A ridiculous street sign has been posted for decades at the corner of Frishman-Arlozorov streets in Haifa. The well-known confectioner Label, whose shop is located next to Frishman Street, smiles and wonders: "If this is a street - why does the sign say 'Frishman Stairs'?" There were never stairs in Frishman!'
When people started asking in a mocking tone: "Where are the stairs?", one of the passers-by stuck a sticker that hides the word "stairs" on the other side of the wrong sign.
The subject was Frishman Street and not Yehoshua Street which is opposite it and adjacent to Binyamin Garden
Yehoshua Street also has no stairs.
Strange things happen in Haifa - a beautiful and mysterious city
odd. Not surprising.
There was a doe at the entrance to the kindergarten. This is according to my memory during the British Mandate period.
Who remembers the doe that was in a cage next to Frishman Street? She once escaped from the cage and ran to the nearby Binyamin Garden. The mothers were scared!! One of them was my late mother, who hurried to lift me on her shoulders lest the doe attack me. I wonder what she "had" for Ayala! Behind the cage was (and still is) a nice looking building where a general health insurance clinic was located. Today the building is used by the children of the area as a kindergarten. Most of them are the children of our brothers from the ultra-orthodox sector. In the building opposite the Ayala, the Hadar Carmel Committee operated. A sign indicating this has been placed in front of the building for years.
The articles may be ridiculous
In the past the path was flat and at the end some steps
Kindergartens were opened there, the municipality took down the stairs and created a sloping asphalt path
20 years ago there were three stairs
There were stairs 70 years ago on the other side of the alley, in front of the Pevzner crossing, and Yosef. Later, they straightened the street down a steep slope to make it suitable for passing vehicles.