100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 27, 1994 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-05-27

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

q)

THOUGHT YOU MISSED THE CHANCE
TO BEAT THE 50% SALES TAX INCREASE??

(4)

WRONG - THINK AGAIN!

WE WILL PAY THE SALES TAX INCREASE ON ANY NEW OR USED CAR PURCHASE*

LEXUS ES

LEXUS LS

LEXUS GS

. 19 AVAILABLE
STARTING FROM

15 AVAILABLE
STARTING FROM

18 AVAILABLE
STARTING FROM

$31 500

$49 545

$37 449

5
STK. #R0057885

STK. #R0051227

STK. #R0200264

LEXUS CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED CARS

'92
LEXUS SC
400

8

'92
LEXUS ES
300

'89
FORD
PROBE

'91 ACURA
LEGEND
COUPE

31,500 '22,900 '5995 10,900

'91 JAGUAR
CONVERTIBLE

'94
JAGUAR
V12 VDP

33,900

miles

'92
LEXUS
LS 400

4000

8

34,900 8 32,900 8 19,900

LAEY0-1._
OF LAKESIDE

N

Lens
Certified

A DIVISION OF THE MEADE GROUP

M-59

0

'88
PORSCHE
928 SE

'93
LEXUS
GS

M-59 (Hall Rd.) At Schoenherr • Across from Lakeside Mall

1-810-726-7900 • 1-800-486-5253

•• ■ -OMM•D

CAPI•

OPEN Mon. and Thurs. 8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.; Tues.-Wed., Fri 8:00 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturday 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

*Must take delivery by July 3. Prior sales excluded.

Our

contemporary

originals are made

under the watchful

eye of perfectionists.

We proudly fashion

unique furnishings of

the highest quality.

Attack On Settlers
Threatens Transfer

Jerusalem (JTA) — The Islamic
fundamentalist Hamas move-
ment has claimed credit for an at-
tack on Jewish settlers that left
two dead and a third seriously
wounded.
The incident was the first ter-
rorist attack on Israelis since
Palestinian self-rule went into ef-
fect in the Gaza Strip and the
West Bank town of Jericho.
And although it did not occur
in either of those two areas, the
attack threatened to upset the
otherwise smooth transfer of au-
thority that has taken place over
the past week.
According to a spokesman for
Hamas, which opposes the Is-
raeli-Palestinian self-rule agree-
ment, the attack was in
retribution for the wounding of
19 Palestinians by Jewish settlers
the day before in the West Bank
town of Hebron. In that incident,
Arab residents of Hebron clashed
with a group of yeshiva students
who had hiked there to mark the
holiday of Shavuot.
The killings occurred when
members of the Izz a-Din al-Kas-

To those who appreciate

the best, to those who

can accept no less.

ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS • MASTER BEDROOM SUITES
DINING ROOMS • HOME OFFICES •KITCHENS
CHILDREN'S BEDROOMS • BATHS

Lt. Gen. Barak was
criticized for
permitting the
yeshiva students to
walk through the
city.

FOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL 1-800-261-5230 • 32445 SCHOOLCRAFT • LIVONIA, MI

H H

SOUTHFIELD

A FAMILY AFFAIR

❑ a variety of homes in every style and
price range

❑ central location with easy access to all
major freeways
❑ rich community life

❑ warm, friendly neighborhoods
❑ award-winning City services and
recreational facilities
❑ a school system nationally-
recognized for excellence

----

,City of Southfield Housing and Neighborhood Center, 354-4400
Open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

SOUTHFIELD

The Center of It All

Next time you feed your face, think about your heart.

Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are high in saturated
fat and cholesterol. The change'll do you good.

American Heart Association

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

sam brigade, the armed wing of
Hamas, opened fire from a speed-
ing car on a family of Israelis in
a passing car.
The attack took place near the
settlement of Beit Haggai, on the
road linking Beersheba and Kiry-
at Arba, a Jewish settlement on
the outskirts of Hebron.
The fatalities have been iden-
tified as Margalit Shohat, 46, of
Ma'aleh Levana, the driver of the
car, and her son-in-law Yair
Rafael, 35, of Kiryat Arba, who
was sitting next to her.
Mrs. Shohat's daughter, Yael
Na'ama, 21, who was sitting in
the rear seat, was shot in the
head and operated on at Hadas-
sah Hospital in Jerusalem.
The three had been holidaying
in the Gush Katif area of the
Gaza Strip over the Shavuot
weekend.
Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak, the Is-
rael Defense Force chief of staff,
rushed to the site of the attack
and called on all who are licensed
to carry weapons to do so and to

help the army guard civilians in
the territories.
The incident in Hebron oc-
curred when a group of yeshiva
students went to say prayers for
the Shavuot holiday.
Stones apparently were hurled
at the yeshiva students as they
reached the city's central square.
The students opened fire, follow-
ing which larger and angrier
crowds of Palestinians appeared.
When the army arrived, it
sought to control the crowd with
tear gas and rubber bullets. But
the yeshiva students apparently
continued firing. Two of them
were subsequently arrested and
held for questioning.
Four of the wounded Pales-
tinians were said to be seriously
injured. Many of the injured were
children.
The army later imposed a cur-
few on Hebron, which has been
the site of ongoing violence and
tension following the Feb. 25
killing of at least 19 Palestinians
by an Israeli settler.
During a Cabinet meeting, Lt.
Gen. Barak was criticized for per-
mitting the yeshiva students to
walk through the city.
According to Israeli radio, sev-
eral Cabinet ministers labeled
the presence of the students there
a "provocation."
Leading the assault on Lt.
Gen. Barak were Environment
Minister Yossi Sarid and Immi-
grant Absorption Minister Yair
Tsaban, both members of the left-
wing Meretz bloc.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
condemned the yeshiva students'
hike and their firing at Pales-
tinians in the ensuing clash as
"quite unjustified."
But for Israel's opposition, the
Hamas killing was but "the first
installment of the price Israel will
pay for giving up Jericho," as
Rafael Eitan, leader of the right-
wing Tsomet party, put it.
Mr. Tsaban sharply criticized
the students' hike, whose goal
was to visit the reputed graves of
the biblical figures Ruth and
Jesse, sites intimately associat-
ed with the Shavuot festival.
"If we carry on with this arti-
ficial worship of so-called ancient
tombs, it's fresh graves that we're
going to create here and that's
got to be stopped," he said.
Replying to the criticism, Lt.
Gen. Barak said the IDF had act-
ed according to the guidelines it
had received from the govern-
ment, which permit Kiryat Arba
residents to enter Hebron armed.
The killings occurred the same
day that the IDF officially hand-
ed over Gaza to the Palestine Lib-
eration Organization. ❑

ti

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan