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November 10, 1995 - Image 72

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-11-10

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

Where

A Great Deal

Gets Even

Better

The
Sports
Club

of West Bloomfield

open ii011 S

Sunday, November 19, 10amlpm

See the Major Expansion &
Renovation of our Locker Faculties

Membership Deals

Free Aerobics Classes at 10am & 1pm
with Fitness Star Kell Roberts

Come see what we have to offer.

G2G-9880

52

The Sports Club of West Bloomfield
6343 Farmington Road, Just North of Maple

Say Cheese:
At Your Own Risk

BOAZ DVIR SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

After eight years of being a
erusalem's Orthodox Jews
strike again. Recently, the dance club favorite, recording
Charedim started spilling three successful albums in Eu-
ink on women who pass rope, giving sold-out perfor-
through their neighborhoods mances around the world and
wearing what they deem im- hanging out with celebrities such
modest clothes. Now, they are as Elizabeth Taylor and Michael
luring Domino Pizza employees Jackson, Ms. Haza has recently
to fictitious addresses to punish started a new career: She's a dee-
them for delivering cheese and jay on the Tel Aviv regional radio
(beef) pepperoni pizzas on Shab- station, according to Yediot
Aharonot.
bat, according to Maariv.
Ms. Haza denies that she is do-
This is what the Charedim do
when trying to be nice. When ing this because her career is de-
they decide to really show the de- clining, Yediot Aharonot reports.
"I miss Israel terribly when I
livery people who rules the world,
they also beat them up, Maariv am overseas," she told Yediot
Aharonot. "I don't like it there."
reports.

j

Kicked Out

The Color Of Discrimination

When officials at a public high
school in Ashdod saw a picture of
one of their students in Yediot
Aharonot, they were so distressed
they decided to kick her out.
No, 14-year-old Liat Brokas
was not shown drinking, smok-
ing, or fighting. She was shown
wearing a bikini, according to
Yediot Aharonot, which also cov-
ered the story.
Ashdod High is a religious
school and has strict rules about
what students can wear during
— and after — school.
Liat is now attending a pub-
lic secular high school, Yediot
Aharonot reports.
As the spokesperson of the city,
which has jurisdiction over the
schools, told Yediot Aharonot,
"The student was removed in ac-
cordance with the regulation of
religious education, which are set
in the policy of the Ministry of Ed-
ucation ... If, for example, a stu-
dent sees another student driving
on Shabbat, and he reports it, the
student who violated Shabbat
would also be removed."

The Beit Hashalom Court in
Jerusalem sentenced a nursery
employee who refused to a admit
child because he is an Ethiopi-
an to 60 hours of community ser-
vice, according to Maariv.
The employee, 31-year-old
Chia Shukran, pleaded guilty,
Maariv reports.

Wide Angle

Three Israelis and two Jorda-
nians recently shot each other.
But it was all in good spirit.
In a project by the Israeli mag-
azine, The Nature Of Things, the
photographers shot pictures of
their neighboring countries, ac-
cording to Maariv.
While Israelis came up with
photos of bedouins and mosques,
the Jordanians captured the glitz
of Greater Tel Aviv — the Opera
House, the Cesarea golf course
and fancy stores.
They definitely had to use their
wide angle lenses.

Coming Home

Singer Ofra Haza, Israel's
biggest star on the international
scene, is coming home.

What A Coincidence

When Golan Friedman looked
at the number the Nazis had tat-
tooed on his grandmother's arm,
he almost fell down.
Frieda Friedman's Holocaust
number, 30076, was almost iden-
tical to the last digits of his Israel
Defense Forces ID, 3076, accord-
ing to Yediot Aharonot
"I think that my husband [who
died 15 years ago] is looking down
on this and laughing at the Ger-
mans," Frieda told Yediot
Aharonot. "Here is the number
that they gave me as one who
was going to burn, and now my
grandson has it in the ID card he
received from the IDF — the
army of the Jewish people." D

Give Peace
A Chance

BOAZ DVIR

SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

he first Woodstock may
have been the most famous
rock concert ever. The sec-
ond Woodstock may have
been the most hyped rock concert
ever. And, if the Beatles, who are
about to release an anthology in-
cluding a new song featuring
John Lennon's voice, reunite on
stage, it may be bigger than both
Woodstocks combined. But for
pure political significance, noth-
ing can top Israeli singer Zahava
Ben's upcoming concert in Gaza.
PLO Chairman Yassir Arafat,

T

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