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May 21, 1993 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-05-21

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

"Right Place.
Right Time."

NISSAN

MI°

1993 SENTRA XE 2 DOOR $

BUY FOR $9995.00"

00

*

per
mo.

V g n

1■1■ 111•

AIR, AM/FM STEREO WITH CASSETTE, CRUISE AND MORE! Stk. #11255.

1993 MAXIMA GXE

THIS IS NOT A
STRIPPED DOWN CAR!

LEASE FROM

2341 iFe ior

n

24

Months

AUTO, AIR, POWER WINDOWS AND LOCKS, MIRRORS, DRIVER SIDE AIR BAG,
CRUISE, AM/FM CASSETTE, ALLOW WHEELS AND MORE!. Stk. #11368

1993 NISSAN PICK-UP

"BEST
COMPACT
P1CK-UP"'

er a

*Sentra and Maxima 24 mo. closed end leases require 1st mo. pymt., plates, $350 acq. fee, DOC, title and tax at inception. Sentra requires $1400 down payment
plus $125 refundable security deposit. Maxima requires $1500 down payment and $275 refundable security deposit at inception. To get total of payments, multiply by
24. Pick-up 60-month lease requires 1st mo. payment, plates, $350 acq. fee, DOC, title and tax plus $125 refundable security deposit and $1400 down payment. To
get total of payments, multiply by 60. All lease prices plus applicable taxes. Option to buy: Sentra $7939.50, Maxima $13,425, Pick-up $2803.50. All leases subject to
credit approval and prior sale. Offer subject to change. **Plus tax, title, license, DOC and destination fees. **-1992 J.D. Power & Associates

NISSAN

471-0044
Open Saturdays Sales and Service!

Grand River
at 10 Mi.

Farmington Hills

ft,.
ogiqe

CI)

CI,

w

I—

w

w

18 •

Photo By Roger Hutton

COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN

As you've heard by now, we're making news in design! Whether it's planning your

new home, remodeling your existing one, or furnishing a room - we invite you to
explore the difference in interior design and encourage you to interview one of our
designers for your next project.

Barbi Krass • Linda Bruder • Linda Hudson

allied member ASID

The Courtyard
• Farmington Hills • 851-7540

32500 Northwestern Highway

Date Rape: BBYO
Expresses Concern

RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER

I

t started off as fun and
games, but ended as a
solemn lesson. One
afternoon this spring,
five high-school boys from.
Cranbrook started tickling
a female friend in a park.
The girl laughed to the
point of tears. The boys
playfully picked her up and
started swinging her from
side to side.
Through peals of laugh-
ter, the girl begged them to
stop. They didn't. Then she
got serious. Her tears of
laughter turned to tears of
fright.
When the boys realized
their female friend was
upset, they put her down.
Shaken, the group of
friends discussed what had
just occurred.
The girl explained that
she felt helpless and
endangered, swinging back
and forth. She reminded
them that "'stop" means
"stop."
"It was a valuable learn-
ing experience," said
Damon Goldsmith, a
Cranbrook sophomore.
Damon was one of about
200 high-school students
who attended a leadership
conference last weekend
sponsored by the B'nai
B'rith Youth Organization.
He recounted his experi-
ence in the park after a
BBYO program on date
rape.
Though the program's
topic differed from Damon's
experience with his high-
school friends, he said it
reinforced a similar mes-
sage: Communication
between the sexes is all-
important.
"I think I've become more
aware of feelings that exist
on both sides — men and
women," he said.
Others agreed. The teens
discussed the mixed mes-
sages women send when
they get drunk and follow
men to their bedrooms.
Though women might not
want to "go all the way,"
men do not always take
them seriously. It is impor-
tant for couples to talk
about their intentions
before entering a potential-
ly dangerous situation, the
teens concluded.
Some said date rape is
more likely to happen when
men and women are inebri-

ated. Others said men
often use being drunk as
an excuse for ignoring the
protests of women.
Jaime Cantor, a high
school sophomore,
expressed concern about
sexual harassment.
"It's rampant," she said.
"People have to take a
stricter attitude. Society
makes girls feel like they're
the ones doing something
wrong."
BBYO's date-rape pro-
gram was sponsored in con-
junction with B'nai B'rith
Women (BBW), which has
held a series of events on
domestic violence this year.
Lucy Gersten of BBW,
Marci Stern and Danny
Goldstein, both of BBYO,

"Society makes
girls feel like
they're doing
something wrong."

Jaime Cantor

helped organize the event.
They invited Tawni Brooks
from The Haven, a wo-
men's shelter, to conduct
the teen discussion.
"The goals are self-
esteem and to be able to
communicate with the
opposite sex," Ms. Brooks
said of last week's pro-
gram. "Many females feel
they do not deserve to be
assertive." 0

Memorial Service
Set For May 31

The annual memorial service
at Beth El Memorial Park
will be held 11 a.m. May 31.
Services will be conducted by
Rabbi Daniel Polish.
Rabbi Norman Roman,
Temple Kol Ami, will speak
on "Two Steps Forward —
One Step Back." Liturgical
renditions will be presented
by Cantor Gail Hirschenfang
and organist Gale Kramer.
Participating congregations
include Temple Beth El, Tem-
ple Israel, Temple Emanu-El,
Temple Kol Ami, 'Temple Shir
Shalom and Congregation
Shir Tikvah.

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