WHEN TERROR STRIKES Your palms begin to sweat... You're on the verge of hysteria... You pray that no one will hear... Your worst nightmare come true... You've just been asked to read... HEBREW HEBREW READING LEVEL II Increase your fluency — broaden your vocabulary — learn the rituals in the prayer services and understand the ideas behind the prayers. A 4-week Hebrew Crash Course designed for the more advanced student. At the end of the course, you'll have the confidence you need to be "at home" in the prayerbook and ready to wow the entire family when it's your turn to read. COURSE BEGINS: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1 (7-9 P.M.) $45 (INCLUDES COURSE MATERIALS) For further information, please call Aish HaTorah of Metro-Detroit FOR THE ULTIMATE IN QUALITY BANDS .. . CALL LORIO-ROSS ENTERTAINMENT We Provide Continuous Music with either Bands and/or DJ's RUMPLESTILTSKIN JERRY ROSS BAND HOT ICE SIMONE VITALE NORMA JEAN BELL SUN MESSENGERS REFLECTIONS RADIO CITY 1_0 1 0-ROSS 04 4 4i meirr 505 S. Lafayet t e Royal Oak, MI 48067 (313) 398-9711 Orchard Lake School of Musi • Kindermusik \\\ Pre-school music •I Suzuki Strings J Violin, viola, ceno Private Instructi'on; `,,(Piano, voice, instruments ; A 2548 Orchard Lake Rd. Sylvan Lake • 683-9233 Jerry Ross Band KEEPSAKE VIZITOR LOVING CUP CHEERS 7VVO-TWENTY SKYLINE & THE BACK STREET HORNS MUTUAL ADMIRATION SOCIETY Call to View Any of These Bands on Video 20% off PHOTO RESTORATION with this advertisement (first time only) 29175 Northwestern Hwy. 3582333 Find It All In The Jewish News Classifieds Call 354-5959 New Terrorist Attack Stirs Settler Unrest Jerusalem (JTA) — Jewish settlers have launched a se- cond series of violent demon- strations in as many weeks to protest the latest attack by Arab terrorists bent on destroying the Israeli- Palestinian peace initiative. The demonstrations oc- curred after terrorists at- tacked the car of Rabbi Chaim Druckman near the West Bank town of Hebron. Rabbi Druckman is a founding member of the Gush Emunim settlers movement and a former Knesset member from the National Religious Party. Ephraim Ayubi, 30, the settlement leader's driver, was killed in the attack. Rabbi Druckman suffered bullet wounds in the arm and shoulder. The Damascus-based Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a group opposed to the peace process, claimed respon- sibility for the attack. Israeli security officials said Rabbi Druckman may well have been targeted for assassination. It was the latest in a series of recent attacks by radical groups seeking to derail Israel's autonomy accord with the Palestine Libera- tion Organization, and it provoked a violent reaction among settlers. Last week, Israeli settlers embarked on a series of violent demonstrations after an Israeli settler from Beit El, Chaim Mizrachi, was kidnapped and murdered by gunmen from the Islamic fundamentalist Hamas movement. The violent demonstra- tions, directed at Palestinian homes and property, were held as a protest against an Israeli government that the settlers believed has turned a blind eye to their security needs. In the latest demonstra- tions, dozens of Israeli set- tlers came to the scene of the shooting, while hundreds of others reportedly charged the outdoor Arab market in Hebron, where they over- turned food stalls, smashed windows and blocked roads. A demonstration was also held in downtown Jerusalem. Settlers and yeshiva students battled with mounted police and border police during the demonstrations here. The demonstrators snarled up traffic in the capital as the work day ended and then tried to make their way to the prime minister's residence in the Rehavia district. The demonstration follow- ed the funeral of Mr. Ayubi, which was attended by several thousand mourners, among them rabbis and po- litical leaders from several parties. In the West Bank set- tlement of Kiryat Arba, leaders of the Judea and Samaria Council resolved to block all the main arteries in the territories. Settlers held a stormy Chaim Druckman: Wounded in the attack. meeting with Maj. Gen. Nehemia Tamaria, com- mander of the Israeli army's central region. They warned him "not to be surprised" if some settler, unable to con- trol his grief and anger, were to enter an Arab village and kill dozens of inhabitants. That, the general was told, would change the entire po- litical equation in the Mid- dle East in one stroke. Gen. Tamaria, in a brief television interview, said that Israeli soldiers would soon open the roads that had been closed by protesters. He declared, too, that the army would deal with any group seeking "to take the law into its own hands." The latest settlers' pro- tests followed incidents of violence in Hebron that began last week, when Jews were stoned while walking to payers at the Machpelah Cave, where the biblical patriarch Abraham is believed to be buried. Jewish groups reacted by