NEWS I GRAND OPENING • OF OUR NEW SHOWROOM Over 8,000 sq ft of Ceramic Tile • Marble • Granite Whirlpool Tubs Faucets • Bath Accessories And Much More! Hungarian Jews Critical Of Law Update your kitchen with a granite countertop "a totally new display concept for ceramic tile, marble and granite" CERAMIC TILE SALES TJ Marble and Granite Shop 23455 Telegraph Road north of 9 Mile in Southfield Phone 313-356-6430 When it's your decision to choose a nursing care residence... Hours: Mon., Tues. and Thurs. 8:30-5 Wed. and Fri. 8:30-8 Sat. 9-5 ee,re rel r kaccivzSz'omilAtzdetnithmeii b igrobb:W=T AA P9 1, •■ •• A classic chair rail... A unique chair to bump the rail... A special room for the chair that bumps the rail... Uncommon woodwork and trim for the exceptional home around the room that holds the chair that bumps the rail. Windemere offers a choice you can feel good about You may never face a more difficult decision than moving a loved one into a nursing home. It's a daily struggle with your emo- tions. The guilt. The worries. The what ifs. Windemere can help. We offer several levels of care to satisfy your family's special needs. Our goal is to improve the quality of life, not just maintain it. And that is something you can feel good about. Oxford Corners for Memory Impaired Disorders Skilled Care 0 Vacation Respite 0 Adult Day Program Rehabilitation 0 Hospice 0 Supportive Care For information and a private tour, please phone 661-1700. 94 FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1992 6950 Farmington Rd., just south of Maple Road, West Bloomfield. Timeless design... Installation that endures. Call Bruno Trentacost to view our portfolio. 10 years of designs and installations. From one-of-a-kind pieces to complete trim and woodwork for many exclusive, fine homes. (313) 628-1406 Budapest (JTA) — The Jewish leadership here is critical of the Compensation Law adopted by the Hungarian Parliament last week because its application to Jews is limited. Leslie Keller, head of the Hungarian office of the World Jewish Congress, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the law will be on the agenda of a con- ference to be held in Budapest this year where the entire issue of compensa- tion to Central European Jewry will be discussed. The WJC is organizing the conference and will an- nounce its date shortly, Ms. Keller said. The latest Compensation Law, the third to be adopted by Parliament, applies to "people deported on racial, religious or political grounds during the Second World War and also to resident Hungarian citizens who were oppressed outside the country." The law covers the 50 years from March 11, 1939 to Oct. 23, 1989. According to its provisions, the new Hungarian regime will pay compensation for Jews who were deported from Hungary but not those thrown into the Danube anti drowned or killed in local ghettoes and concentration camps. At least 600,000 Hungarian Jews perished in the Holocaust and many of them were killed inside Hungary by the Nazis. The first anti-Jewish laws in Hungary date from May 28, 1938. The second were passed in 1939. The purpose of both was to eliminate Jews from the commercials and social life of the country. But the new law ignores the 1938 decree. Tamas Raj, a rabbi and a member of Parliament for the opposition liberal Free- Democrat Party, was sharp- ly critical of the law in it draft stages. He proposed_ dozens of amendments but few were accepted. Hungarian Jews say the issue is not the small amount of the monetary compensation but the gap in the moral compensation for which surviving Hungari Jewry has waited for 50 years. China Denies Supplying Nukes Tel Aviv (JTA) — Visibly disconcerted by the sharp questioning of reporters, China's ambassador to Israel, Lin Then, angrily de- nied that his country has ever supplied nuclear weapons to countries in the Middle East. "Nonsense. China has never supplied any nuclear weapons to any country," he retorted angrily when jour- nalists pressed the question. Mr. Lin was on a ceremonial visit to Haifa to sign a twin pact between Israel's largest seaport city and the port city of Shanghai. It was the envoy's first public appearance since he presented his credentials to President Chaim Herzog two weeks ago, becoming China's first ambassador to the Jewish state. But he was clearly not used to the persistence and blunt manners of Western journalists. He was especially irritated at being asked repeatedly if China supplied or was sup- plying weapons to Iran and possibly Syria, and whether China planned to replace the' former Soviet Union as an arms supplier. Mr. Lin turned to his host, Haifa Mayor Arye Gurel, saying, "I thought I was in -• vited here to a reception, and not a press interrogation." But he replied, "We are not doing many things in this field, and I don't think it will upset the balance in this region. We aim toward peace and security in this area." Miniwar On In Lebanon Tel Aviv (JTA) — The miniwar continued in— southern Lebanon last week. Israeli air force jets at- - tacked Hezbollah targets in the Jebel Tsafi area, north of the security zone, and in Nabatiyeh, in the general area of Iqlim Toufah. The sorties were in swift response to a Hezbollah at- • tack on positions of the Israel Defense Force and its allied South Lebanon Army in the central section of the southern Lebanon security zone.