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November 27, 1992 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-11-27

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

MON TRICOT



Student Stabbed
In Old City

The Best Sweaters,
The Best Styles,
The Best Yarns,
The Best Buttons!

And
of Course,
The Best Gifts!

Mon Tricot will donate 10% of all Sales from
Friday, November 27, 1992 - Friday, December 11, 1992 to
The Ronald McDonald House
and Jewish Family Services

We hope you'll join us in support of these worthy organizations

Mon Tricot
29260 Franklin • Suite 121 • 355-0591
At the claymoor Apartment Building

MARV
SAYS

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SAVE FROM
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YOUR VINTAGE
WRIST WATCH COULD
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TUB & SHOWER
ENCLOSURES
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BIFOLD OR
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We need the following men's wristwatches:

INSULATED (-
GLASS
REPLACED)

• TABLE TOPS
• STORM DOORS &
WINDOWS
• PATIO DOOR WALLS
REPLACED
• STORMS & SCREENS
REPAIRED

VISIT OUR
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C/3

'Suggested List Price

MOBIL
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GLASS & AUTO TRIM
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ESTABLISHED 1920

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SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph
Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park

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LLJ

• Bloom Go Bloom •

• Registered Electrologists •

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F-

38

Come and let us remove your unwanted hair problem and improve your appearance.

Near 12 Mile Rd. bet. Evergreen & Southfield

559-1969

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WHY SETTLE
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500 Styles,
over 2,000 fabrics,

plus leather.
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$695.00 - $1695.00.
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NOVI • LIVOIVIA
STERLING HEIGHTS
ANN ARBOR

Tel Aviv (JTA) — A
Jerusalem yeshiva student
was stabbed badly in the
neck over the weekend by an
18-year-old Arab woman.
But a terrorist incident of
far greater scale was-averted
in the Tel Aviv metropolitan
region when an alert patrol
led police to the detection
and destruction of a power-
ful car bomb.
Another bombing was
averted when a bus conduc-
tor found a booby-trapped
parcel, which was safely
defused.
The Jerusalem stabbing
occurred as Yaron Shefi was
walking from his apartment
to the Ateret Cohanim
yeshiva in the Moslem
Quarter of the Old City. The
teen-age assailant came up
from behind Shefi and
plunged a knife deep into his
neck.
Mr. Shefi had no time to
reach for the handgun he
was carrying, but a fellow
student pulled a pistol and
shot the attacker in the leg.
Paramedics from the
yeshiva then proceeded to
treat both the victim and the
assailant until police and
ambulances arrived.
Mr. Shefi was undergoing
examination to determine
whether he would need
surgery. Doctors said they
were hoping no vital organ
had been hurt.
In the Tel Aviv area,
meanwhile, a dramatic se-
quence of events began
about 2:30 in the morning,
when a civilian patrol notic-
ed a van without rear lights
traveling with three Arab
occupants on a road in Or
Yehuda, about four miles
southeast of Tel Aviv.
Policeman Aharon Bin-
Nun and his partner, Civil
Guard volunteer Leon
Cahalon, a 42-year-old
building worker, flagged the
car down, but it sped off. The
patrol set off in pursuit,
radioing for reinforcements.
The chase led them several
miles northward to the
upscale suburb of Ramat
Efal, where the van hit a
dead end street and was
blocked by a police car.
Its three occupants jumped
out. One was captured
almost immediately.
A second was seized out-
side a private home, the door
of which he had knocked
down, begging for admis-
sion. The only occupants of
the house at the time were a

14-year-old girl and her Lab-
rador dog.
Sharon Guzman, alarmed
by police sirens and hearing
knocking at the door, ac-
companied by what she later
described as "cries and
sobs," phoned her parents,
who were visiting friends
out of town. They told her to
take refuge in the family
shelter until they got home.
A third man, believed to be
the leader of the group, got
away and was still being
sought Sunday.
One of the captured men
told police the van was
booby- trapped. Police
sappers discovered it con-
tained five 2 5-pound
cylinders of cooking gas,
attached to explosive
charges with a timing
device.
The van had been stolen
Nov. 19 from the Shikun
Dan suburb of Tel Aviv. Its
owner had left two full gas
cylinders in the vehicle,

The teen-age
assailant came up
behind Shefi and
plunged a knife
into his neck.

together with a licenced
pistol that he left under the
seat.
The terrorists added three
more large gas cylinders and
explosive charges, to convert
the van a major car bomb.
Police believe the missing
terrorist is in possession of
the stolen weapon.
The car owner was detain-
ed and released on bail pen-
ding questioning about the
careless handling of a
firearm.
A police anti-bomb robot,
operating by remote control,
blew up the explosive
charges as Ramat Efal
residents took shelter in
bomb blast rooms prepared
at the outset of the Persian
Gulf War nearly two years
ago.
b But the blast, which
damaged nearby cars and
broke windows over a wide
area, left the gas cylinders
intact.
Police then towed the
booby-trapped car to an
empty field on the outskirts
of the residential quarter
and destroyed it by ex-
plosives.

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