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July 19, 1991 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-07-19

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

SPORTS

The Jewish Community Center
and
The Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame

wish to invite you
to attend

THE FIFTH ANNUAL
MICHIGAN JEWISH SPORTS
HALL OF FAME GAMES

(ATHLETIC EVENTS FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS)

Sunday, July 28, 1991
10:00 a.m.

All Events Will Occur At The
Maple/Drake Building

For Further Information Call:

Leanie Gunsberg at

661-1000,

ext. 343

JEWELRY APPRAISALS

At Very Reasonable Prices. Call For An Appointment

established 1919

FINE JEWELERS

Lawrence M. Allan, Pres.
GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST
AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA
IN GRADING AND EVALUATION

50

FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1991

30400 Telegraph Road
Suite 134
Bingham Farms, MI 48010

(313) 642-5575

DAILY 10-5:30
THURS. 10-7
SAT. 10-3

Fall Softball
Is Planned

is mandatory for all par-
ticipating teams.

Fall softball will begin Aug.
5 in West Bloomfield.
Leagues for men, business
organizations and coed teams
are planned. All games will
be played at the West Bloom-
field Community Sports Park
located on Keith Road north
of Commerce Road in West
Bloomfield Township.

City Of Hope
Sets Golf Outing

The Men's-Class C league
will play on Mondays and
Wednesdays in a 12-game
season. There is an entry fee.
The Business Team league is
for a 10-game season and the
coed recreation league is a
10-game season. There will be
no end of season playoffs for
any of these leagues. A one-
umpire system will be used
for all fall leagues. Each team
must pay the umpire a fee
before the start of each game.

To register a team,
managers should call parks
and recreation, 334-5660. A.
manager meeting is schedul-
ed for July 29. This meeting

The Sophie and Harry Hoff-
man Chapter for City of Hope
National Medical Center will
sponsor its second annual golf
outing Aug. 7 at the Links at
Pinewood in Walled Lake. All
golfers are welcome to par-
ticipate in the day-long event,
which includes meals, prizes,
contests and full use of club-
house facilities.
The outing will begin with
a continental breakfast from
6:30-9:30 a.m.; a buffet lunch
from 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; an out-
door grille from 10 a.m.-3
p.m.; an open bar from 11
a.m.-11 p.m.; and a banquet
dinner starting at 7:30 p.m.
There is a charge.
Proceeds from the golf
outing will benefit City of
Hope National Medical
Center.
For information, call the
regional City of Hope office,
443-2250.

I NEWS I

Abie Nathan
Detained In Israel

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Peace ac-
tivist Abie Nathan returned
to Israel from his latest
meeting with Yassir Arafat,
head of the Palestine Libera-
tion Organization, and was
detained as soon as he land-
ed.
Police from the serious
crimes unit took Mr. Nathan
from his plane, which had
just arrived at Ben-Gurion
Airport from Paris. He was
escorted to an unmarked car
after talking briefly with his
lawyer.
Mr. Nathan had said from
Paris before embarking that
he expected to be arrested
for his meetings with the
PLO chief, which violate an
Israeli law forbidding
meeting with members of
terrorist organizations, the
PLO specifically.
It is not known if he was
charged with anything.
Israeli police officials had
said he would be
"questioned" on arrival.
A small band of his sup-
porters demonstrated on Mr.
Nathan's behalf outside the
terminal, from which
reporters were blocked.
Mr. Nathan faces three
months of one suspended
prison sentence for a 1989
meeting with Arafat and a
trial in September for an-
other meeting with the PLO
leader. His latest encounter

with Mr. Arafat took place
in Tunis at the end of June.
He served four months of
the first sentence last year.
Mr. Nathan left to meet with
Mr. Arafat after holding
a lengthy, life-endangering
hunger fast to protest the
Israeli law that prohibits
such meetings.
Before leaving Paris, Mr.
Nathan disclosed that he
had applied for a visa to go to
Yemen, where he intended
to hold "meaningful political
talks" and visit the rem-
nants of the Jewish com-
munity there. But the visa
had not been forthcoming
and he apparently tired of
waiting.
Mr. Nathan also applied in
vain for visas to visit Jordan
and Sudan.
The peace activist
predicted he would face a
"witch hunt" upon his
return in a telephone inter-
view from Paris on July 7.
But he had said he had no
regrets about attending' Mr.
Arafat's news conference in
Tunis last month. Mr.
Nathan submitted 12 ques-
tions, to which the PLO
leader replied last week.
Mr. Arafat said he stands
ready to talk peace with
Israel. He then listed a
series of preconditions, none
of which would be remotely
acceptable to Israel.

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