Bones And Money The Orthodox are applying prayers and economic leverage. LARRY DERFNER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT PUT A LITTLE MORE IRON IN YOUR DIET A few regular workouts each week can make a dramatic difference in the way you look and feel day to day. Whether it's lifting a few pounds of iron, jumping into an aer- obics class, rowing on our Concept II Rowing Ergometers, or climbing on the Stairmaster or LifeCycles, the effects are quick and encouraging no matter what your age or conditioning level. If you've let regular exercise fall out of your weekly routine, it's time to pick it up again. And your timing couldn't be better! Join the Health Club in March 1995 and save $100 off your membership! 0 utside the construction site [Ganei Hammat] hotel in of a $120 million to $140 Tiberias, haredim in Jerusalem million luxury apartment were setting garbage cans on fire complex, haredi (Orthodox) in the streets." men are praying. Police guard the Protecting Jewish graves from earth-moving trucks and tractors archaeologists and developers is driving in and out of the site, high on the haredi public agen- overlooking the Jaffa pier. da. Raucous protests break out Since the last week of Febru- here and there around Israel ary, a few dozen to some 4,000 seemingly every few months. haredim have shown up daily (ex- The demonstrations date back cept on Shabbat) to protest the at least to the beginning of the excavation work on the project, 20th century, when they focused called "Andromeda Hill." on Jerusalem. They continued Busing in from Jerusalem and during the Zionist archeology Bnei Brak, they claim ancient craze of the 1950s and picked up Jewish graves are being de- steam in the early 1980s, when stroyed — a claim the construc- the haredi organization Atra tion company and Israel's Kadisha (Holy Site) began ac- antiquities officials deny. tively monitoring excavations. Some protesters have thrown The most storied confronta- rocks at police and shouted tions took place in the early "Nazi!" at them. They've broken 1980s, at Tiberias and at an windows of construction trucks. archaeological dig in Jerusalem's C C HEALTH CLUBS Voted #1 in Member Satisfaction Call the Maple/Drake Building (810) 661 7622 or the JPM Building (810) 967 4030 - - Must not have been a JCC Health Club Member in the past year. Some restrictions apply. VI SA DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S. CAMPING OUTFITTERS 738-5291 3405 Orchard Lake Road Keego Harbor EXTRACTIONS DENTURES & PARTIALS RELINES & REPAIRS CASH FOR LIKE-NEW WOMEN'S & CHILDREN'S QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES 30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE DESIGNER AL 601‘‘'S 9 04 LYNNE MASTER, M.Ed Owner, Director Q1316d or 353-2200 DENTURE CENTER HARVARD ROW MALL 21774 WEST 11 MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 C—X- N fashions & accessories CONSIGNMENT CLMIMS • ACT, SAT, MEAP Preparation • Remedial Tutoring/All Subjects • Study/Testing Skills • IEPC Advocacy • Testing/Evaluation 545-6677 • 433-3323 Oak Park Bloomfield Hills Call today for a FREE housecall appt or in-store appt . 347-4570 43041 W 7 Mile • Northville cfoueh Uhe. cUnitod AP/NATI HA RNIK MIME Orthodox Jews at a police barricade shout at construction workers. Police have beaten a few of the rowdier demonstrators and ar- rested about 300 of them. Developer Udi Ilan comes home these days to find haredi demonstrators outside his house near Tel Aviv. He says anony- mous callers have threatened to kill him and rape his 12-year-old daughter. On the basis of mali- cious false alarms, fire trucks have been sent to his house five times, and ambulances 15 times, Mr. Ilan says. But compared with some oth- er major battles over old Jewish graves, the battle of Jaffa is "un- der control," said Bar-Ilan Uni- versity Professor Menachem Friedman, a leading authority on the haredim. "After all, Jerusalem is quiet," Professor Friedman noted. "Dur- ing the protests in the early 1980s over the construction of the City of David. Last year's battle royal occurred at the biblical site of Modi'in, where a new city is be- ing built. "The State of Israel is the only country in the world where Jew- ish graves can be desecrated freely," said Eyal Porat, a lead- ing activist in the Jaffa demon- strations. "You have to show respect for the dead. How would people like it if their family's graves were vandalized?" Usually the clashes end with builders or archaeologists amend- ing their plans, and agreeing to take extra digging precautions so the haredim can walk away as- sured that Jewish graves won't be harmed further. In Jaffa, however, developer Ilan and the government Antiq- uities Authority insist there are no Jewish graves on the four-acre building site.