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October 22, 2009

Palestinian students unable to leave Gaza for studies

More than 800 Gaza Palestinians have been unable to leave the coastal strip for university study abroad, an Israeli legal center says.

The academic year has started, but 838 students are still waiting for exit permits from Israel, according to Gisha-Legal Center for Freedom of Movement.

Some 1,145 students have left through the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt, and another 69 received permits to exit from the Erez crossing into Israel, according to Gisha, citing figures from the Palestinian Interior Ministry in Gaza.

The rest either do not meet Israel’s criteria, which includes having a diplomatic escort, or have not been able to get out through the Rafah crossing, which only opens infrequently.

Responding to Gisha’s claims, Israel’s Civil Administration told Ynet that “The policy of allowing scholarship recipients from Gaza is derived from the government’s overall policy regarding the Strip. Israel is under no legal obligation to allow Palestinian students to cross into it for the mere sake of traveling abroad to school. Nevertheless, it was recently decided to ease such departures and some 200 scholarship recipients have left Gaza since 2008.”

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Livni letter backs J Street

Israeli opposition leader Tzipi Livni sent a letter of support to J Street on the eve of its first national conference.

Livni, of the Kadima Party, said she could not participate in J Street’s Oct. 25-28 event, but wished the group “much success” at the conference. Livni said she and J Street, a lobbying group that bills itself as “pro-Israel, pro-peace,” shared a similar “vision” of a two-state solution.

“In my view, the discussion in the pro-Israel community of what best advances Israel’s cause should be inclusive and broad enough to encompass a variety of views, provided it is conducted in a respectful and legitimate manner,” Livni wrote. “Along the way, we may not agree on everything but I do believe that we must ensure that what unites us as Jews who are committed to Israel’s future as a secure, Jewish, and democratic State is far greater than what separates us.”

Earlier in the week, the Israeli Embassy said U.S. Ambassador Michael Oren would not be attending the conference because J Street supports positions that may “impair Israel’s interest,” instead saying it would send an observer.

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Report: Israeli, Iranian nuclear officials were at same meeting

Israeli and Iranian nuclear officials participated together in a nuclear non-proliferation conference last month in Cairo, according to the Israel Atomic Energy Commission.

The representatives sat at the table during the regional dialogue but did not have any real “dialogue or interaction,” a commission spokeswoman said Thursday.

Iran denied the report, which broke in an Australian newspaper last week and became widespread after the Israeli daily Ha’aretz reported on it Thursday, stressing that the sides did not meet privately.

The meeting reportedly took place Sept. 29 and 30 at the Four Seasons Hotel in the Egyptian capital. Other participants reportedly attending the meeting were representatives of the Arab League, Jordan, Egypt, Tunisia, Turkey, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, as well as European and American officials.

It was held under the auspices of the International Commission on Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament, an unofficial forum established by the Australian and Japanese governments.

During one of the meetings, the Iranian representative asked the Israeli representative, “Do you or do you not have nuclear weapons?” Ha’aretz reported, citing unnamed meeting participants. The Israeli envoy did not answer.

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Alleged Nazi Zentai arrested

An alleged Nazi war criminal living in Australia was taken into police custody.

Charles (Karoly) Zentai, 88, was arrested Thursday by police in Perth following the expiration of a two-week stay granted by the Federal Court.

The federal government will decide whether or not to uphold the court’s view that Zentai is eligible for extradition to his native Hungary.

Zentai is accused of helping murder an 18-year-old Jewish boy, Peter Balasz, in Budapest in November 1944 for allegedly not wearing the mandatory yellow Star of David.

Zentai has vehemently denied the charges, claiming he left the Hungarian capital the day before Balasz’s death, since an arrest warrant was issued in 2005 after he was flushed out by the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Operation Last Chance.

The center’s Jerusalem director, Ephraim Zuroff, has led the campaign against Zentai, whom he accuses of trying to elude justice.

“In a case like this when the person is not young, every day that goes by only brings that person a day closer to eluding justice,” Zuroff told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

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Iranian negotiators agree to nuclear enrichment plan

Iranian negotiators reportedly have agreed to a draft of an accord that would allow most of its nuclear fuel to be enriched in Russia.

Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, said Wednesday that the Iranian negotiators meeting in Vienna had accepted the draft agreement, but added that it would have to be approved by the Iranian and U.S. governments.

Under the agreement, the 2,600 pounds of nuclear fuel would be further enriched in Russia and then sent back to Tehran for use in a reactor that refines nuclear fuel for medical purposes, according to The New York Times. The converted nuclear fuel would be difficult to use in a weapon.

ElBaradei’s announcement comes after the second day of negotiations in Vienna hosted by the International Atomic Energy Agency were delayed as the delegations met for consultations.

The delay Tuesday came following a news conference by Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki in which he stated that “Iran will never abandon its legal and obvious right” to nuclear technology.

“The meetings with world powers and their behavior shows that Iran’s right to have peaceful nuclear technology has been accepted by them,” Mottaki said.

The meeting also was delayed after Iran announced Tuesday that France must be excluded from a final deal.

The United States, France and Russia began meeting Monday with Iranian diplomats to discuss a deal by which a third country, namely Russia, would convert about 2,600 pounds of Iran’s low-enriched uranium into fuel for a nuclear reactor to be used for medical purposes.

A tentative deal on the plan was announced at a meeting of Tehran officials and Western powers in Geneva at the beginning of the month.

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Celebrations trim down amid recession

With the weak economy forcing lifestyle changes large and small, one of the mainstays of American Jewish life — the bar and bat mitzvah party — is undergoing some recession-era adaptation.

While few seem to be doing away with the traditional celebration, many families are scrapping themed parties, trimming guest lists and in some cases holding joint or group b’nai mitzvah parties.

“The creative aspect of bar mitzvahs has been decreased,” said caterer Jeffrey Stansfield, the chef of Advantage Jewish Catering and Event Planning in Encino.

The cost cutting at Jewish lifecycle celebrations by no means is universal. Plenty of lavish b’nai mitzvah celebrations, not to mention extravagant Jewish weddings, are still being held. But the cutbacks in parties have been pronounced in some communities, according to caterers in the industry.

Stansfield said he recently catered a joint b’nai mitzvah for four friends whose families decided to have a combined celebration, saving on invitations, food, photography and specials such as entertainers and giveaways. Stansfield said spending on those kinds of specials have fallen about 40 percent.

One caterer in Cherry Hill, N.J., said the average spending on a party has dropped to $15,000 from $30,000 a few months ago, as clients cut out bells and whistles.

“The last time we did a full weekend event with kiddush meals, breakfast, luncheons and dinner buffets was a year-and-a-half ago,” said the caterer, who asked not to be identified. “Most families are looking for simplicity.”

In Dallas, Lowell Michelson of Simcha Kosher Catering said that while he has slashed prices to satisfy clients who want to produce an event at half the usual price, the fixed costs of his own expenses — gas, labor, food, shipping — have made his business all but unsustainable.

“We’re not able to produce profit,” Michelson said. “Business has been hurting.”

Among the extras clients are eliminating are special decor, extravagant cocktail hours, food upgrades and size. They aren’t, however, doing away entirely with the party.

“We’re doing as much work as ever here; people just spend less,” said Howard Heiberger, president of Exquisite Caterers in Marlboro, N.J.

Heiberger said the Darwinistic nature of the catering business — weaker companies are felled by the recession and stronger ones pick up clients from their failed counterparts — means that surviving companies are doing more business than ever. He said the last two years have been two of his company’s best, despite the recession.

“Caterers who went out of business were going out of business anyway,” he said. “The recession just pushed them over the top. We’re not going anywhere.”

Stansfield concurred: “Even though business is off, the business that has been there has been a lot of business.”

Experts say the effects of the recession are more apparent at b’nai mitzvah than weddings because the former is more expendable, weddings often have multiple funders — the bride’s and groom’s families — and weddings often represent the last of the major expenses for a child.

B’nai mitzvah, on the other hand, are usually followed after several years by college tuition bills, then perhaps a wedding.

“For a bar mitzvah, the Torah portion and synagogue service is what counts. The rest is just a child’s birthday party,” one Long Island caterer said. “A wedding is not a birthday party. It’s a pinnacle lifecycle event for adults, and their continued resistance to downsizing in the face of economic hardship proves this.”

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Israeli airstrikes hit arms factory, tunnels

The Israeli Air Force bombed a building and two smuggling tunnels in Gaza.

Wednesday night’s raid was in response to a Kassam rocket attack near a kibbutz in the western Negev several hours earlier.

The building located in Gaza City was used to produce weapons, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

Some 55 rockets and mortar shells have been launched at Israel in the past three months, the IDF said. More than 250 rockets have targeted Israel since the end of Operation Cast Lead in January and more than 750 in 2009.

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Madoff + ponzi + fights + cocaine + sex = Tony Soprano?

CNN has recently reported that a new lawsuit alleges that Bernard Madoff used funds to finance “a cocaine-fueled work environment and a “culture of sexual deviance,” [while] he diverted money to his London, England, office when he believed federal authorities were closing in at home.”

Between $50 million in embezzlement,” title=”CNN.com”>CNN.com.

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Mooning over new ‘Wolfman’ trailer

The new trailer is up for “Wolfman,” a remake of the 1941 classic due out February 12. It features intense action, some gorgeous period sets and lycanthrope-a-rific transformations. But if you think it looks a little goyishe (Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Hopkins, Emily Blunt…), you’re missing all the Jewish subtext, my friend. (And Gene Simmons providing the Wolfman’s howls.)

Here’s Jeremy Wexler on the Jewish aspects of the werewolf:

[The] modern-day werewolf … is largely a metaphor for being Jewish in the 20th century. Consider the modern werewolf narrative: A hairy young outsider becomes saddled with an identity he doesn’t want or particularly like, the meaning of which is told to him by an old European lady speaking a lot of mumbo jumbo. He is in love with a blonde girl who loves him back, but their love is doomed. Eventually he gets chased and killed by a bunch of peasants with pitchforks and torches. And, oh, yes, he feasts on human blood, but it’s not his fault.

The parallels between Jewish ideas of how non-Jews perceived us and the lifecycle of the werewolf aren’t surprising, considering that Jews effectively created the modern werewolf.

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FROM HOLLYWOOD TO TEL AVIV…. TOPLESS??

NOW CASTING:

For the lead role in a feature movie we are looking for a young woman,
age 20-25, with brown hair, brown eyes, thin figure.

Preferably bi-lingual.

Must be light skinned, innocent looking, with strong, captivating eyes.

Excellent pay.

 
Perfect. The ad described me to a T.  Finally, after searching the Internet and newspapers for days, I had stumbled across a general audition for the lead role in a movie. I might even have a chance to work in a few words in my native language, Hebrew. AND they were paying! What more could a new face in LA want? I read the last lines.

Must be familiar with Bondage.

Send full body picture to the following address:

               
Bondage? I didn’t recognize that genre. Could be a typo. Maybe they meant Bandage? But I’d never heard of Bandage movies (spliced movies?) either. I quickly reviewed the types of movies advertised at my local video store, in Israel: Suspense, Action, Drama, Comedy… Nope. I couldn’t remember anything called Bondage. But then again, that WAS in Israel. What do we know back there? Obviously, in the REAL movie industry, here in LA, the genres are much more wide ranging or specific.

This was just one of the problems I faced as an actress raised in Israel by English speaking parents. Maybe I spoke perfect English but that didn’t mean I knew the American culture or lifestyle. Like the first time I parked a car in LA and the meter said Insert Dimes Only. How could I know what a dime was? We had only used Shekels in Israel. So I approached a young woman walking two children, spread my palms out full of coins and asked her, in a flawless English, “Could you tell me which of these is a dime?”  She looked at me as though I had just landed from outer space, picked up both her kids and started running. She shouted something that reminded me of one of my mother’s favorite desserts – “Fruitcake!”

But it wasn’t only the different country cultures. I grew up in a Jewish, Orthodox home, where lots of common American expressions were just never mentioned.  Like the term “Want to come up for some coffee?” which my date asked me as we left a movie.  I had actually been craving a caffeine kick for some hours, but apparently, in LA, “some coffee” was a code phrase for something else. Entirely. As I rushed out of his apartment I realized that his craving and mine were world’s apart.

So I was sure that back home we probably watched Bondage movies all the time, we just didn’t know that’s what they were called in the States.

As the professional actress I considered myself, I sent in my picture, requesting an audition as soon as possible, and assuring the producer/director that of course I was familiar with Bondage. “Why it’s my favorite genre, by far,” I assured him.

After all, wouldn’t it be a shame to blow my big shot at stardom simply because I hadn’t done a little research?

So I sent an email to one of my guy friends in LA, who happened to be a film teacher, asking him for a speed course on Bondage.

He wrote back that he would be more than happy to give me private lessons on the subject, and that he was looking forward to moving our relationship up a notch. He even assured me he had all the props we would need, and that we should meet later.

But later was no good. I needed to learn NOW.

I thought of calling my father in Israel for some information, but realized that the ten hour time difference meant he was sound asleep. As a last resort, I called my cousin, an entertainment lawyer, and told him I needed help preparing for a bondage audition. I practically begged him to help me.

“Come over, now!” he commanded, clearly upset.

When I arrived at his office, he ushered me into his room, saying, “Trust me, Tiferet, you DON’T want THIS audition.”

“But I do!” I insisted, almost in tears. “I was MADE for this role. They’ll appreciate me for myself. Can’t you just give me some pointers so I don’t come off like an idiot?”

“The only thing that will come off in this audition IS your clothes, you idiot!” My cousin buried his head in his hands. “Tiferet, Bondage is…. It’s….” He looked at my eager smile and bit his lower lip. “Do you know what S&M is?”

“A production company?”

“In a manner of speaking,” he quipped. “It’s more like a pre-production company in that…”

You’ll be relieved to know (although not as much as my parents were), that after his detailed explanation of the unorthodox use of high heals and leather belts, I passed on the audition.

This was my first lesson in the pitfalls of the acting industry. It served me in good stead when I packed up and flew back to Israel, ready to make a name for myself in the city that doesn’t let anyone sleep, Tel Aviv.  After all, I’m still a small town girl (from Jerusalem) in a big, unfamiliar city (Tel Aviv, or as we Jerusalemites call lit – Sin City). And sure enough, most men here have the same definition of “some coffee” as their brothers in L.A.

So, older and wiser, I was ready for almost anything as I awaited instructions from the Casting Director who was auditioning me and three other girls for a part in a car commercial.
My agent told me to come in sportswear. This was to be an informal audition.

Sure….

“So girls,” began the director, “although you are auditioning for the part of handyman – woman, in your case—we are actually placing less emphasis on your fix-it abilities and more on your flirting abilities. We want you to look pretty, and inviting.”

Ah hah. There it was. Inviting for WHAT? “Some coffee”, perhaps?

“Also, there is something we forgot to mention to your agents.”

Just as I thought….

“Should you be accepted for the commercial, we will also require you to be available for a photo shoot for our product catalog. Please sign these consent forms.”

I looked around at the other girls. So sweet and innocent, clearly not as seasoned as I was—they wouldn’t know what hit them. It was up to me to uncover this wolf in sheep’s clothing.

“Let me ask you,” I said diplomatically, “would these happen to be NAKED pictures we’re talking about?”

Silence. The director’s jaw dropped, and the girls looked at one another.

I had caught him off guard. At least the girls would know –

Suddenly the director and his crew burst out laughing.

“Only if you really, REALLY want to be naked!” the director roared with laughter. “Miss, we’re selling car parts not body parts!” 

“Do you think we should tell the company to change its name from Deals on Wheels to Bonkers for Honkers?” his assistant joked.

“Gee, I didn’t know this was that kind of audition,” one of the girls said. “I would have worn a lot less.”

Okay, so I didn’t get the part (neither did she). But I did get an ecstatic call from my agent saying he didn’t know I was an actress who would audition naked, and that opened a whole new set of doors for us…

You know, it takes time to get your bearings in a new place, whether in tinsel town or Sin City. But I was – am – determined to make a name for myself, a name I can be proud of. It’ll take time, of course. But I’m learning.

So, welcome to my life. A wise man once said, You are where you’re at.  And I’m East of Hollywood North of Jerusalem, South of Haifa, and West of the Mediterranean Sea.

I’m in Tel Aviv, an actress ready for a career filled with Drama, Action, Suspense, Comedy….

And Bondage? Let’s just say I’m still searching for the guy who can make me a good cup of coffee.

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