1 Judge Thomas S ', P ft g t, i Brookover Experience Makin ount! Women Protest Dress Code 7 -YEARS As 48th District Court Judge +17 YEARS As A Practicing Attorney = 24 YEARS On The Job! EXPERIENCED EFFECTIVE •Chief Judge Pro-Tern •Six years as a City Prosecutor • University of Michigan Law School 1971, Yale University 1966 • Peace Corps Volunteer, Nepal 1966-1968 •As Chief Judge, reduced the court's budget! •As Chief Judge, introduced a new computer system, saving tens of thousands of dollars annually • Educates high school students by holding court in local high schools: West Bloomfield, Bloomfield Hills Lahser, Bloomfield Hills Andover, Birmingham ENDORSED Seaholm and Cranbrook-Kingswood •L Brooks Patterson, County Executive • Seminar speaker for lawyers, area high school • Fred Korzon, Bloomfield Township Supervisor students and Oakland University • Jeddy Hood, West Bloomfield Township Supervisor • President, Oakland District Judges' Association • Norman Lippitt, Former Circuit Court Judge • Member of Birmingham Community Coalition •State Rep. Maxine Berman Preventing Substance Abuse •Lawrence B. Deitch, University of Michigan • Member of Steering Committee, Bloomfield Regent Community Drug-Free Coalition •Gilda Jacobs, County Commissioner • Harry Eisenberg, President Jewish Community Center "Judge Brookover is an • Robert Naftaly astute, hardworking Judge • David Pith& Bloomfield Hills Police Chief • David King, Orchard Lake Police Chief and a decent person." •Numerous Court of Appeals, Circuit and District Court Judges — Rabbi Dannel Schwartz •United Auto Workers Re-Elect Judge Thomas Brookover Paid for by the Committee to Re-elect Judge Thomas W. Brookover 6735 Telegraph Rd., Suite 330 • Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48301 Ifl II' 1T lit n e \ nil ll rim If Get Results... Advertise in our new Entertainment Section! . JUDY DEAN thank you to all my customers. I am looking forward to serving many new customers in the future and continuing the same great service to my present customers with whom I've been with for 4 years at Glassman. - GLASSMAN OLDS-SAAB-HYUNDAI-AURORA 2800 Telelgraph (at Te-12 354 3300 IN Call Robin Magness (810)354.7123 Ext. 209 THE JEWISH NEWS Jerusalem (JTA) — Dressed in pants and blouses, two dozen women attempted to enter a su- permarket here that limits entry to "modestly dressed" female cus- tomers. The store, which is owned by the giant Supersol supermarket chain, served all customers until April, when it decided to cater to shoppers from the Orthodox com- munity. The demonstrators, represen- tatives of a half-dozen organiza- tions devoted to equality and women's rights, were denied en- trance to the market on the grounds that they had not ad- hered to the store's strict dress code of knee-length skirts and el- bow-length shirts. According to the store's policy, women wearing shorts or miniskirts must don wraps if they want to enter the market, which is located in an industrial zone on the border of both religious and non-religious neighborhoods. The demonstration came at a time of increased friction in Israel between religious and secular groups. Each side believes that the stakes involve nothing less than the future character of the Jewish state. Stopped by a guard at the en- trance, the protesters stood out- side the store with placards that read "Don't Sell Out Women's Rights" and "How About the Women's Status Quo?" They also displayed a petition with hundreds of signatures from customers vowing to boycott Su- persol stores until the dress-code is revoked. Although most of the shoppers simply stared at the demonstra- tors in curiosity, one man shout- ed, "You are anti-Semites. You are not Jews." Another shopper, who declined to give her name, told the pro- testers, "If you were walking into a mosque, you would be required to take off your shoes. These are the rules here, and you have to abide by them." Oman Yekutieli, head of the secularist Meretz faction in the Jerusalem City Council and the only male demonstrator, said, "It is unacceptable for the largest su- permarket chain in Israel to bar segments of the public from a store in the middle of a busy in- dustrial zone. It's like being in Tehran." The store's policy, Mr. Yeku- tieli said, "is another step away from the Western 20th century toward a fundamentalist society." Leslie Sachs, director of the Is- rael Women's Network, admitted that the market "is a private place and can do what it wants." However, she added, "we are still trying to tackle the problem through a consumer law that says governmentally price-con- trolled items like bread, milk and cheese must be available to all." After the demonstration, which ended without incident, store manager Reuven Cohen said the supermarket's policy was out of his hands. "We are designed to give ser- vice to the ultra-religious com- munity, but we are nevertheless happy to serve anyone who comes into the store," he said. "However, because of the sen- sitivity of women's dress in the religious community, we simply request women to put on a skirt." Asked what would happen if a woman did not honor this re- quest, Mr. Cohen at first hesi- tated. Pressed for an answer, he replied, "She will be denied en- Delicatessen Gets Warning Montreal (JTA) — A Montreal Jewish restaurant has become the latest target of Quebec's of- ficial language watchdog. Schwartz's Hebrew Deli- catessen, founded in 1931, is best known for its smoked meat, a type of pastrami that is smoked, aged and served hot and juicy on rye bread with mustard. The eatery is so popular that last April Quebec Premier Lucien Bouchard, an avowed separatist, had his picture taken by the me- dia while eating a Schwartz's smoked meat sandwich. Now the landmark eatery has been cited for violating Quebec's law governing language use. The restaurant recently re- ceived a letter from the Quebec government's French Language Office asking it to reduce the size of the English letters on the bilin- gual signs posted inside the restaurant. Under the law, English is per- mitted on public signs, but only if the lettering is one-third the size of the French letters. Schwartz's manager, Johnny Haim, was planning to change the signs immediately, even though it would cost more than $1,000 to do so. But after receiving hundreds of phone calls and visits from con- cerned customers who were op- posed to the move, Mr. Haim may have changed his mind. Mr. Haim said in an interview he was under orders of the own- ers of the restaurant to "keep my mouth shut" and would only say "I don't know" when asked if he planned on changing the signs. Meanwhile, other shopkeepers on the popular St. Lawrence Street were planning to help Haim raise funds should he choose to contest the language of- fice's warninff in the courts.