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January 22, 1993 - Image 100

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-01-22

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

BAGEL DELI & PRODUCE CO.

6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. • 851.9666

EAT SMOKED FISH-LIVE BETTER

OPEN MON THRU SAT 96

SUNDAY 8- 3

Labor Party Chooses
Ezer Weizman

BUMBLE BEE -
SOLID WHITE MEAT

RUSSIAN
SCHMALTZ

HERRING

$ 1.5

TUNA
$1.45EA

EA.

Limit 4

Water or Oil — Limit 4 Cans

SPECIALS - JANUARY 22-23-24 - 3 DAYS ONLY!

FINEST SMOKED FISH & DELI TRAYS
WE SPECIALIZE IN HANDCUT NOVA LOX

OWN
Stoc1 5Jus t



• A




• EA

• Es,


4 DAY S
ONLy!

Buy Direct From the Midwest's Largest Factory

ill.KTact°1 OUTLET

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Temporary Store
Hours:

We're OVERSTOCKED and MUST LIQUIDATE!

70 0

Saturday
10-6
Sunday
10-6
Monday
10-6
Tues., Wed. & Thur.
Closed to Restock
Friday
10-8

TAKE 50% to

OFF

0 Ticketed
rice

'

THE DETRO IT JEWISH NEWS

• ■ ■
• •
• ■


100






4 DAYS ONLY!

FICUS

5' to 6' TALL

ON NATURAL WOOD!

59r97

$25

DEALERS
WELCOME

Trees, Plants. Arrangements
OVER 2000 Sizes and Varieties

HANGING
PLANTS

6"

TeMPora"

Location

Almost 200 Leaves

8 Styles
$1 170

v.

$ 247°

Huge Wicker
Basket With Silk

Greens
.see

FARMINGTON HILLS

Orchard Lake Rd. & 13
Mlle Rd., 1/2 Block South
of 13 on West Side of
Orchard Lake Rd.

29325 Orchard Lake Road

488-1144

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

ONLY

Vr.'t

t.>

• •






NEW JUMBO
Flowering
Spathephylum

P6

Includes Basket

100's of trees just arrived. 4'
to 14' Ficus, Palms, Dog-
woods & More!

1

POTTED BUSHES





$ 247°

2' to 3' Spread
Almost 400 Leaves











II • • • • • • • • • • •

Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results
Place Your Ad Today, Call 354.6060

Jerusalem (JTA) — Ezer
Weizman, the father of
Israel's air force and an
architect of the peace accord
with Egypt, has been
selected as the Labor Party's
candidate for the post of
state president.
Mr. Weizman, a former
Cabinet minister who left
the right-wing Likud bloc to
become a Labor Party dove,
received 52 percent of the
vote in the 1,300-member
Labor Central Committee,
compared to 24 percent for
centrist Shlomo Hillel and
23 percent for ultra- dove
Arye (Lova) Eliay.
Mr. Weizman, 68, the
nephew of Israel's first pres-
ident, will square off in Mar-
ch against Likud Knesset
member Dov Shilansky, a
former Knesset speaker, in a
secret ballot among the
parliament's 120 members.
Labor floor managers
believe they can count on the
solid support of coalition
members in addition to that
of the Arab Knesset mem-
bers for Mr. Weizman's can-
didacy. Independent
observers said some centrist
Laborite Knesset members
might have considered
voting, in the secret ballot,
for a less dovish candidate
than Weizman, but they
would be unlikely to vote for
the hawkish Mr. Shilansky.
In final addresses to the
Central Committee, Mr.
Hillel presented himself as
the man likeliest to win
broad support in the Knesset
and in the nation.
A onetime Mossad intel-
ligence agent and diplomat,
Mr. Hillel was subsequently
a Labor minister and then
speaker of the Knesset. He is
presently chairman of Keren
Hayesod, which raises
money for the Jewish Agen-
cy from Jewish communities
outside the United States.
Mr. Eliav recalled his long
record of social work
throughout the country, por-
traying himself as a man of
the people and suggesting
that if he were president, the
office would take on an open
and popular character.
Mr. Weizman referred to
his record in the military
and in government, and
stressed especially his
championship of the cause of
peace from the time of the
1978 Camp David negotia-
tions to the present day.
"I am pleased and ex-
cited," the ever-cheerful Mr.

Weizman said after the vote.
Some political observers
described Mr. Weizman's
victory as a further success
for Shimon Peres, who had
openly supported him. Mr.
Peres also had strongly
backed Knesset member
Nissim Zvilli, whom the
Central Committee recently
elected to the post of party
secretary-general, over the
opposition of Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin.
The premier took no public
position on the presidential
candidacy. But some pundits
felt he would be unhappy to
see Mr. Weizman elected. It
was Mr. Weizman, back in
1974, who first published the
account of Mr. Rabin's brief
emotional breakdown on the
eve of the 1967 Six-Day War.
Mr. Weizman announced
his retirement from politics
11 months ago, saying he
was deeply concerned about
Israel's fate and image in
the years ahead.
"I've come to the conclu-
sion that I've reached a point,
in my political life where
I've contributed what I can,"
he said in a valedictory
speech from the Knesset
podium last Feb. 3.

Cemeteries
Are Desecrated

Bonn (JTA) — Unknown
vandals last week
desecrated a Jewish
cemetery in Florsheim, a
small town not far from
Frankfurt.
According to police, 10
gravestones were overturn-
ed, and some of them carried
away and thrown in a near-
by creek.
Police believe the desecra-
tion occurred at the beginn-
ing of this week. It was
discovered later in the week.
The town authorities
released a statement con-
demning the desecration in
sharp terms. Mayor Norbert
Hegmann said that he re-
quested a speedy and full in-
vestigation to identify the
perpetrators and bring them
to court.
A desecration of a Jewish
cemetery was meanwhile
reported in another nearby
town, Hochheim. Here also,
several gravestones were
overturned.
Police investigators
believe that in both cases the
perpetrators were politically
motivated.

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