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August 07, 1992 - Image 56

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-08-07

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

EICOWAMUD'a IMCOLE.10
DIAMOND SALE

LOOSE DIAMONDS

REG. SALE

FANCY CLUSTER RINGS

REG. SALE

,

.30ct. ... 550.00 ... .275.00
.40d ... 700.00
.
. .350.00
.65ct _ 1,650.00 ... .825.00
.98ct. ...2,000.00 .. .1,000.00

V4

CARAT

Many Styles
to Choose From

REG. SALE

Reg.
325.00

Marquise

LADIES DIAMOND BAND

99
gk 1/4
e4-6`3,2',;, CARAT

18
inch
Strand
of

Cultured
41-- Pearls

450
1 $1. 2 5 1 11 $600

Reg. $
$900

$ 15999

YOUR CHOICE
REG. t400

.32ct. 700.00 . .350.00
.45cL .. .1,000.00 . —.500.00
.90ct. —1,000.03
141ct. . : .3,000.00...1,500.00

NOW $

REG. SALE

.48d .. .1,350.00 . —.675.03
.54ct. _1,500.00 ... .750.00
.1,700.00 —.850.03
1.31 ct
_2,000.00

One
Carat
16
Diamond
Pendant

Many Styles
to Choose From

YOUR CHOICE
REG. $600

NOW . $ 299

1•FULL
CARAT

14K GOLD & DIAMOND

EARRINGS

op

_Apo

14K
Gold

.24ct..... 300.00 ....ISOM
41 ct. 700.00 ....350.00
.86c1 _1,650.00 . —825.60
1.22c1. .2,000.00 _1,000.00

Many Styles
to Choose From

SIZE
VALUE SALE
.02ct ... 20.00... 10.00
.05ct. ... 75.00 ... 37.50
.10ct —.120.00 .. 60.00
1/5ct ...160.00 ... 80.00
1/4ct. —.300.00 .. .149.00
1/3ct _400.00 . _199.00
1/2ct —.600.00 _299.00
2J3ct _850.00 ...425.00
3/4ct. _1,150.00 .575.00

YOUR CHOICE

REG. $1200

NOW

$59900

$77:00

r

$350°'

s5A

Valuable Coupon

TAKE
TAKE $20
AN
V AN
EXTRA OFF EXTRA OFF

(any purchase of
L $500 or more)

(any purchase of

$100-$499)

EAST SIDE

141/2 Mile & Van Dyke

ANNIVERSARY RINGS

STERLING HEIGHTS
STORE OPEN DAILY
10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
SUNDAY 11 TO 5 P.M.

'Act. Diamond Anniversary Ring ....199
'Act. Diamond Anniversary Ring ....287
'Act. Diamond Anniversary Ring ....375
Act. Diamond Anniversary Ring ....599

2 Blocks West of Grand River

WEST SIDE 8 Mile

FARMINGTON
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
FOR QUALIFIED BUYERS
LAYAWAYS WELCOME

LEATHER SALE

Reg. Price

$2741

SALE
PRICE

$1645*

SALE
PRICE

$1482*

Lifetime warranty on frames, springs and cushions. Choose from
over 100 styles of sofas, loveseats, chairs & recliners in your choice of color.

*Similar savings on other styles

Berg

FURNITURE

1914 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills
north of Square Lake Rd., just past Carl's Golfland

338-7716

Fall Passions Coming September 4th

56

FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1992

Sydney, Australia (JTA) —
An Adelaide magistrate has
dropped the charges against
alleged war criminal
Mikolay Berezowsky, saying
there was "no case to an-
swer."
Mr. Berezowsky, 78, wept
openly on hearing that the
charges had been dropped.
He later told reporters that
he was "relieved at the out-
come."
He was charged with
knowing involvement in the
mass murder of the 102 Jew-
ish villagers of the Ukrai-
nian village of Gnivan bet-
ween March and July of
1942.
The defense acknowledged
that the government pros-
ecutors had proven that Mr.
Berezowsky was a leading
member of the Schutzmann-
schaft, the local police
recruited by the Nazis,
which took part in the roun-
dup of Jewish children and
adults from the village
before they were murdered.
The defense also admitted
that Berezowsky had
"generally" collaborated
with the Nazis and that he
had escaped with them as
they retreated.
The ruling by the
magistrate, David Gurry,
was based on the absence of
eyewitness testimony that
Mr. Berezowsky took part in
the mass murder on and the

possibility that
Mr.Berezowsky was not in
the village on the day of the
massacre — a possibility
raised during the cross-
examination of Cambridge
University historian Dr.
Jonathon Steinberg.
The magistrate had
previously denied the war
crimes prosecutors their re-
quest to take testimony in
Ukraine from two elderly
women who reportedly were
eyewitnesses to the events.
The prosecution had
argued that the two Ukrai-
nian women, who are too ill
to travel to Australia, were
vital to the case against Mr.
Berezowsky. But after
several days of considera-
tion, Mr. Gurry said in a
written statement that it
was "neither necessary nor
expedient" to grant the ap-
plication.
He said the trip to Ukraine
would delay the hearing by
at least six weeks and that
because of the defendant's
poor health, he would not be
able to come face-to-face
with his accusers.
Although the result is a
setback for the prosecuting
unit, the federal director of
public prosecutions, Michael
Rozenes, has the authority
to refile the charges or to
take the matter directly to
the Supreme Court for
judgment.

Movement Ordains
Woman Rabbi In Israel

Reg. Price

$2470

Australian Court
Drops Charges

New York (JTA) — The
first woman ever to become a
rabbi in Israel was ordained
last week in Jerusalem.
The ordination of Naamah
Kelman, 37, was a historic
step and brings to 11 the
number of Reform rabbis or-
dained in Israel.
Rabbi Kelman is the most
recently ordained member of
an illustrious family which
has produced rabbinic
leadership for 12 genera-
tions.
Her father, Rabbi Wolfe
Kelman, was the much
beloved executive vice presi-
dent of the Conservative
movement's Rabbinical
Assembly for nearly four
decades.
Her paternal grandfather
was a Chasidic leader, and
her maternal grandfather is
Rabbi Felix Levy, a past
president of the Reform
movement's Central Con-

ference of American Rabbis.
Her brother, Rabbi Levi
Weiman-Kelman, is the
spiritual leader of Kol
HaNeshama, a Reform con-
gregation in Jerusalem.
Rabbi Kelman is now com-
pleting a master's degree
from Hebrew University's
Institute of Contemporary
Jewry, and will join the staff
of the North American Fed-
eration of Temple Youth in
Israel.

During the six years that
she has been preparing for
the rabbinate, Rabbi
Kelman has served four
Reform communities in
Israel as a rabbinic intern.

She helped found and has
worked at a kindergarten
and elementary school
which was established on
the Jerusalem campus of the
Hebrew Union College-
Jewish Institute of Religion.

O

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