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August 09, 1991 - Image 94

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-08-09

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



NEWS

One Price



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,tzt$



a .

a)
0
•r.
a .

PRICE One Price

N.

m

You Won't need it at One PRICE Cleaners

All items are only
$2.79* each and
every day!

Highest quality cleaning around

*No household items or fancy
garments, some restrictions apply.

Shirts 99'
every day!

(hangers only)

Same day service.
Price subject to advance payment.
2-piece minimum.

Same day service.
3 shirt minimum

31217 14 Mile Road

932.3222

at the Triangle at 14 Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. (next to Office Max)

m

One Price PRICE One Price

Try-Outs for Competition
Teams and Auditions
for Scholarships
To be Sponsored
in September

: Pre-Register for :
: September Classes :

• Special Scholarships
for Male Dancers
• Suspended
Hardwood Floors

and

.
Aug. 19-30
• :
.
• between 10 a.m.-5 p.m. ;

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CALL FOR OUR
SCHEDULE

SAVE $5.00

10% OFF

Ifyou pre-payyouryearlytuition •

Including:

• Ballroom •
• Jazz
• Pre-School • Ballet

• Karate-Do • Street
Dancing • S
• Tap
• Discounts apply on tuition and •

registration fees only
Expires 8-31-91


681.4101

FEDERAL FIREPLACE

HOMESTEAD WIND 1 OR 2

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SALE ENDS WEDNESDAY, AUG. 13, 1991 AT 5PM • HOURS: MON-FRI 10AM-9PM • SAT 9AM-8PM • SUN 10AM-5PM

In F&M Plaza • Southfield Rd. at 12 Mile Rd.
1 mile north of 1-696

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• PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED•

94

FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1991

Federal Fireplace)

(

BARBEQUE & PATIO FURNITURE

141 MD

In Pine Ridge Center • Novi Rd. at 10 Mile Rd.
1-3/4 miles south of 12 Oaks Mall

348-9300

• SOME ITEMS NOT EXACTLY AS PICTURED•

Advocacy Groups
Split On Status

Washington (JTA) — The
two major U.S. advocacy
groups for Soviet Jewry took
opposing views on President
Bush's announcement that
he would grant the Soviet
Union most-favored-nation
trade benefits.
Mr. Bush announced at the
beginning of his two-day
summit with Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev that he
would send to Congress for
its ratification the year-old
U.S.-Soviet trade agree-
ment, granting the Soviets
the opportunity to export
goods to the United States at
the lowest possible tariffs.
As expected, the National
Conference on Soviet Jewry
and the Union of Councils
for Soviet Jews differed in
their responses to Mr. Bush's
announcement.
The National Conference
welcomed Mr. Bush's an-
nouncement, "which, we
believe, is appropriate at
this time in light of Soviet
emigration performance in
general and Jewish emigra-
tion performance in par-
ticular," said Shoshana
Cardin, the organization's
chairman.
But the Union of Councils

for Soviet Jews, which has
often expressed apprehen-
sion over such a move,
registered its disappoint-
ment.
Micah Naftalin, Union of
Councils' national director,
said the group opposed the
president's decision
"because we feel that the
basic requisites (for MFN)
have not been met."
At the same time, Mr. Naf-
talin added, "we are grateful
the president has held out as
long as he has. We have
averted MFN at least two
years longer than we had
any right to expect."
The National Conference's
support was echoed by an-
other American Jewish
group, the Anti-Defamation
League, which likewise
hailed "the substantial and
sustained emigration of
Soviet Jews."

While the National Con-
ference has been in favor of
most-favored-nation status
for the Soviet Union in light
of the large number of Soviet
Jews emigrating to Israel,
the Union of Councils has
argued that the Soviets have
not gone far enough.

IDF Soldiers
Barred From Combat

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Two
Israel Defense Force reser-
vists were barred from fur-
ther combat duty and their
commanding officer was se-
verely reprimanded follow-
ing an investigation into the
successful guerrilla raid on
an IDF outpost near the
Syrian border July 3.
Staff Sgt. Ehud Ben-
Mordechai, a 26-year-old re-
serve soldier, was killed in
an attack at dawn by ter-
rorists who apparently pass-
ed through Syrian lines and
escaped the same way.
The Damascus-based
Democratic Front for the
Liberation of _Palestine
claimed credit for the attack.
The outpost on the slopes
of Mount Hermon, where
Mr. Ben-Mordechai was on
guard duty when he was
killed, had been considered
one of the safest IDF posi-
tions. There had been no at-
tacks from the nearby
Syrian positions for 16
years.
Immediately after the in-
cident, the troops guarding
the outpost were absolved of

guilt. The IDF chief of staff,
Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak, and
the commander of the nor-
thern region, Maj. Gen. Yit-
zhak Mordechai, agreed that
the men performed properly.
But a subsequent in-
vestigation determined that
their reaction to enemy fire
had been much too slow and
their pursuit of the attackers
ineffective.
The two reservists held
responsible were reassigned
to non-combat duties.
The officer in command of
the outpost was formally
rebuked by his commander
for failing to "do what was
expected of him in an inci-
dent of this kind."
Military sources said the
episode cast doubt over the
effectiveness of reserve
soldiers.

Some military observers
say the decline of combat
readiness may be due to the
IDF's preoccupation with
the intifada over the last
three years, stressing police
methods at the expense of
military training.

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