Jews Have Had To Confend T The Gize eks • Court Gives Embryo To Mom Babionians, Anti_ The Rtarianso konypar1s01. 9 UT' Aerobics nsfructors Are Pik sycais. No one will dispute the cardiovascular benefits of driving a chariot into battle. But why go to all that trouble, when the newly renovated Jimmy Prentis Morris JCC has everything you need to get in shape? Including a new indoor pool, gym, fitness equipment, and aerobic studios. And right now, Family Memberships start at just If you are not wearing it ...sell it! The fertilized eggs should be regarded as a pregnancy-in- progress. $300, and Individual Health Club Memberships start at $620. You could save as much as $200. Quite a deal, especially when you consider how much a good chariot costs these days. For more information, call 967-4030. Offer limited to first 350 memberships. Some restrictions apply iCC ROHN GOLDMAN ASID INTERIOR DESIGN You can't enjoy jewelry if it's sitting in your safe deposit box. Sell it for immediate cash. We purchase fine gems. Diamonds and Gold Jewelry. BLOOMFIELD -HILLS A Service to Private Owners, Banks & Estates — Gem/ Diamond Specialists NEW YORK t;mele. /nre44"044 /for 39 p4/), r Fine Jewelers EST. 1919 AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GR IN GRADING & EVALUATION Lawrence M. Allan, President - 30400 Telegraph Rd. • Suite 134 Bingham Farms 642-5575 Hours: DAILY 10-5:30 THURS. 10-7 • SAT. 10-3 An iA) deli court has awarded custody of a frozen embryo produced by a now-divorced couple to the mother, in the first case of its kind to con- front the Israeli legal system. The Haifa District Court rejected the request of the woman's ex-husband to pre- vent the embryo's implanta- tion in a surrogate mother. The case began several years ago, when Haifa resi- dent Ruthi Nahmani had to undergo an operation of which a side effect was her inability to have any chil- dren in the future. As she and her husband, Danny, were at the time married and wanted to have a child, they decided that she should become pregnant and that the fertilized egg would be gestated in a surrogate mother. But after the fertilization took place, the couple 313-855-8787 separated and divorced. The husband left home, married and started a new family. He subsequently made a legal demand that the implantation process be stopped, arguing that he was not willing to be forced to become the father of a child he would not raise. But the mother responded that as this was her only chance to have a child, the fertilized eggs should be regarded as a pregnancy-in- progress. In a precedent-setting rul- ing, Judge Hanoch Ariel ruled that there was no fur- ther need for consent from the former husband, as he had previously agreed to the procedure. According to the judge, the father had no right to retract his original consent. "I am really relieved," said Ruthi Nahmani follow- ing the verdict. Her ex-husband said the decision had been painful to him and that he would ap- peal the ruling. A similar case in the United States, involving a divorced Tennessee couple, went the other way, when a court affirmed the father's right. to have the embryos destroyed.