1:* 1999 Joe Swimmer Camps A Camping Tradition Since 1935 Register Mayan iinie's running miti Check out all our NEW offerings at JPM! NEW! One Week Sport cc Specialty Camps for Ages 6-14: JCC Swim Camp • JCC Basketball Camp • WNBA Detroit Shock Girls Basketball Camp • NFL Flag Football Camp • Magic Camp Dance Camp • JCC Soccer Camp • Photography Camp JCC Baseball Camp • JCC Rollerblading Camp Plus, back by popular doviand... Young Chagall Art Camp • Wet & Wild Camp Traditional 4-Week Camps for preschool-3rd grade For additional information, please call (248) 967-4030. Jimmy Prentis Morris Building • A. Alfred Taubman Jewish Community Campus 15110 West Ten Mile Road • Oak Park, MI 48237 LP ACCREDITED TIE ON ONLY AT THE SHIRT BOX The Shirt Box, Shirts and a Whole Lot More. Always 20%-35% Off Retail 4 ,0 milumi, . • 1r. HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6 • Thurs. till 7 t ij I I Courtyard Center • 32500 Northwestern Hwy. • Farmington Hills, MI 48334 • (248) 851-6770 Save 23%-25% on add-ons Ez accessories* TerTi The Ultimate Quality *with purchase of any fort with swings at regular price by Swingsets Inc. Save Up To VOW° Add-ons include: slides, ramps, multiple forts or decks, sandbox, firepole, picnic table, climbing wall, roof, awning & more! Order Now for Healthy Play all Summer Long. 5/7 1999 Special Offer Runs Thru May! LOBO- ROSS 3947 IV. 12 Mile Berkley (248) 543-3115 www.donhospital.com Models on Display Mon-Sat. 10-5:30 • Fri 10-8 76 Detroit Jewish News Skyline & The Backstreet Horns Royal Oak • (248) 3984711 WWW.LORIOROSELCOM The BIG Story around Jerusalem. In November 1947, when the United Nations voted to partition Palestine into Jew- ish and Arab states, the organiza- tion also demanded that Jerusalem be placed under international administration and jurisdiction. Jerusalem's population was over- whelmingly Jewish, and Jews, Arabs and others maintained their own, separate neighborhoods, both in the old and new districts of the city. Jews grudgingly accepted the par- tition plan, but the Arabs rejected it outright. When British mandatory rule in Palestine ended at midnight on May 14-15, 1948, Arabs forces put Jerusalem under siege. As the war raged, the Jewish popula- tion was cut off. from supplies of food and water. The situation grew desperate, and on May 27 the Jewish Quarter in the Old City sur- rendered to the Arab Legion and was evacuated. Dozens of Jewish families, including some that had lived in the Old City since the Mid- dle Ages, were forced to leave. By the time the cease fire was proclaimed on June 1 1 , Jerusalem was divided. The cease-fire line ran north-south, with Jews on the west and Arabs to the east. This meant that the Jews held most of the city, including the new neighborhoods and suburbs. But the Arabs con- trolled the Old Ciy, with its famous holy places. The U.N. continued to press for internationalization, but in Decem- ber 1948, Israel declared Jerusalem the state's eternal capital. Jordan, meanwhile, already had annexed its portion of Jerusalem. The line dividing the Israeli and Jor- danian sides was marked by barbed wire and stone walls. Dur- ing the 19 years that Jerusalem was a divided city, old Jewish neighbor- hoods — now controlled by the Arabs — underwent systematic destruction. The Arab Legion Uor- clan's army) wrecked almost all the synagogues and yeshivot in the Old City's Jewish Quarter. The Legion toppled huncreds of tombstones in the ancient Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives and used the mon- uments to build new barracks. Some of the synagogues were used as stables; others were turned into latrines. Later, the Jordanians allowed the Intercontinental Hotel to build on the Israelis rebuilt the ruined synagogues, yeshivot and houses. Mount of Olives, and more Jewish graves were desecrated. Although the armistice agreement called for Israel to have access to Mount Scopus (upon which stood the original building of the Hebrew Universi -y and Hadassah Hospital), as well as to Jewish holy places, the Jordanians did not comply. For Jerusalem in 1967, the Six- Day War was actually a three-day war. The fighting began Monday morning, June 5, when the Jordani- ans took over the U.N. building and began shelling the Israeli side of the city. By Wednesday afternoon, June 7, the Israeli forces controlled all of Jerusalem. Israel immediately tore down the barbed wire and the walls and cleared the mine fields to unite the two halves of the city. Although official reunification was declared June 28, 1967, the Israeli government proclaimed Yom Yerushalayim, Jerusalem Day, to be observed on 28 lyar. This corre- sponded to June 7, the day Israeli forces conquered the city. When Israeli soldiers entered Jerusalem's Old City, the first place they ran to was the -Kotel Maaravi,