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the impetus for all of my pro-
choice activities," she said.
Another woman's grand-
father, a physician, perform-
ed an illegal abortion on a
diabetic patient who should
not have become pregnant.
The doctor told the woman
never to get pregnant be-
cause she would not survive.
She later became pregnant
and died in her final months
of pregnancy under another
doctor's care.
Men and women of all ages
joined Michigan's 7,000
marchers. The march pro-
vided a generational ele-
ment, with mothers,
daughters and grand-
daughters walking together.
This time, organizers said,
they saw more men than
ever walking on the mall
and making statements
about choice.
Walking along a route that
began at the Ellipse behind
the White House and con-
tinued for hours on the
streets around Capitol Hill,
people lobbed pro-choice
tennis balls over the White
House fence.
Even thousands from the
newly formed Republicans
For Choice led chants, rang-
ing from "Free Barbara
Bush" to a takeoff on the
"Saturday Night Live"
Wayne's World lingo, "Two,
four, six, eight, George
Bush: NOT."
Huntington Woods City
Commissioner Gilda Jacobs
traveled with her daughter,
Rachel, 16. They were
among many other Jewish
mother-daughter duos who
rode on a chartered bus to
D.C. from Madison Heights.
The bus was free, courtesy
of businesswoman Carola
Vogel of Madison Heights.
Rachel, president of Tem-
ple Emanu-El's youth group,
was impassioned. She
became "a part of history."
For both the Jacobs, this
march was a first.
Rachel ran into friends
from other National Federa-
tion of Temple Youth
groups, whose states had
organized bus loads of teens
for the rally. She and her
mother saw signs, one of
which Mrs. Jacobs said she
won't forget. It read, "Hitler
Outlawed Abortion."
If another rally takes
place, Rachel said she will
organize a bus load of teens
from Michigan State Temple
Youth. Meanwhile, she is
running for the social action
state board position for
MSTY.
"One of the things I want
to do is get the group more
involved in this issue,"
Rachel said. "This is not just
about abortion. It extends to

so many different areas. If
they take this right away
now, where does it lead for
women?"
Janice Erdstein of Hun-
tington Woods rode the bus
with her two daughters,
Rachel, 19, and Elana, 13.
Joining the Erdsteins was a
friend, Lath Buch, also 13.
Peggy Pitt and her 13-
year-old daughter, Megan,
veterans of pro-choice dem-
onstrations, also opted for
the bus. Megan was a
toddler when her mother
walked her in a stroller at an
Equal Rights Amendment
rally in Detroit during the
1980 Republican National
Convention.
In recent years, the Pitts
have been to two pro-choice
rallies in Lansing. They also
went to the pro-choice march
in Washington, D.C. in 1989.
"We might make a differ-
ence on .a local level more
than on a national level,"
Mrs. Pitt said. "Legislators
here must know how many
local people went to the mar-
ch, and they must listen."
"This march will make a
difference because it
energized and mobilized
younger women," said Ed-
wina Davis, Jewish com-
munity activist and vol-
unteer coordinator for
Planned Parenthood. "We
need to pass the power. It is
their lives that will be af-
fected the most." 0

NEWS

l'"""

Official Jailed
Over Photos

Tel Aviv (JTA) — A veter-
an Israeli Health Ministry
official and his brother have
been arrested on charges of
having provided a French
magazine with confidential
videotape of Robert Max-
well's autopsy in Israel.
Naim Batzrit, 65, of
Rishon le-Zion and his
brother, Sasson, were
remanded by a Petach Tikva
magistrate's court for
allegedly stealing and sell-
ing copies of a report of the
autopsy performed on the
late British media magnate
before his burial.
Nairn Batzrit is a former
police officer employed for
many years as chief photog-
rapher at the Health Min-
istry's Pathology Institute in
Tel Aviv.
He is charged with copying
the record of the post-
mortem, which was sold to
the French news magazine
Paris Match. Sasson Batzrit
was charged with acting as
an intermediary with the
magazine.

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