ship with the world's largest
Jewish organization.
"Pending their delegates'
action, we are ready to go
into negotiations and change
the original statement," said
Lipsky, referring to an Oc-
tober 1988 resolution that
declared BBW "a separate,
independent and
autonomous organization
identified with the B'nai
B'rith."
But when pressed on the
meaning of the change, she
admitted "the words would

change, but the meaning
would stay essentially the
same."
Incoming BBW president
Harriet Horowitz agreed.
"The meaning is really the
same as it has been for
years. If indeed the semantic
of 'separate and
autonomous' is distasteful to
BBI leadership, we will
change the wording to make
it less onerous.
"There are a lot of issues
other than a matter of
words: the integrity of B'nai
B'rith Women and our rights
and abilities to shape our
own future."
BBI is skeptical of the
modification. "We're pleased
that B'nai B'rith Women has
withdrawn its declaration of
being separate and
autonomous," said BBI Pres-
ident Seymour Reich, "but
it's not clear to us how to
interpret the meaning of
`affiliated.' It is ambiguous
and I'm hoping it's not a
cosmetic solution."
BBI is calling for further
clarification from BBW
about the wording of the
resolution.

The final section of last
week's BBW resolution
implies that should negotia-
tions fail, BBW would con-
sider future plans for an
autonomous women's organ-
ization.
"If BBI and BBW are not
able to agree on such ar-
rangements within a
reasonable period of time,
the BBW executive board
shall prepare and recom-
mend a plan for the future of
B'nai B'rith Women," it
said.

Puerto Rico Sports Bar
Becomes A Synagogue

San Juan (JTA) — What
was once a sports bar on this
Caribbean island has been
transformed into a Reform
temple.
Rudy's 10th Inning
Lounge, a popular hangout,
has been converted into a
traditional Reform syn-
agogue that serves a con-
gregation of 72 families, who
have waited more than 20
years for a permanent place
of prayer.
Temple Beth Shalom, an
affiliate of the Union of
American Hebrew Con-
gregations, opened last mon-
th bearing no resemblance to

the rundown building that
was once Rudy's bar.
It is a "real synagogue,
something we can be proud
of," said Norman Bronson,
head of the congregation's
ritual committee.
Besides the sanctuary, the
temple houses a social hall,
kitchen, classrooms, library
and an office.
The congregation began in
1966, when a half-dozen
young Jewish families in
San Juan decided to provide
their children with a Reform
Jewish education.
The only other Jewish
facility available here at the

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