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October 04, 1996 - Image 128

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-10-04

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

4 Seasons

Fireplace Barbecue
PRE-SEASON SALE

REF. $390.

sr)

999REF. $425.

ENGLISH OAK BP -18" h

$117999

BP -24" L

INCLUDES: logs, burner, pan, embers,
cinders, grate, & SAFETY PILOT CONTROL.

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A t...
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:til 7

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'll. '11
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1:16.

VI. •

if

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ALL SIZES &
STYLES OF
GAS LOGS ON
SALE NOW



.011• :.

INIIINEW FROM'
S49.99

ALL FIREPLACE GLASS DOORS ON SALE-- DESIGN
SPECIALITIES, CUSTOM DOOR, DAVID KIMBERLEY, GLO-FIRE
HEARTHCRAFT, PORTLAND WILLAMETTE, MAJESTIC, SUPERIOR

4 Seasons Fireplace & Barbecue
(810)855-0303 SALE ENDS 10-10-96

30903 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD

(in THE PLAZA between - 13
& 14 Mile by TJ Maxx &THE GAP) HOURS: Monday-Thursday 10 am-9 pm
Friday 10 am-5 pm CLOSED SATURDAY

CLOSED THIS SUNDAY FOR SIMCHAH TORAH

Had Dinner With
Gordie & Colleen Howe Lately?

Here's "Howe!"

Monday, November 4, 1996
Congregation Shaarey Zedek

join us in honoring
our three newest inductees:

Gordie and Colleen Howe,
The 1996 Alvin Foon Memorial Award Recipients

Tickets

C:)
CC

$100 per adult

Kids 18 and under
pay their age for admission

LU

28

Call Elayne Wolfson at
(810) 788-0921

Ben Braun

Men's Basketball Coach
University of
California — Berkeley

Don Berger

Chuck Frankel

(1932 - 1985)

1940s High
School and
College Star

Former MSU
Football Standout
NFL and CFL player

Red Cross Visits
Are Allowed

Jerusalem (JTA) — The Pales-
tinian Authority has agreed to
let International Red Cross offi-
cials visit prisoners in jails in the
autonomous areas.
The decision follows reports
of harsh treatment and torture
of political prisoners in the jails.
Until now, Palestinian secu-
rity forces have refused to allow
the international humanitarian
organization into the lockups.
Israel Radio quoted Palestin-
ian Authority official Nabil
Sha'ath as saying that under the
agreement, which is to be signed
next month, Red Cross officials
would be allowed to visit the jails
without intervention from secu-
rity forces.

Canadian Court
Continues Case

Toronto (JTA) — A Canadian
federal court has ruled that a de-
portation hearing for accused
Nazi war criminal Josef Nemsi-
la could continue.
Justice James Jerome said
that a Canadian immigration of-
ficial was wrong to rule that a
1910 law protecting immigrants
who have been in Canada more
than five years applied to Mr.
Nemsila.
As a result of the immigration
official's decision, deportation
proceedings against Mr. Nem-
sila had been halted last year.
Mr. Nemsila, 83, is accused of
lying about his Nazi past when
he came to Canada in 1950.
Mr. Nemsila, a legal resident
of Canada, was allegedly a dis-
trict commander in the notori-
ous Hlinka Guard in the Nazi
vassal state of Slovakia. He also
is accused of participating in the
roundup of the country's 100,000
Jews and in their deportation to
Auschwitz and other death
camps in Poland.
Ed Morgan, legal counsel for
the Canadian Jewish Congress,
said, "Essentially, the federal
court has said that the five-year
clock never started running be-
cause he entered through mis-
representation."
He added that the 1910 law
was never "meant to protect peo-
ple who have defrauded our im-
migration officials."
David Matas, honorary senior
legal counsel for B'nai Brith
Canada, said the ruling by the
Federal Court of Canada "is a
welcome development after a se-
ries of procedural setbacks in
proSecuting alleged Nazi war
criminal Josef Nemsila."
"B'nai B'rith has always con-
tended that Nemsila's entry into
Canada was based upon fraud
and misrepresentation and was

therefore unlawful," Mr. Matas
said.
Paul Vickery, the Canadian
Justice Department's director
and general counsel for war
crimes and crimes against hu-
manity, said the decision gives
the green light to a deportation
hearing against another accused
war criminal, Antanas Ken-
stavicius of Vancouver, British
Columbia, who also allegedly
lied to gain admission into Cana-
da and who has never become a
citizen.
Earlier this year, a Canadian
federal judge ruled that no ju-
dicial interference existed in the
case against Nemsila.

Government
Building Plans

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel has ap-
proved the first phase of a build-
ing project for a new neighborhood
in a Jewish settlement in the
West Bank.
The project, in the Kiryat Sefer
settlement, comprises 1,806 hous-
ing units, but only 900 had been
approved for construction, the Is-
raeli daily Ma'ariv reported.
The move marked the first
approval of a building plan in the
territories under the new govern-
ment, which has lifted a freeze im-
posed by the previous government
on construction in Jewish settle-
ments.
Defense Minister Yitzhak
Mordechai, who has been autho-
rized to approve all building pro-
jects in the territories, gave his
approval.
But officials at the Tzivha de-
velopment company in charge of
the project pointed out that for-
mer Prime Minister Shimon
Peres had agreed in principle to
the construction project shortly
before handing over the reins to
the Likud government.
Before the May elections, the
firm had petitioned the High
Court of Justice to let the plan go
through.
Moshe Fogel, head of the Gov-
ernment Press Office, denied that
the approval was politically mo-
tivated.
He told Israel Radio that it was
only to allow for the "natural
growth" of the community.
But the Palestinian Authority
has warned against further build-
ing in Jewish settlements, calling
their expansion a violation of the
accords signed by Israel and the
Palestine Liberation Organiza-
tion.
Meanwhile, Palestinians called
a two-hour protest strike in east-
ern Jerusalem after Israel bull-
dozed a building in Jerusalem's
Old City.
The building was intended to
be used as a social club. Israel said
it was built illegally with Pales-
tinian Authority funds.

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