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JUST NORTH OF 8 MILE PHONE: 313-352-8580 "I love what you do for me:' $1) TOYOTA COME MEET JEANETTE BIALEK who will help you select the right bra for you ... minimizers, supportive, or the padded plunge push-up. Plus many more styles! SPECIAL SALE 30% OFF On Lilyette Only FREE DRAWING FOR 6 BRAS Roslyn's Intimate Apparel Applegate Square Northwestern and Inkster Road Daily 10-5:30 Thurs. 10-8 Take Control GET ORGANIZED of weight, alcohol, drug-sexual problems. Stop smoking, relieve stress-tension- anxiety, insomnia, pain, depression . Preliminary evaluation required. No "one-shot" groups or walk -ins Hypnosis LUTTER ONTROL The Complete Closet Store 28956 Orchard Lake Rd. 855-9678 CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354..5959 42 FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1992 0 New York (JTA) — Two unidentified assailants hurled hand grenades at Istanbul's Neve Shalom Synagogue, slightly injuring a blind man in the vicinity, according to reports from Turkey. One of the attackers was captured, reportedly by passersby, and another got away. There was no damage to the synagogue, which was the target of a terrorist at- tack in September 1986. In that incident, two Arabs believed to have been mem- bers of the Abu Nidal ter- rorist group sprayed machine-gun fire and detonated grenades, killing 22 Sabbath worshippers and themselves. No group affiliation or motive has yet been claimed for last week's attack, which took place just before a dele- gation from the World Sephardi Federation arrived in the country for a two- day visit to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the ar- rival of the Sephardic Jews in Turkey. The police chief in Istanbul confirmed that one of the assailants was captured, "but declined to make any comment about his whereabouts or identity," said Sammy Cohen, a jour- nalist in Istanbul, who was reached by telephone. Turkish police normally do not comment on incidents of this type until initial in- vestigations are completed, Mr. Cohen explained. Since the 1986 attack, the worst-ever on Jews in Turkey, the synagogue has been "very heavily guard- ed," Mr. Cohen said. It was "thanks to the measures since then that nothing has happened to the temple itself," he said. One of the two grenades thrown exploded in front of the synagogue, but there was no damage. Mr. Cohen described the man who was slightly injured as a blind passerby who was hit by fly- ing glass from a nearby shop window, which shattered from the force of the grenade explosion. Mr. Cohen described the man's light wounds as facial, although another report said the man sustained a foot in- jurY. The Turkish news agency described the wounded per- son as a blind beggar named Mordi Yendi. The attack was described as "an assault not only on Jews but on the values and standards of civilization itself," by Andre Sassoon, co- president of the Interna- tional Jewish Committee for Sepharad '92, which was formed to commemorate the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 and their resettlement in other coun- tries. Mr. Sassoon recalled the warm welcome given the Jews "exactly 500 years ago by Sultan Bayazit II of the Ottoman Empire.", "We have every confidence that the leaders of the Turkish government, who will be honored Monday in Ankara" by the World Sephardi delegation, "will act swiftly and effectively to bring the criminals to justice — and to intensify their efforts to prevent acts of this kind in the future," Mr. Sas- soon said. Officer Gets Two Years Tel Aviv (JTA) — An Israeli air force reserve offi- cer was sentenced last week to serve at least two years of a three-year prison term for theft of a World War II com- bat plane that was to have been placed in the Israeli Air Force Museum. The sentence for reserve Lt. Yisrael Yitzhaki was pronounced in Tel Aviv District Court, which found him guilty last week of sell- ing the plane abroad for profit. The propeller-driven Mustang, a carrier-based fighter in the U.S. Navy dur- ing World War II, saw years of active service with the Israeli air force in the 1950s before it was retired. The Air Force Museum, es- tablished in the late 1970s by the air force commander, Maj. Gen. Benjamin Peled, sent volunteer reservists to scour the country for aban- doned aircraft and restore them to their original condi- tion. Lt. Yitzhaki was one of the volunteers who worked on the Mustang, which was parked in a remote corner of Ben-Gurion Airport. According to the prosecu- tion, he made it airworthy with imported parts. After painting it with false identi- fication numbers, he flew the plane to Sweden, where he sold it to a private corn- pany for $331,000.