u► A1-1 GIFT LIND ER $3 0.001 ELECTION from page 20 A Jewish Perspective Editor's note: David Gad-Harf; executive director of the Jewish Community. Council of Metropolitan Detroit, offers his comments on • the elections: T Dancing Rabbi Sonic activated - the Dancing Rabbi dances to Hava Nagila when you clap your hands.A delightful gag guaran- teed to lighten up any occasion. $18.00 he election was a mixed bag for the Jewish community. On the nation- al level, the Republican control of Congress will not affect the level of Congressional support for Israel. In fact, the new Congress will contain some replacements for House and Senate members who were vocal critics of Israel. The Jewish community's domestic agenda will be threatened, however, as more conservative members of Congress control the flow of legislation. We will have to be on guard for a re-emergence of the social conservative agenda on church-state separation issues and more restrictive welfare and immigration leg- islation. The biggest challenge facing the Jewish community in the area of government relations is that of building ties to the many new players in the state legislature. Due to term limits, many Michigan House and Senate committee members will be brand new to Lansing. This provides us with a fresh opportunity to present our agenda, placing a premium on our active presence in Lansing. Char at This bluetaseba cop speaks for itself! Adjustable Strap - one size fits all. . $20.00 Essence of Jerusalem Cologne Using the aromatic essences of over . 90 Israeli plants, this cologne is the very essence of Jerusalem. Men's $22.00, Women's $24.00 Dreidel Dish A fun and unique gift. Great for candy and Chanukah gelt! $30.00 www.jewish.com • 800 875 6621 - n • - vewtshacom"_5to.rs The store for the Jewish community online' 24 ° As of the Nov. 6 unofficial count, Newman had garnered 1,424,333 statewide votes. Her Oakland County total of 743,532 was more than any other U-M candidate earned in any other county. Although U-M President Mary Sue Coleman and the board have both rejected the idea of divestment, the issue hasn't gone away, said Newman, who earned an honors degree in history from the university before proceeding on to a law degree from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She pledged to investigate why stu- dent fees are being used to fund confer- ences such as the SAFE (Students Allied for Freedom and Equality) conference on Palestinian rights and divestment that included anti-Israel rhetoric. "All our students are paying mandato- ry community service fees," she explained. "At the last meeting of the Community Service Commission, SAFE was approved for $5,300 to help fund the conference. Winning the second regent position was District 1 Rep. Andrew Richner, R- Grosse Pointe, who represents the Grosse Pointes, Harper Woods and the east side of Detroit. His unofficial vote count was 1,279,171. Richner, who is not Jewish, published a pamphlet on the reasons to oppose divestment, independent of any other legislators. With both undergraduate and law degrees from U-M, Richner said he looks forward to "working with board members of both parties to serve the university community and the state of Michigan." In addition to the divestment issue, he is "particularly focused on doing what the board can to restrain tuition hikes and on garnering state support for the university." Meanwhile, lawyer Richard Bernstein won his first elected post, as a member of the WSU Board of Governors, with 1,257,322 votes. The other available seat on the WSU board went to Diane Dunaskiss. "I think the whole divestment issue is totally anti-Semitic and it's not going to be tolerated," Bernstein said. 'As far as I'm concerned, it's very important to get Jewish people on boards. To allow for divestment is to allow anti-Semitism to run rampant." "Ultimately, one of my main priorities as a governor at Wayne State University is to see that the university gets its fair share of state funding," he said. "WSU gets half the funding of U-M and MSU, and it's the 20th largest uni- versity in the country, with 31,000 stu- dents. "Most importantly, WSU is a Carnegie I research facility. There are only three in Michigan — U-M, MSU and Wayne. Yet it still gets only half the funding." Bernstein said he ran for the WSU board "because, as a blind person, I can help organize and mobilize the disabled community. "The fact I was able to succeed in a statewide race shows that people once thought of as vulnerable can be a force in the world." Jewish News Sta f f M.iters Shelli Liebman Doi frnan, Harry Kirsbaum, Diana Lieberman and Sharon Luckerman and IN Associate Editor Alan Hitsky con- tributed to this report.