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

February 09, 1996 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-02-09

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

RJM PUBLIC AUCTION
. SAT. FEB. 10TH, 10:30 A.M.

DUE TO THE RETIREMENT OF OWNER
ASSETS & INVENTORY OF
FRAMING SHOP AND ART GALLERY
28944 ORCHARD LK. RD.
(BETWEEN 12 & 13 MILE)
FARMINGTON HILLS, MI
INSPECTION FRI. FEB. 9TH, 9 A.M.-6:00 P.M.

Peres Spars
With IDF Head

Vacuseal Vacuum Press, Fletcher Glass & Mat Cutter, Dan
Clip Molding Chopper, Putnam Miter-Mite V-Nailer,
Makita 10" Miter Saw & More. FINE ART; Hayslette, Kuang,
Hong, Hall, Buzkij, Tarkay, Fritz, Higdon, Noel, Wilkinson,
Chagall, Calder, Appel, Dali & Many More. Fixtures, Office
Equipment & Much More. TERMS: 25% Deposit In Cash,
Charge Or Certified Funds. For More Information Call: R.J.
Montgomery & Assoc., Inc.

1-313-459-2323

CHAIM'S Trip to Prague and Poland



Community Information Meeting

Monday February 19th at 8 p.m.
J.C.C. - W. Bloomfield

C.H.A.I.M. will host a Community Information meeting
about its upcoming trip to Poland and Prague this April 18-
28. C.H.A.I.M.'s trip includes airfare via Alitalia Airlines, first
class hotel accommodations throughout, kosher meals,
and motorcoach travel with a tour director. The $2,100 per
person Heritage tour includes Prague, Krakow, Auschwitz,
Kasimierz, Lublin, Lodz, Warsaw, Treblinka, Maidanek,
others, and lastly, Rome, Italy.

ALL INTERESTED ARE INVITED
TO ATTEND THIS INFORMATION MEETING.

- Free refreshments. -

For further information, contact
Helen Cozzetto (810) 354-2880 or (800) 788-7633.

assomm-
.tagarnases ■
4111110•••••11111111111.
d ■ mossessoaseMe.
.asimmONIIIONIM

■ imIONIPI ■■■■ OMBIBI
.•11 ■■■■ 111111 ■ 1111111111111116

ass•••••••••1110111.111111
1IIi•111M11111, —
vast

• ■s■■sa■e

summer
IMI11111111 ■ 11

• a ■s■■■al

qv



If

las■s■a■••
A.
sem•11111111..
m■ eell ■ llOwliamsor
•samoulamar
Ismo ■■■■ ollr



Give every
NEWBORN
the
advantage

March of Dimes

C.H.A.I.M. Community Holocaust Program

Sunday, February 25th 7:30 p.m.
J.C.C. - W. Bloomfield

C.H.A.I.M.

will present a community program
on "Germany and the Holocaust Today."
The guest speaker will be the
German Consul General in Detroit.

The entire community is invited to attend
this very informative meeting.

Free admission and refreshments.

For further information, contact
Dr. Charles Silow (810) 356-6668.


#1 IN BUICK SALES

AL HARRIS

TaMBROFF

28585 Telegraph Rd.

353-1300

Jerusalem (JTA) — As Israeli and
Syrian peace negotiators continue
their talks in eastern Maryland,
Prime Minister Shimon Peres and
the Israel Defense Force chief of
staff expressed disagreement
about the chances for reaching a
peace agreement by the end of the
year.
Speaking at the weekly Cabi-
net meeting, Lt. Gen. Amnon Sha-
hak said the timetable for the
Israeli-Syrian talks was too short
for a peace treaty to be reached be-
fore elections were held later this
year in the United States and Is-
rael.
Israeli elections are scheduled
for November, but there has been
speculation that Mr. Peres may
call for early elections if no progress
is made on the Syrian track.
At the Cabinet session, Mr.
Peres objected to Mr. Shahak's
pessimistic assessment, stressing
that some progress had been made
at talks in Maryland on the issue
of normalizing Israeli-Syrian ties.
After meeting in late December
and early January, Israeli and Syr-
ian negotiating teams resumed
their negotiations Jan. 24 at the
Wye Plantation, a private confer-
ence center.
For the first time since the talks
were abruptly broken offlast June,
the teams included military ex-
perts from both sides.
During a break before the talks
were slated to resume, the two ne-
gotiating teams met separately
with chief American mediator
Dennis Ross.

Israeli Court
Rejects Petition

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel's High
Court of Justice rejected a petition
to remove Likud leader
Benjamin Netanyahu's parlia-
mentary immunity so that he
could face charges of endangering
national security.
The petition was submitted by
Meretz Knesset member Ran Co-
hen, who sought to bring the
charges after Mr. Netanyahu
brought before the Knesset a clas-
sified Israeli army document in
June.
The document detailed securi-
ty arrangements with Syria that
would form the basis of a peace
agreement between the two coun-
tries.
The document appeared to
back away from Israel's demand
to maintain an early-warning sta-
tion on the Golan Heights and also
presumed a full Israeli with-
drawal from the Golan as part of
a peace agreement with Syria.
Mr. Netanyahu claimed before
the Knesset that then-Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Rabin had ordered
the army to prepare the document

to be used in discussions with Syr-
ia.
Mr. Rabin at first denied all
knowledge of the document; in
subsequent days, he termed it a
"stolen document."
Mr. Netanyahu said the docu-
ment proved that the Rabin gov-
ernment was willing to
compromise Israel's security needs
to reach a peace agreement with
Damascus.
The court ruled that Mr. Ne-
tanyahu's actions were sheltered
by his parliamentary immunity.
But at the same time, the court
instructed Minister of Internal Se-
curity Moshe Shahal and Attor-
ney General Michael Ben-Yair to
explain why it had not ordered an
inquiry to determine how the doc-
ument was leaked to Mr. Ne-
tanyahu.
Mr.Cohen said he was satisfied
with the court ruling.

New Defense
From New Lawyer

Jerusalem (JTA) — A second at-
torney, appointed to defend Yigal
Amir on charges of assassinating
Yitzhak Rabin, indicated that he
is considering a manslaughter de-
fense for his client.
Avraham Pachter, a former
deputy district attorney in Tel
Aviv, was appointed by the court
to represent Mr. Amir after one of
Amir's lawyers, Mordechai Ofri,
announced a day ealier that he
would resign from the case.
Mr. Pachter told Israel Radio
that Mr. Amir's statements in
court and to investigators would
indicate a manslaughter plea, not
murder.
Mr. Amir previously said in
court that he had intended only to
paralyze Mr. Rabin in order to
force him out of the political are-
na.
"There was no intent to kill,"
Mr. Pachter said.

Three. Hamas
Gunmen Killed

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israeli forces
shot dead three Hamas gunmen
near Jenin, after the members of
the fundamentalist Islamic group
opened fire on Israel Defense
Force soldiers at a roadblock.
One of the Israeli soldiers was
lightly wounded in the leg.
The three Hamas gunmen
were driving in a car from the
Jenin self-rule area, according to
reports.
As the car approached the Is-
raeli checkpoint, it slowed down.
One of the people inside opened
fire on a group of soldiers stationed
at the roadblock.
The soldiers then opened fire,
killing all three.
The three Hamas members
were known to Israeli security
forces.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan