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August 30, 1991 - Image 70

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-08-30

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

NEWS

Silvers

KNOCK YOUR

EVERYTHING STORE WIDE 20% OFF
(regular priced merchandise only)
Colony Croft set of 2 glass vases
(6" & 9") 'REG. 524. SALE $14.95
Filofax Saffian leather pocket
organizer 4"x51/2" 'REG. $80.
SALE S39.95
Lincoln leather personal organizer
'REG. $60. SALE S42.95
Krups Brewmaster Jr. 4 cup coffee
maker 'REG. $50. SALE $29.95
#2 Gold Filter 'REG. $22. SALE
$17.95
All Day Runner Organizers 25% off-
Refills 20% off
Lightning Bug Eurolamp
Black 'REG. $30. SALE $19.95
Chrome 'REG. $34. SALE S23.95
Braun 10 cup coffee maker
'REG. $55. SALE $29.95
#4 Gold Filter 'REG. $22.
SALE $15.95
Multipractic handblender
'REG. $36. SALE $22.95
Scully Leather weekly agenda with
zip 'REG. $85. SALE $59.95
Leather padholder with zip
*REG. $109. SALE $76.95
In stock Steelcase Sensor chairs 35%
off while supplies last
Steelcase swivel-tilt bucket chair
(various fabrics & finishes) Valued up
to 5523 SALE $229.50
Entertainment Center in white
melamine (assembly required)
'REG. $197. SALE $99.50

Deco styled halogen desk lamp,
round glass shade (black or brass)
'REG. $100. SALE 575.00
HON vertical 2 dr. home file w/lock
(various colors)
'REG.$115.SALES69.50
HON Exec. swivel-tilt chair with
arms (black, gray & burgundy)
'REG. $183. SALE $99.50
Parker, Mont Blanc, Waterman,
Cross and Sheaffer pens at 25% off.
White bond copy paper 8W x 11"
(5000 sheets per carton)
'REG. $68.50. SALE $22.50
All 1992 dated goods 30% off
Lightning Bug swing arm lamp
(various colors) 'REG. $18. SALE $9.95
Uchida SketchMate portable art set
'REG. $31. SALE $18.95
Hewlett Packard #HP-19B11 Business
Consultant Calculator
'REG. $175. SALE $134.75
Hunt Electronic stapler 'REG. $69.95.
SALE $39.95
#1800 Electronic pencil sharpener
'REG. $29.50. SALE $12.95
Sharp #EL-2628 Desktop Calculator
'REG. $69.99. SALE $43.99
Swingline desk stapler 'REG. $23.95.
SALE $6.95
BIC metal roller pen (black, blue, red)
'REG. $16.68 dz SALE $4.00
'Manufacturers' suggested retail price.

AND MUCH MUCH MORE!!!

151 W. FORT AT SHELBY, DETROIT • 963-0000

TEL-TWELVE MALL, SOUTHFIELD • 356-2000

BRIARWOOD MALL, ANN ARBOR • 662-1400

70

FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1991

Triple Stabbing Raises
Security In Jerusalem

Jerusalem (JTA) - A tri-
ple stabbing in Jerusalem
and mounting unrest in the
West Bank mobilized securi-
ty forces over the weekend.
Police set up roadblocks at
exits from the city as they
searched for a knife-wielding
Arab who wounded a
policewoman and a teen-age
couple near a bus station in
the Ramat Eshkol neighbor-
hood of Jerusalem last week.
Four suspects were re-
ported in custody. The
assailant, described by
witnesses as a tall, heavy-set
young man, attacked his vic-
tims with a long knife,
shouting "Allahu akhbar"
(God is great).
The policewoman, who was
not immediately identified,
was stabbed in the stomach
and collapsed. She was re-
ported in "good" condition at
a hospital.
The couple, Assaf Sharon,
a 19-year-old university stu-
dent, and Sigalit Ben-
Yehuda, also 19, were the
next victims in the area.
They wrestled with their
assailant, who inflicted light
wounds and fled in the direc-
tion of Nablus Road, a main
thoroughfare linking
Jerusalem with the West
Bank.
In the West Bank itself,
the weekend was marked by
a spate of gasoline bomb at-
tacks.
Two of the bombs were
thrown on a Saturday night
at an army lookout post near
the Tomb of the Patriarchs
in Hebron. There were no
casualties or damage.
Shots were fired at the
civil administration head-
quarters in Jenin, and a
gasoline bomb was thrown
at an Israeli vehicle there.
Jenin was placed under
curfew.
A gasoline bomb was
thrown at an Israel Defense
Force patrol in Nablus
without causing casualties
or damage.
Meanwhile, six Arab wo-
men were wounded Satur-
day when Israeli soldiers
fired on a private clinic. The
soldiers claimed stones were
thrown at their vehicle from
the direction of the clinic.
The escalation of Arab
violence seems to be in re-
sponse to provocative moves
by Jews in the Old City of
Jerusalem and in Hebron.
Last week, yeshiva
students took over another
building in the Moslem
Quarter of the Old City. It is
adjacent to the apartment

purchased some years ago by
Ariel Sharon, Likud's hard-
line housing minister.
Mr. Sharon rarely occupies
the apartment, but his ac-
quisition of it was viewed as
a deliberate provocation and
encouragement to other
Jews to encroach on the
Moslem enclave.
Similar occurrences in
Hebron have increased ten-
sion there. A bus station in
the Arab town, confiscated
by the army several years
ago, has been turned into a
temporary dormitory for
about 120 students of the
Shavei Hebron yeshiva.
The Defense Ministry,
meanwhile, has allowed 15
Jewish families from nearby
Kiryat Arba to settle in
what was formerly a
military post at Eshkolot in
the Hebron hills.

The Jerusalem police nor-
mally take extra security
measures just before the
High Holidays. Owing to the
deteriorating situation, they
are now beefing up security
two weeks before the holiday
season, which starts with
Rosh Hashanah at sundown,
Sept. 8.

Time Change
For Israelis

Tel Aviv (JTA) - While
most of the rest of the world
will still be enjoying extra
hours of daylight, Israel will
revert to standard (winter)
time on Aug. 31, when clocks
will be set back one hour for
the convenience of observant
Jews.
Rosh Hashanah comes ear-
ly this year, beginning on
the evening of Sept. 8. Re-
ligious Jews offer Slichot,
prayers of repentance, in
preparation for the solemn
holiday.
They must be recited in
early morning for a
minimum of four days before
Rosh Hashanah.
The Interior Ministry,
which has jurisdiction over
such matters, noted that
Israelis have enjoyed 160
days of daylight- saving time
since clocks were advanced
an hour on March 23.
Starting Sept. 1, Israel's
time will be two hours ahead
of Greenwich Mean Time,
the longitude of London, and
six hours ahead of daylight-
saving time in the eastern
United States.

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