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October 28, 1994 - Image 52

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-10-28

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

At 18, Jeanne Schaller left home
to spread her wings.
At 81, she's doing it again.

Quote Of The Week

life. For more information, call us at (810) 358-0088.
Springhouse. Where older adults get a helping hand.

Assisted Living at Springhouse,
opening soon.

She's an independent woman. But if she's going
to live her own life, she'll need a little assistance now
and then.
If you or someone you love is looking for a warm,
caring environment where independence is respect-
ed and a helping hand is always nearby, we can help.
Introducing Springhouse Assisted Living, open-
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We have a highly qualified staff to provide assis-
tance when it's needed, as well as features like an ice
cream parlor, formal dining room, country kitchen
and outdoor terrace to share with visiting family and
friends.
Regular wellness assessments let us work dosely
with each resident to help them get the most out of

Please send

MC your

brochure on Spinghouse.

Name

ANNINTH

1-1 ‘ ,NG A l -
SPR
;1.10Iis

Address

Phone

Zip

(810) 358-0088

26111 Telegraph Road
Soukield, MI 48034

JN

A Member of the Manor Care Family of Companies

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breast
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or sheer shock value, the
New York Times goes to the
head of the class for the
front-page photo it used the
day after the Hamas bombing of
an Israeli bus in downtown Tel
Aviv.
Although the bombing was
front-page news in almost every
paper in the country, and al-
though almost every paper car-
ried a photo with its story, the
Times' photo of an Israeli soldier
looking down at the body of a
woman killed in the assault —
and still lying in the twisted,
barely recognizable frame of the
Dan No. 5 bus — conveyed with
extraordinary immediacy the
force of the blast that killed at
least 22 and wounded 48.
The Media Monitor Shock
Award, which is being premiered
in today's column, does not hon-
or gratuitous pandering to base
instincts. Rather, the value of the
"shock," as eminently illustrat-
ed by the Times' photo, is that
it is informative and education-
al — not cheap, sleazy or ma-
nipulative.
Kudos to the Times for having
the guts to put such a gripping
photo on its Oct. 20 front page.
And a secondary slap on the jour-
nalistic back to Agence France-
Press, from which the Times got
the photo, for having superb pho-
tographers on its staff.
Many news stories focused on
the possibility of the recent spate

F

ASSISTED LIVING

The Privacy and Comfort of Home

I

— Conrad Muhammad,
Nation of Islam leader in New
York and reputed heir to Louis
Farrakhan, in New York maga-
zine. 1=1

ARTHUR J. MAGIDA SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH N EWS

cYringhouse

BEDFORD VILLA NURSING CARE CENTER

f people who stereotype and
believe in conspiracy theories
are anti-Semitic, then they've
changed the definition of anti-
Semitism on me. Not that I
stereotype."

Shocking Times

State

City

Yassir Arafat's attitude toward Hamas is mentioned in a forthcoming
documentary on PBS.

of llamas-sponsored bombings,
•kidnappings and murders
derailing the Mideast peace
process, at least between Israelis
and Palestinians. One of the
most gloomy prognostications
for how all this affects ordinary
Israelis came in London's Fi-
nancial Times from Professor
Yona Alexander, a terrorism ex-
pert based in Tel Aviv: "The
worst terror is yet to come ...
[llamas] has a long arm and
could decide where and when to
strike."
Especially surprising was that
so few op-eds appeared about the
bus bombing. Maybe opinion-
mongerers are tired of com-
menting about Mideast terror.
Amid such a dearth, the New
York Times rose to the occasion
and printed two about the inci-
dent. Steven Emerson, executive
producer of a forthcoming PBS
documentary about Islamic
terrorism, stated that Yassir
Arafat "has learned that if he al-
lows llamas to target only Is-
raelis, it will leave him alone. In
the long run, this strategy will
only doom him, because Israel
will be forced to reoccupy Gaza.
And ultimately it will not be Mr.
Arafat, but the Palestinian peo- '
ple who will suffer the most."
And A.M. Rosenthal scolded the
West for showing "a passivity"
toward Hamas' terror. "The
only explanation," he stated,
"is that the West fears con-

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