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October 20, 1995 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-10-20

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

• .P.G.--
-.11•M•111.

New showroom has it all
including the sink

ADVANCE PLUMBING and HEATING SUPPLY CO.

After wholesaling plumbing
supplies for more than 70. years.
Advance Plumbing and Heating
Supply Co. has opened a retail
showroom in Walled Lake.

The 3,000 square foot showroom
at 1977 Maple Rd., between
Decker and Haggerty, features
hundreds of faucets and displays
with working showers, whirlpools,
toilets and sinks.
"You can actually see how

everything works," says Jeffrey
Moss, vice president.
"We feature high end brands
like Kohler, Grohe, Delta, Moen,
Oasis, Jason and Artistic Brass.
A licensed master plumber can
assist do-it-yourselfers and
answer questions on installation
and maintenance.
We also have an experienced
interior designer on staff to help
coordinate all of your bath and
kitchen ideas."
Moss' grandfather, Harry
Chernick, founded the business in
1920. Chernick's son-in-law and
the current president, Ron Moss,
joined in 1957. Advance expanded
to Walled Lake in 1990 when it
purchased Franklin Plumbing
Supply.
Store hours are 8-5 Mon.-Fri.
8-3 Sat. and by appointment.

(

Phone: 1-800-560-7474

COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN I I

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Please join Us For Our Fall Fine Arts Event
Oct. 25th from 1 1 - 7 & Oct. 26th from 12-8

Featuring original serigraphs, lithographs, monoprints, canvases,
and fine art glass by both national and international artists.
Complimentary refreshments throughout the day.
Stop by or call for a private showing.



32500 Northwestern Highway • Farmington Hills • 851-7540

A

DAVID ROSENMAN'S

ti

Mlle
AMOK PIIIKIIIMERII

NEW & USED CAR BROKER
Sales • Leasing • Buying
(810) 851-2277
(810) 851-CARS

ti

THE BEST OF KNITTING

Anny Blatt • Tahki • Prism • Classic Elite
Trendsetter • Annabel Fox • Katia • Unique Kolours
Dyed In The Wool • Rowan & More!

im

8

nit

29791 Northwestern Hwy.
Southfield, MI 48034
(810) 355-1400

ti

ti

Police In Argentina
Arrest 20 In Bombing

Buenos Aires (JTA) — Argentine
police arrested 20 people here in
an effort to find those responsi-
ble for the July 1994 bombing of
the city's Jewish community cen-
ter.
The arrests came after police
carried out 47 searches of private
homes, car-repair shops and busi-
nesses of people who may have
been involved in the July 18,
1994, terror bombing.
Along with the arrests, police
seized several boxes of docu-
ments, including tax records of
potential suspects in the case.
The police action came in the
wake of criticism at a recent U.S.
congressional hearing that the
Argentine government had not
carried out a vigorous investiga-
tion of the bombing, which
claimed the lives of 86 and left
more than 300 wounded.
Judge Juan Jose Galeano, the
official in charge of the bombing
case, ordered the searches, in
which stolen cars and counterfeit
license plates were also found.
Judge Galeano refused to com-
ment on the operations, but one
of his prosecutors, Eamon
Mullen, said the "searches are the
result of months of careful data-
gathering by judiciary and police
officials."
Mr. Mullen said the car-repair
shops and offices searched be-
longed to "friends and associates"
of Carlos Alberto Telleldin, the
sole person so far detained in the
case.
Mr. Telleldin is suspected of
selling the van that was used for
the car-bomb that destroyed the
Argentine Jewish Mutual Aid As-
sociation.
Judge Galeano has said pub-
licly that wrelleldin is lying about
his role; he knows more than he
says."
Mr. Mullen said his investi-
gating team now believes "that
Telleldin did not sell the van to
the bombers, but simply turned
it over to them, because he was
part of their group. That would
make him an accomplice in the
killings."
Mr. Telleldin has consistently
denied any involvement with a
terrorist cell.
He recently told Judge
Galeano that he would give "More
information in exchange for
$300,000, a new identity for me
and my family and police protec-
tion."
Argentina has no witness-pro-
tection program, and prosecutors
are barred by law from granti-
ng immunity to alleged felons.
Mr. Telleldin also told Judge
Galeano that he had received
death threats from police in the
Buenos Aires province.

Judge Galeano subsequently
removed Mr. Telleldin from a
downtown jail and placed him in
an isolation block in a more se-
cure lockup.
Buenos Aires province Police
Chief Pedro Klodzyck denied that
any of his subordinates had
threatened Telleldin or were in-
volved in the bombing.
"International terrorists oper-
ate underground," said Mr.
Klodzyck, "and it is preposterous
to think that they contacted cops
as accomplices."
The Argentine press has high-
lighted the fact that the long-dor-

Mr. Telleldin has
consistently denied
any involvement
with a terrorist cell.

mant terror-bombing case
suddenly came to life after the
Sept. 28, 1995, hearings of the
U.S. House International Rela-
tions Committee in which Ar-
gentine and American Jewish
officials and security personnel
criticized the handling of the case
by the Argentine government.
Faced with harsh criticism
from Washington, Argentina is
considering a diplomatic reaction.
Interior Minister Carlos
Corach said his government is
considering lodging a formal
protest against the United States.

Rome Remembers
Jewish Mayor

Rome (JTA) — Rome Mayor
Francesco Rutelli marked the
150th anniversary of the birth of
Ernesto Nathan, a London-born
Jew who served as the mayor of
Rome before World War I.
"He is a model who is ex-
tremely difficult to emulate, but
an unforgettable and extreme-
ly great mayor," Mr. Rutelli told
a news conference.
His experience still has great
meaning today: his extraordi-
nary pragmatism and serious-
ness," he said.
Mr. Rutelli announced that a
conference on Mr. Nathan would
be held in December to explore
his identity as a Jew, a Mason
and, as a follower of Italian pa-
triot Giuseppe Mazzini, a lead-
ing proponent of liberal,
democratic reforms and a vocal
advocate of the secular state.
Mr. Nathan was born in Lon-
don of an Italian-German Jew-
ish family, but settled in Rome.

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