replaces Abdul Salam al-Majali,
who was dismissed from the post
by King Hussein because of his
handling of domestic issues.

Youths Clearing
Camp Site

New York (JTA) — Youths from
across Europe are clearing the site
of a long-neglected Nazi concen-
tration camp.
The Elrich camp, which held
an estimated maximum of 8,000,
sat for decades on no-man's-land
between the border separating
East and West Germany. Many of
the camp's inmates were worked
to death digging tunnels for the
Nazi's rocket program.

Oslo Anniversary
`Not A Funeral

New York (JTA) — Israeli and
Palestinian officials attended a
dinner in Norway's capital to
mark the fifth anniversary of the
initialing of the Oslo accords.
The officials — including for-
mer Israeli Prime Minister
Shimon Peres — denied that they
were attending a funeral for the
peace process, which has been
deadlocked for more than 17
months. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is not attending the
two days of events to mark the
initialing, which paved the way
for an official signing ceremony a
month later on the White House
lawn.

Premier Firm
On Covenant

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel is still
demanding that the Palestinians
revoke the anti-Israel clauses of
their covenant as a condition for a
further West Bank redeployment,
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu told a special Knesset
session.
His comments came amid press
reports indicating the prime min-
ister had softened his stand
regarding the covenant. Legislators
had been called back from their
summer recess to discuss the stale-
mated peace process.

WHERE
KIDS
LEARN
SPORTS!

TENNIS

junior program

lessons

clinics

SWIMMING

youth lessons

U.S.S. swim team

summer swim team

GYMNASTICS

recreational classes

The.
Sports/

preschool classes

team

MARTIAL ARTS

taekwondo

preschool classes

NOW TWO
LOCATIONS

WEST BLOOMFIELD

6343 Farmington Rd.
(Just north of Maple)
Classes begin August 31

U.S.T.A. belt program

DANCE

(NOVI only)

ballet

tap

jazz

NOVI

42500 Arena Drive
(Off Novi Rd, South of 10 Mile)
Classes begin September 28

modern

248-626-9880

9/4
1998

Detroit Jewish News

37

