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Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Rehovot to elect new mayor today to replace ousted Shuki Forer

By Noah Kosharek, Haaretz.com

The residents of Rehovot will head to the polls today to elect a new mayor to replace ousted mayor Shuki Forer. Forer left office as mayor of the 110,000-resident city after being convicted in a plea agreement of breach of trust. He claimed that he should not be disqualified from staying on as mayor, but the district court rejected Forer's appeal, ruling that his crime involved moral turpitude and required that he step down. A further appeal to the Supreme Court was rejected two months ago.

The three current mayoral candidates are Rahamim Maloul, who has been acting mayor for the past several months and is a Likud city council member formerly affiliated with Shas; Ami Feinstein, a businessman and former deputy mayor who recently returned to Israel after living in Australia; and councilman Uzi Salant, a former director general of the Meuhedet health maintenance organization who lost to Forer in the mayoral elections held last year. Advertisement

The first two candidates both claimed to be endorsed by the Likud party, but a court ruled that in fact neither is. Salant has the support of Kadima.

Last year's election was decided in two rounds after none of the candidates earned the required 40 percent of the vote in the first round. In the event that none of the three candidates in today's election clears the 40 percent threshold, a second round will again be necessary.

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Two hurt in Rehovot terror axe attack

An ax-wielding 20-year-old man from Jenin attacked passersby on Rehovot's main Herzl Street on Friday, lightly wounding two people.

The assailant then stood with the ax and shouted "Allahu Akhbar" before being arrested.

A 17-year-old suffered light cuts near his ear. He was treated at the scene. A second person also sustained light wounds, but left before paramedics could reach him.

The attacker told police he came to avenge the death of a friend who died in the IDF's Gaza operation.

"We view this as a sporadic incident, not an organized attack," a Shfela Police spokeswoman said.

The suspect was transferred to the security forces for further questioning.

Source: Yaakov Lappin. Two hurt in Rehovot terror axe attack (9, 11/01/2009) JPost.com [FullText]

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Sunday, December 23, 2007

Patent-Infringement Windfall Goes to Israeli Institution, Could Be a Result of the Weizmann Top Scientists, Officials Gambling

Two companies involved in the making and selling of the anticancer drug Erbitux will each pay $60-million to the technology-transfer organization of Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science, resolving claims from a patent dispute.

The settlement, announced on Friday by ImClone Systems Inc. and Sanofi-Aventis SA, acknowledges that the Weizmann organization, called the Yeda Research and Development Company, is the sole owner of the patent.

In September 2006 a federal judge in New York ruled that three scientists at Weizmann deserved the patent for inventing the process used in making Erbitux, a drug for treating colon cancer that ImClone Systems makes.

ImClone has resolved another patent-infringement lawsuit over Erbitux involving a university. In September, it agreed to pay $65-million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Repligen Corporation to settle a 2004 lawsuit that was due to go to trial that day. The parties did not say how much of the settlement would go to MIT.

Source: Goldie Blumenstyk. Patent-Infringement Windfall Goes to Israeli Institution The Chronicle of the Higher Education (10 Dec 2007) [FullText]

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Rehovot Weizmann Institute Says Vivisected Monkeys Rehabilitated. Would You Believe a Serial Lier?

Also see: Rehovot's Weizmann Institute is a Concentration Camp, Leading Israel News Source Says. My Rehovot (19 December 2007) [FullText]

Reuven Ladiansky, legal counsel for Let Animals Live, said the group intends to file a request with the Rishon Lezion Magistrates' Court to issue an injunction against the Weizmann Institute and the National Council on Animal Experimentation, in accordance with the Animal Protection Law.

Click here to see pictures and video on the vivisection of animals at the Weizmann Institute of Science (at Let Animals Live website) Warning: contains disturbing images!

"Our request relates to all the different aspects of the cruelty involved in these experiments," Ladiansky said, "the monkeys, which are social animals that need contact with their own species, are kept in small cages, and during the actual experiments they are placed in a device that does allow them to even move their heads."

The organization also plans to file a complaint with Rehovot Police, claiming that the Institute is conducting cruel experiments in violation of the Animal Protection Law, an offense punishable by up to three years in prison.

"We are hoping that indictments will be filed," Ladiansky said.

Let Animals Live said four Knesset members - Eitan Cabel (Labor), Yoel Hasson (Kadima), Gideon Sa'ar (Likud) and Dov Khenin (Hadash) - are backing the organization's initiative and have called for a special Knesset session on the matter, scheduled for Wednesday.

The Weizmann Institute of Science issued a statement saying that it "abides by all laws of the State of Israel as well as international codes of ethics (including the National Research Council) in all matters pertaining to animal experimentation and welfare. This includes minimization of suffering and an extremely high standard of animal maintenance and care. The Institute will terminate, quickly and unconditionally, any research that does not meet even one of these regulations.

"Animal experimentation is crucial to understanding various biological processes. Such understanding frequently leads to the development of medical applications (drugs and therapies) that save human lives and improve the quality of life for millions," the institute said in a statement," the Institute said.

According to the Weizmann Institute, the monkeys used in the research are rehabilitated and moved to a shelter in Ben Shemen."

Located in Rehovot major Israeli Science Institution is a well known plot of the curruption by Israel Science. My Rehovot took a leadership in enlightening the non ethical wrongdoing by the Weizmann Institute officials, that apparently serves ones private interest.

Despite the statement by the Weizmann that the Institution "abides by all laws of the State of Israel as well as international codes of ethics (including the National Research Council", the Institute did not terminate yet the employment of the currently acting Academic Secretary Boaz Avron, and Professor and Chairman Yoram Groner for their apparent professional misconduct.

Source: Dan Bentsur Ynet, Israel News. 19 December 2007, 14:40 [FullText]

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute is a Concentration Camp, Leading Israel News Source Says

'Treblinka for monkeys' slammed

Animal rights activists gather outside Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot to protest controversial brain experiments. 'Decent, broken-hearted people told me they wanted to infiltrate the institute and free the monkeys from this hell, even if it would lead to their arrest,' Let Animals Live spokeswoman says

"Free the monkeys" and "Monkeys feel the same pain humans do" were among the signs waved by some 250 animal rights activists who gathered outside the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot on Tuesday in protest of controversial experiments on animal brains.

The protest came following a week of public outcry after the release of shocking hidden-camera footage taken by a monkey caretaker who worked in the institute's labs.

Click here to see pictures and video on Let Animals Live website
(Warning: contains disturbing images)

"I received emails, faxes and phone calls from decent, broken-hearted people who said they wanted to infiltrate the institute and free the monkeys from this hell, even if it would lead to their arrest, but I told them that we must remain within the boundaries of the law," said Anat Refua, spokesperson for Let Animals Live, which organized the rally.

"Our side abides by the law; it is those inside these walls who are the criminals. We will get the monkeys out of there legally," she added.

Using a loudspeaker, Refua and former Channel 2 news anchor Gadi Sukenik called on the Institute to end the experimentations "that do not contribute anything to modern science", as passing cars honked in support, indicating widespread sympathy for the cause.

According to Refua, the entire cast of the popular satirical TV show "Eretz Nehederet (Great Country)", who are currently shooting new episodes, asked that the demonstration be postponed so that they could also attend.

Some of the protestors went as far as likening the animals' suffering to the Holocaust, and wore black t-shirts bearing the words "For the animals, it is an eternal Treblinka" – a quote by Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer in "The Letter Writer"...

Source: Dan Bentsur Ynet, Israel News. 19 December 2007, 14:40 [FullText]

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Friday, September 07, 2007

4th Rehovot's International Film Festival to Discuss Woman Perception of Sexuality

By Nirit Anderman, Haaretz.com


Pictures at length of this publication are from Opening Gala of the festival preceeding premiere screening of the Adrienne Shelly's film Waitress. Opening Gala VIPs included Mr.Galeb Majadle, Israel Minister of Science, Culture and Sport (to the right, also )see the bottom picture and Rehovot Mayor Shuki Forer.

All presented images are original photography and copyright by www.MyRehovot.info. Image usage is allowed in case a working hyperlink http://www.myrehovot.info/eng is provided. To request high resolution images contact us by email. All available pictures thumbnails are available here


Film directing is, unfortunately, still a male-dominated field, apparently one of the last artistic endeavors in which gender inequality is still clearly visible.





The number of women directors is on the rise, but is still amazingly small. Out of 13,400 members of the Directors Guild of America, only 1,000 were women - about 7 percent, according to figures reported last month by The Associated Press. Women are believed to constitute less than 5 percent of all directors active in the world today.




Pictures at length of this publication are original photography and copyright by www.MyRehovot.info. To request high resolution images contact us by email.

Male control is obvious in that most prestigious bastion of American filmmaking, the Academy Awards. No woman has so far won an Oscar for direction; over the years only three women directors have been nominated (Lena Wertmuller for "Seven Beauties" in 1975; Jane Campion for "The Piano" in 1993; and Sofia Coppola for "Lost in Translation" in 2003), but none has yet taken home the gilded, muscle-bound, male figurine.



"Out of 30 films made in Israel each year, only one or two are directed by women," director Michal Aviad says. "I believe this is a nefarious combination: Women have a harder time getting into this industry, as they do in other money-rich fields, and this is demanding work that requires women to give up what they are not always prepared to give up.




In the Tel Aviv University film department, where I teach, for example, there are more or less an equal number of male and female students. But after a few years, you see the women drop out of the field, probably because of family life and the need for a secure income. Students ask me and themselves, 'films or love?'"



Cinema theoreticians have been talking for years about the way the director looks at his or her characters and at the world in which they operate.



In the five-day International Women's Film Festival opening today in Rehovot, the spotlight will focus on the cinematic representation of passion and sexuality in films created by women, with an examination of the works of women directors and how they offer a different look at passion than the one we are accustomed to seeing in mainstream, mainly male-directed, films.



"Since so few women are making films, you almost never see in films how they view the world. This is particularly so when it comes to passion and sexuality, because the leading characters are men, and all the supporting roles are supposed to serve them.




And so in mainstream films, the question of women's pleasure is shunted to the margins," says Aviad, who is the festival's artistic adviser. "In the films we have chosen to present, the pleasure principle is not marginalized," she says, adding that questions arise as to how pleasure is achieved, what means are used, who is hunting whom, what pleasure is and when does it become suffering.



Many films to be shown in the festival address love, sex and intimacy, and allow the feminine view of these issues to be scrutinized. The difference between the feminine and masculine experience of passion, and the original and independent cinematic tools of woman filmmakers, rather than those borrowed from the male cinematic world, result in an original, different examination of passion and sexuality.




Marie Mandy's "Filming Desire" (France 2002), which will be screened at the festival, attempts to examine how women directors from various countries are dealing with this challenge. Mandy speaks with the filmmakers and presents scenes from their films as illustration. "I believe that men cut the female body much more, showing more erogenous zones - buttocks and breasts, and in porno films - the rectum," says French director Agnes Varda. "In contrast, when women film women, they show them whole, the pieces are bigger, there is a tendency to show the woman's whole body."




To explain how she prefers to show female sexuality, Varda presents an example from her film "Documenteur" (1981). In one scene, the heroine is shown undressing in her boss' bedroom and stretching out nude on the bed. After some time she turns to the side and sees her reflection in a mirror on the wall.




Throughout the scene, her whole body is seen in the frame, not only parts of it. "In men's films, nudity is usually the end of the process, of voyeurism or exposure leading to the situation in which the woman is nude, usually ahead of a sex scene," Varda says. "In this scene, I wanted to show the woman alone, naked, without it leading to something else."




Also appearing in "Filming Desire" is Catherine Breillat ("Anatomy of Hell"), Sally Potter ("Orlando"), Deepa Mehta ("Water"), and Jane Campion ("The Piano") and other directors. They talk inter alia about the relative ease of filming sex scenes, about the challenge in illustrating internal events cinematically and feelings of love and sacrifice. They mention the unchallenged dominance of female nudity in mainstream films and the almost total absence of male nudity and they wonder about the lack of the penis on the big screen.




"Filming Desire" presents scenes from the films of women directors to illustrate the cinematic language they have developed to deal with love and passion. They move with the camera over the woman's body as if it were a landscape, showing close-ups of various body parts of female and male nude bodies, not hesitating to show the penis, undressing men as much as women, letting one character describe a sex scene in a voice-over without showing the act itself, etc.




When a woman describes sexuality in cinema in a new language, it often incurs angry opposition. For example, the Italian director Liliana Cavani recalls how she was told to cut sex scenes in which a woman was shown on top of a man. The Indian-Canadian director Deepa Mehta was showered with curses at mass demonstrations outside movie theaters in India when her film "Fire" was screened. And here in Israel, director Catherine Breillat's "Anatomy of Hell" was censored for its sexual content.




"Filming Desire" will be shown on Saturday at 11 A.M. at the Chen movie theater in Rehovot. A subsequent panel discussion will include Aviad, Gesher Theater actress Yevgenia Dodina, director Hagar Ben-Asher and Dr. Amalia Ziv, who teaches literature at Tel Aviv University.




The panel will try, together with the audience, to delve into such questions as what passion is for women and how it is expressed cinematically, how men whom women desire appear in films and how female passion can be represented in cinematic language that differs from that of the mainstream.




"We could have all turned into men; that is a possibility," director and actress Paula Baillargeon ("I've Heard the Mermaids Singing") says in "Filming Desire." "We could all have become young, white, American men, but it's very important to us to tell our story, to our daughters, our sons, to everyone. It's a different view of the world."



The Gala was for invited guests only (see pictures above and below).



Source: Nirit Anderman. Sexuality as she sees it. Haaretz.com (5 September 2007) [FullText]

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Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Film Festival "Women in the picture" To Open In Rehovot

"The lives of women in Israel and Europe go under the lens at the fourth annual International Women's Film Festival, a four-day event kicking off Wednesday in Rehovot. The festival, with screenings of more than 60 movies at the city's Cinema Chen and Weizmann Institute of Science, gets underway with the Israeli premiere of Waitress, the final film by Adrienne Shelly, the writer, actress and director murdered last November in her Manhattan office.

The film, with TV star Keri Russell as an unhappily pregnant restaurant worker, differs from nearly all the other festival offerings in its setting - a small, unnamed town in the American South. The majority of the festival's films arrive with an Israeli or European pedigree, though one of the festival's guests, documentary maker Sarah Moon Howe, spends part of her film in the US as well.

Moon Howe's project, the suggestively titled Don't Tell My Mother, fits nicely with the festival's theme for the year - passion and its depictions on screen. Moon Howe's 26-minute production, completed in 2003, follows the director's own career as an exotic dancer, as well as her reasons for quitting the profession. Like a number of other films at the festival, Moon Howe's project analyzes not only the female search for male approval, but how that search can affect relationships between women.

Taking a lighter look at similar issues is Sex is Comedy, a 2002 French production screened at Cannes and the Toronto International Film Festival. The film stars Anne Parillaud (who worked with Israeli director Amos Gitai in 2004's Promised Land) as a perfectionist director trying to stage a sex scene between male and female stars who can barely conceal their loathing of one another. Though intended as farce, the film asks an interesting question about the function of the sex scene: when not staged purely for comic or voyeuristic appeal, what narrative purpose can such scenes serve?

Joining Moon Howe among the festival's foreign guests is Polish filmmaker Dorota Kedzierzawska, an internationally acclaimed writer and director known for her lyrical, minimalist screenplays. Three of Kedzierzawska's feature-length movies will be screened in Rehovot, as will two of her short films.

Only a small minority of the Israeli offerings are feature-length efforts; best known among the Israeli submissions is Three Mothers, Dina Zvi-Riklis' warmly received 2006 drama about female triplets born to Jewish parents in Egypt and brought to Israel as teenagers. Nominated for a slew of prizes at last year's Ophirs (the Israeli version of the Academy Awards), the film took two prizes at the 2006 Jerusalem Film Festival, and serves as an acting workshop by performers like Gila Almagor, Tali Sharon and newcomer Miri Mesika.

Israel's other offerings include documentaries looking at a variety of contemporary issues, among them adoption (I, the forementioned Infant), the impact of IDF service on women (Seeds of Summer) and the modern Orthodox singles scene in Jerusalem (The Modern Ones). Three Times Divorced examines the aftermath of a break-up between a Gaza Palestinian and her Israeli Arab husband, while the three-minute Dana Lynn follows a young woman's decision to have her breasts enlarged.

Of renewed interest since May's Cannes Film Festival is The Womb, an animated 2000 adaptation of a short story by Etgar Keret. The Israeli writer and filmmaker shared the Golden Camera prize at this year's French festival with his wife, who wrote and co-directed the Cannes audience favorite Jellyfish.

Awards for best film and documentary will be handed out at the conclusion of the festival, as will "promising director" and "director promotion" prizes. Films screened will be accompanied by subtitles in Hebrew and English.

A full program and information about purchasing tickets can be found at the festival Web site.

Source: Nathan Burstein. Film Festival: Women in the picture (30 August 2007) JPost.com [FullText]

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Sunday, September 02, 2007

Rehovot Researchers Discover Survival Mechanism for Blood Cancer Cells

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia is a type of blood cancer in which specific white blood cells, called B lymphocytes or B cells, build up in the blood, bone marrow and lymph nodes.

The lifespan of a normal B cell is limited by an internal self-destruct program but, in cancer cells, this mechanism breaks down. B cells that don't self-destruct can live on to multiply and accumulate in dangerous amounts.

A team of scientists headed by Professor Idit Shachar of the Weizmann Institute's Immunology Department and Dr. Michal Haran of the Hematology Institute of the Kaplan Medical Center recently discovered what makes these cancer cells stay alive.

They then launched a targeted attack on the survival mechanism they discovered and succeeded to significantly raise cancer cell mortality rates. Their findings may lead to future treatments for this disease, as well as for other diseases in which B lymphocytes accumulate in the blood.

In previous research, Shachar had found that a specific receptor — a protein on the outer surface of healthy B cells — fulfills a crucial role in helping these cells to survive. She wondered if the same protein might also be a central player in the abnormally high survival rates of cancerous B cells.

Members of Shachar's research team, including Inbal Binsky, Diana Starlets, Yael Gore and Frida Lantner, together with Kaplan Medical Center doctors Haran, Lev Shvidel, Professor Alan Berrebi and Nurit Harpaz, scientists from Yale University and David Goldenberg of the Garden State Cancer Center in New Jersey, examined B cells taken from chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients.

They discovered that, even in the earliest stages of the disease, these cells have an unusually high level of both the survival receptor and another protein that binds to the receptor.

The scientists found that this protein, in binding to the receptor, initiates a series of events within the cell that leads to enhanced cell survival capabilities. For instance, in one of these events, a substance is produced that helps to regulate the cells' lifespan. This substance causes another protein to be produced, which then prevents the self-destruct program from being activated. The team treated the chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells with an antibody that attached to the survival receptor, blocking its activity and causing the cancer cell death rate to soar.

The antibodies they used are produced by the firm Immunomedics, in New Jersey, and are currently entering clinical trials for the treatment of several different types of cancer. Following this research, which has revealed the mechanism for the antibody's actions, the company is planning trials for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, as well.

Shachar said, "The abnormally elevated levels of this receptor seem to be important factors in the development of this disease, right from the beginning, and they are responsible for the longevity of these cancerous B cells. Blocking the receptor or other stages in the pathway they activate might be a winning tactic, in the future, in the war against cancers involving B cells."

Source: Weizmann discovers survival mechanism for blood cancer cells. www.Sun-Sentinel.com (30 August 2007) [FullText]

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Friday, August 17, 2007

Maccabi Tel Aviv Football Club Stars Attracted Rehovot Youth to Grand Opening of New Sport Complex

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A grand opening for the Sportec Sports Complex (Big Orange TV by My Rehovot, 16 August 2007), located at Rehovot Hollandit area, featured a mini football game between Maccabi Tel-Aviv and Rehovot Municipality, preceded with the first symbolic goal by Rehovot Mayor Shuki Forer.

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The event was widely publicized by the municipality, so, top players from national soccer league took deserved attention by Rehovot youth crowd, and participated in a feature minifootball game.

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Please note: This is original material by Myrehovot. Any republication (both online and in print) should be accompanied by the quotation of the original place of publication, www.MyRehovot.info

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Rehovot SportTek Sports Complex and Family Activity Center Grand Opening Celebrated

A grand opening for the Sportec Sports Complex, located at Rehovot Hollandit area, was celebrated Wednesday, August 15, at 6 PM.

The new multi-purpose complex, features field lights, artificial turf, an outdoor exercise facility by Greenfields, and a multi-purpose areas for team excercise and competition.

There are several basketball/minifootball fields, a soccer field, impressive children's playground, picnic areas, and planters with shade trees, and restrooms.

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Rehovot's Wu-Shu Team showcase its' skills


The event was widely publicized by the municipality, so, Rehovot’s sports enthusiasts joined celebrations marking the day of official opening of SporTek. It was a true no-admission-fee 'come and try' day opened to all ages and offering free cookies, sporting demonstrations, live entertainment and mass exercise by Holmes Place...

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...and Holmes Place...

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Many people have been enjoying the children's playground since April but the official opening coincided with the opening of other facilities.

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There were probably few thousand people on the day. The event was open to all ages so teenagers, kids and families all had lots of fun.

There were no official opening ceremony, except of a blessing glass of wine by Rehovot municipality members and religious leaders, and the plaque opening, went unnoticed by many participants.

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Please note: This is original material by Myrehovot. Any republication (both online and in print) should be accompanied by the quotation of the original place of publication, www.MyRehovot.info

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Explosion, fire awakens Rehovot streets three blocks away from the Weizmann Institute and Melzer Street Synagogue

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A fire by an antiterrorist special operation group at Rehovot's Melzer Street corner of Herzog Street (Menuha Venahala) jolted residents awake early Wednesday. This happened shortly after the Police closed a section of Herzog and Melzer Streets (hundred meters from the Weizmann Institute and tens of meters from Melzer Street Synagogue) early morning (about 7 AM) today after a suspicious item, later discovered to be "quite a good student bag with educational materials", was left unattended at a street sidewalk. Because of the morning rush hours, police urged residents to remain in their apartments until further notice is given.


Police Special Operations Group officer by using a remote control bomb-disposal robot inspected the bag and made a control explosive fire. Luckily, there were no bomb. "It was a student bag left unattended at a sidewalk,'' Melzer St. resident told MyRehovot while rushing to reach his office in time.

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Additional 20 minutes of the disassembly of the mini-van based bomb disposal setup temporarily blocked the traffic at Melzer street, that become one way just a week ago.

My Rehovot would like to repeat once again, that it is very important Rehovot residents take greater responsibility of disposing old items to a designated garbage-collectors only, so, that valuable time and money of the Police would be directed for issues of greater security importance, not faulty security threat alerts.

Also see: Rehovot's Weizmann Street Reopens After Bomb Scares. www.MyRehovot.info (19 March 2006) [FullText]

Please note: This is original material by Myrehovot. Any republication (both online and in print) should be accompanied by the quotation of the original place of publication, www.MyRehovot.info

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Big Orange TV: Rehovot Residents Hoped for a Quick Restoration of Electricity


Hundreds of people streamed into the streets of Rehovot in about 30-degree heat, when the city went dark Monday 20-21 PM. Many walked down the stairs of their residential buildings because elevators weren't working. Some people were stuck in elevators and were rescured by Fire Department 102 rescue teams.

For some reason or other, there was a power failure on Monday evening. The water supply was safe and we did not hear of any injury by those trapped in non-functioning elevators or dark streets. Emergency city phone number 106 was working.

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Some people remained in their apartments and even managed to... solve Sudoku Puzzles under the candle light.

After the electricity was restored at 20:53 PM, traffic light remained dead in a number of locations that we inspected.


Previous daytime "blackout" in Rehovot happened a year ago (see My Rehovot, 5 June 2006).

Please note: This is original material by My Rehovot. Any online reuse must be accompanied by a function hyperlink to www.myrehovot.info

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