100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

February 17, 1984 - Image 45

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-02-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Grunzweig Suspect Charged

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Yona Avrushmi, a 28-
year-old resident of
Jerusalem and the West
Bank, was formally charged
last Friday with willful
murder in the grenade slay-
ing a year ago of Peace Now
activist Emil Grunzweig..
The charge sheet, pre-
sented in Jerusalem Dis-
trict Court exactly one year
after the killing, alleges
that Avrushmi purchased
an Israel army issue hand
grenade in January 1983

Mack Pitt

and his

Orchestra

plus

Disco

Music just for you!

358-3642

and, on the night of Feb-
ruary 10, 1983, positioned
himself on a hill overlook-
ing the Prime Minister's
Office and there awaited the
arrival of a procession of
Peace Now marchers who
were scheduled to demon-
strate outside the office.
At 8:50 p.m., as the
demonstrators were about
to disperse after singing the
national anthem, Avrushmi
allegedly threw the grenade
into the crowd, according to
the charge sheet. The gre-
nade exploded, inflicting
fatal wounds on Grunzweig,
a 33-year-old teacher, who
died within minutes. Ten
other persons were
wounded, one of them seri-
ously. The charges state
that the accused threw the
grenade with intent to kill
and fully understood the
implications of his act.

STRICTLY KOSHER MEAT MARKET

13831 W. 9 Mile Rd., Oak Park 543-7092

GLATT KOSHER MEATS

(at reasonable prices).

Novie

PICKLED HERRING 32 fl. oz. jar
TURKEY LEGS
GROUND CHUCK 5 lb. pkg.
CHUCK STEAK

Avrushmi was de-
tained for questioning in
the middle of last month.
He was identified as a
former resident of the
Neve Yaacov quarter of
Jerusalem, currently
employed as a metal
worker in Ofra on the
West Bank. At the same
time, police arrested a
20-year-old soldier,
David Shem-Tov of
Jerusalem, on suspicion
of having sold the fatal
grenade to Avrushmi.
The police said that
Shem-Tov was not
otherwise involved in the
grenade attack. The de-
scribed Avrushmi as the
"prime suspect."
The filing of charges
against Avrushmi ended a
year-long investigation of
the crime which shocked Is-
rael. Grunzweig was mur-
dered at a demonstration
demanding that the gov-
ernment implement in full
the recommendations of the
Kahan Commission which
investigated Israel's role in
the September 1982 mas-
sacre of Palestinian civi-
lians by Christian Phalan-
gists in the Sabra and
Shatila refugee campe in
west Beirut.

...$2.79
$49c lb.
1.95
$1.49 lb.

Wesle
Quaker Maid

• •


4
4
4

4
O

4

• Ice Cream

4
4
4

• Italian Ices (Pareve)
• All Natural Flavors 4
4

The finest quality in ice cream products, all made under the
Orthodox rabbinical supervision of Rabbi Jack Goldman, of the
*Metropolitan Kashruth Council of Michigan.

available throughout
Michigan and northern Ohio



on the development of only
those industries that can
compete on the American
market.

Some of the most power-
ful and dangerous feelings,
as ambition and envy, de-
rive their principal
nourishment from a source
so trivial.

1

UJA Pledges

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Participants in the United
Jewish Appeal's Washing-
ton Mission Program
pledged $19.9 million in
1983, Jerome Dick of Wash-
ington, D.C., the program's
national chairman, an-
nounced.

Passover, Shavuot and
Sukkot are the major festi-
vals ordained in the Bible.

4 0 THE BAGEL FACTORY

amm••

313/352.5695

24551 W. 12 Mile
Near Telegraph

0

Sun.-Fri. 7-9, Sat. 7-10

Next To Star Deli

we la se um on m

EN Es

Any Evening After 5:30

BUY 1 BAGEL

GET 1 FREE

Limit 18 purchased
(Expires 3/9/84)

MN IM MN • =MIMI MO I= EN U NE •III

Anytime

BUY 1 FRAGEL ®
GET 1 FRAGEL FREE

limit 6 purchased

*Our exclusive, delicious,
soft 8,"warm, cinnamon-sweet bagel
(Expires 3/9/84)
Cannot be used with other coupons or specials

CHUCK & BUD'S FRUIT MKT. & DELI

13745 West 9 Mile (corner of Westhampton)
Hours weekdays 8-7 Sun. 7:30-5
543-8780

• •• • •••••∎ ••••• •

Celebrate the presidents'
birthdays in the traditional
American way . . . with

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
American and Israeli
negotiators met here Mon-
day for the second round of
discussions aimed at the es-
tablishment of a U.S.-Israel
Free Trade Area (FTA). The
first round of talks was held
in Washington last month.
Officials expressed op-
timism that FTA could be
set up within six months,
despite opposition by some
American trade unions. The
FTA is one of the projects
arising from the agree-
ments in principal for U.S.-
Israeli military and eco-
nomic cooperation which
were reached when Premier
Yitzhak Shamir met with
President Reagan and other
Administration officials in
Washington and November.
Economists heie believe
Israeli high technology
enterprises stand to gain
once an FTA is established.
But smaller Israeli com-
panies dealing in consumer
goods and electrical
appliances may be wiped
out in competition with
American corporate giants
such as General Motors and
General Foods. This may
force Israel to concentrate

remove the stain of this
tragic episode."

Under Supervision of
The Council of Orthodox Rabbis

Raise the banner,
in salute to the
immortal presidents
of the United States!

Friday, February 11, 1984 45

U.S.-Israel Free Trade
Talks Continue in Jerusalem

Atlanta Group Demands
Exoneration of Leo Frank

Many More Specials In Our Self Service Counter

♦ •

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

4

4

4

ONLY THE BEST, NO ROOM FOR THE REST!

LEO FRANK
ATLANTA — A group of
leaders from the black and
Jewish communities of At-
lanta has issued a state-
ment calling on the state of
Georgia to exonerate Leo M.
Frank, the Jewish factory
superintendent convicted in
the 1913 murder of 13-
year-old Mary Phagan and
lynched two years later dur-
ing a city-wide wave of
anti-Semitism.
The Georgia State Board
of Pardons and Paroles de-
nied a posthumous pardon
for Frank last year despite
new evidence in the case
which cast doubt on the
original guilty verdict. The
board claimed that the
Jewish organizations that
had sought Frank's pardon
had failed to prove his inno-
cence beyond any doubt.
The statement issued by
the black-Jewish coalition
said that "only by exonerat-
ing Leo Frank can Georgia

Poor human nature, so
richly endowed with nerves
of anguish, so splendidly or-
ganized for pain and sorrow,
is but slenderly equipped for
joy.
—George Du Maurier

IDAHO POTATOES

1

10 lb. bag

Fancy

CHERRY TOMATOES

Large Indian River

W HITE GRAPEFRUITS

49cpint bskt.

5 99 c

for

Wilno Kosher

$

SQUARE SALAMI

Z

99

lb.

1 99

AMERICAN CHEESE • 1

Sea/test 1/2%

LO FAT MILK

lb

sliced or chunk

7 9cy2 gal.

Specials Good Through February 23

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan