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March 26, 1993 - Image 118

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-03-26

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

PHILIP TEWEL

FINE CLASSIC CUISINE

Food and Beverage Director

Approved By Council of Orthodox Rabbis

Students Stabbed
In Jerusalem

KOSHER PASSOVER MENU
COMPLETE DINNERS

Chicken
Turkey (10 minimum for whole turkey)
Breast of Chicken
*mist Beef
Prime Nib

$12.25
$12.25
$14.75
$14.75
$16.75

COMPLETE DINNERS INCLUDE:

Chicken Soup with Matzoh Bails, Chopped Liver, Tzimmes, Potato Kugel; Fruit Compote

ALA CARTE MENU

Prime Rfd
Stuffed Chicken Breast
One-half Roasted. Chicken
Rpast Beef
Whore Stuffed Turkgy
Chopper 1 Liver
Gefilte Fish
Chickcn Soup

$10.00
$8.00
$6.00
$8.00
$4.50 fb.
$ 7.50 Id.
$3.00
$3.50 qt.

Broccoli (one serving)
Basted Rcc 1 Sk:n Potatoes
Potato Kugel-
Matzoh Faifef
'Mimes
One-half -pint of Charoseth
Matzoh Bails

$ 1.25
$ 1.50
$1.00
$1.00
$1.00
$ 5.00
$.50ea.

Choice of Passover Tortes $15.00 ea.

Chicken Special: Chicken, Soup with Matzoh Bath. , Tzimmes, Kugel, Compote $10.75

ORDERS BEING TAKEN NOW THRU MARCH 31 • PICK UP OR DELIVER AVAILABLE
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL

6614050 OR 968-1200

LAKEWOOD SPECIAMY
FOOD CENIER

LAST CHANCE PASSOVER SPECIALS

MACAROONS Best Price in Town
PASSOVER TUNA FISH Super Special
GEFILTE FISH ROLLS Our Famous
BARTON'S KISSES 10 oz. tin can
PLASTIC SINK LINERS While supplies last
PASSOVER SWEET & LOW
SABRA SALADS Assorted (container)
SCHMERLING SWISS CHOCOLATES Bar

$1.69

79

$4.49
$6.99

$10.50
$1.99

$2.35
$1.69

no rain checks • while supplies last

OUR PASSOVER CARRY-OUT DEPARTMENT WILL
OPEN THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1993 AT 9.30 A.M.

For orders and information please call
(313) 967-2021

1 1 R

25250 Greenfield • In The Royal Plaza • Oak Park, MI

Jerusalem (JTA) — A Pales-
tinian stabbed five students
and a principal outside a
high school here, adding to
an ongoing wave of violence
and triggering attacks by
angry mobs against Arabs in
the neighborhood.
Unrest also continued in
the Gaza Strip, where a 10-
year- old Palestinian boy
was shot and killed and two
other Arabs were seriously
wounded, the army said.
Palestinian sources said
three Arabs were killed in
violent clashes between
rioting residents and Israeli
troops.
In the Jerusalem stabbing
attack, eyewitnesses said
the Palestinian assailant
burst into the yard of the
ORT John F. Kennedy Ap-
prenticeship Center in the
East Jerusalem neighbor-
hood of Talpiyot early in the
morning.
Twenty students and the
school principal were in the
yard as the man charged at
them, yelling "Allahu
Akbar," or "God is Great,"
and stabbing people with
what looked like a long kit-
chen knife.
The school's guard, who
was unarmed, and the prin-
cipal apparently used a chair
to subdue the 22-year-old at-
tacker. School officials then
prevented students, who had
begun to hit him, from
beating him to death.
The Palestinian assailant
reportedly came from an
Arab village close to
Talpiyot.
The man was identified as
Hamdan Shkeirat, who was
released from jail a year and
a half ago after serving a
two-year sentence for tor-
ching cars and throwing fire-
bombs, sources said.
Shaken students, parents
and residents who gathered
outside the school afterward
blasted the Rabin govern-
ment and shouted anti-Arab
slogans.
Dozens of residents and
workers in the area's nearby
industrial zone threw stones,
bottles and other objects at
Arab- owned cars, injuring
at least two Palestinians and
lightly injuring an Israeli
border policeman.
One Arab was beaten by a
mob that fled before police
arrived.
In New York, the presi-
dent of the American ORT
Federation, Murra y
Konelman. said: "This at-

tack is particularly painful.
recently met with the prin-1
cipal and students at OR'Il
Kennedy and they a0
wonderful kids.
"Most of the 450 students
at the school, 50 of whom are
Arabs, are hard-luck kiL,
who have a history of failur6
at other schools."
Prime Minister Yitzhal
Rabin, who was visiting the
Gaza Strip to pump up the
army's morale and calm the
country over the securit -: \
situation, called the morn-'I
ing stabbings an "atrocity"'
that should have been
prevented by the govern
ment-financed school guard.
Mr. Rabin was forced to de-
fend the government'F
security policy in the,
Knesset during two no TI
confidence motions from',
right-wing parties following
the school yard attack.
"We'll cope with all the
measures that are allowed to

,

,

The Palestinian
assailant came
from an Arab
village.

us by Israeli law," he said it
Gaza, adding that the armS,
and all the security branches
of the police "are operatin
with one goal: to reduce to
minimum the violence."
At the same time, Mr
Rabin said it was unrealisti
to hold the government a
countable for providing it
citizens with absolut
security.
Mr. Rabin added that the,
nation is in a "violent con-,
frontation" with Palestin-,
fans in the territories tha
can be solved only at the ne-I
gotiating table and not
through military means.
But Mr. Rabin also em-
phasized: "We have to make
it clear that violence, terror,
will not change our posi-I
tion."
The government has
decided to beef up the,
nation's police force by ad-,
ding 1,000 to 2,000 extr a
recruits to deal with the ris-I
ing tide of violence.
Right-wing Jewish groups,
protested against Arab,'
violence at demonstrationg,
in the city center and outsid

the Knesset.
Police broke up a protest i
downtown Jerusalem, after
demonstrators refused a
Police request to disperse

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