For The

UNBEATABLE DEAL
see LARRY KAPLAN

OP-ED

New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing

Jerusalem

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Continued from Page 7

THE UNBEATABLE DEALER

VAILABLE

VAILABLE

4-dr., white tinted glass. rr. defrost, air.
sport mirrors, cruise, auto, tilt stereo frt &
rr floor mats. Stk. #928
512,345
LIST
DISCOUNT
$1550
$10,795
SPRING CASH BACK $800

2.0 EFI L4. 5-spd.. man' I. trans., am/fm
stereo. Stk. #044X.
LIST
510,132
'S1,137
DISCOUNT
$8995
SPRING CASH BACK $500

NOW $ 9995 *

NOW $ 8495 *

SAVE UP TO

$

1000

* SPRING

CASH

ON
SELECT
MODELS

MVA ILABLE

NEW '87 CAVALIER

NEW '87 NOVA

2-DOOR COUPE

VAILABLE

5-spd., silver, carpet flr. mats frt. & rr.,
P155/80R-13 RAD &W. Stk. #1066
$8588
LIST
5643
DISCOUNT
$7945
SPRING CASH BACK $500

NOW $7445*

NEW '87 CAMARO Z-28

38

el,AILAHLF

NEW '87 SPECTRUM

Stick, 2 dr., pinstripes, steel belted radials,
inside hood release, halogen headlamps.
maint. tree battery. more. Stk. # 1519X
57702
LIST
i577
DISCOUNT
$7125
SPRING CASH BACK $500

NEW '88 CORSICA

4-DR. SEDAN

P. door locks. t-glass, air, AM/FM stereo,
2.0L EFI auto. STk. #066X
LIST
$11,555
DISCOUNT
S1,430
$10,125
SPRING CASH BACK $500

LIST
DISCOUNT

$13,999
;1,296
$12,703
SPRING CASH BACK $1,000

703*

NOW1625 *

28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
at 1-696

355-1000

OM QUALITY
SERVICE PARTS

GM

MOM eaarciala.

Friday, May 22, 1987

NOW $7875*

NOW $6625*

Red cloth bucket seats, tinted glass, body
side moldings, elect. defogger, AM/FM
stereo w/clock, r. wind. lub., 305 V8. 5 spd.
trans. Stk. #1419

NOW $ 11

2.0L EWFI L4, auto trans., tinted glass,
body side moldings, elec. r. wind defogg. ,
power steering, am/fm stereo. Stk.
#1506X
LIST
$9148
5773
DISCOUNT
$8375
SPRING CASH BACK $500

. 31V3 1 31: V , 3:k i

2-DR. CPE.

.H311130 319V11139 NO 3H1,, .. 11 311130 319 V1V39N0

NEW '87 CELEBRITY

NEW '88 BERETTA

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

*Plus tax, title, dest., incl.
rebates.

"On Camaro, Celebrity (4
cyl.), Spectrum, Nova.
Dealer participation may af-
fect consumer cost.Offer
expires May 31, 1987, on
Celebrity, Cavalier,
Camaro, Nova, Corsica and
Berett. Offer expires June
30, 1987, on Spectrum only.

1V30 319V1V3BNI 3.

H UN BEATABLE DEALER" "THE UNBEATABLE DEALER"

B ATA BLE DEA E "

"E NBEATABL DAL R '

6th
Anniversary
Sale

. /1 1V30 319V1V39 N11 3H1,

Across from Tel-12 Mall

28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696

10

(313) 355-1000
(313) 355-6414

in the world, business is the
most dynamic meeting place
between the different com-
munities of Jerusalem and
forms the weave of a network
of multiple relations between
secular Jews, religious Jews,
Arab and Jewish tradesmen.
Coexistence is also on
display. On the street we see an
orthodox priest passing a
Palestinian wearing a "kef-
fiah"; in turn he is overtaken
by a frock-coated Orthodox Jew
who turns aside from an Israeli
woman in shorts.
Each community preserves
and maintains its own culture
and traditions and accepts the
diversity with a passive
acknowledgement of each
other. Jerusalem is a city of
separate and distinct
neighborhoods, living side by
side without integration.

In 1985 Jerusalem, there
was a total of 472,000
residents, 346,000 (73%) of
whom lived in the Jewish
quarters and 126,000 (27%) in
the Arab neighborhoods.

As the Jews of this com-
munity celebrate Yom
Yerushalayim, "Jerusalem
Day," which this year falls on
May 26 and commemorates 20
years of reunification of the ci-
ty, we should reflect on the pro-
found historical significance of
Jerusalem to the Jewish peo-
ple. At the same time we must
wonder whether the unique
organization of its multi-
national population today may,
in fact, be a step toward the
prophetic vision of Jerusalem
that "every man shall sit under
his fig tree and none shall be
afraid."

LETTERS

Continued from Page 6

tal chutzpah. Having been a
mitlaufer of the Hitler regime,
Dr. Waldheim should not have
aspired and succeeded in
becoming a political leader in
the post-Hitler world.

Dr. Emanuel Tanay

Detroit

`Franklingate' Letter
Was Too Harsh

I read the recent letter to
the editor concerning the
Council of Orthodox Rabbis
and the debate concerning
Franklin Kosher Meats (May
8). I found the letter's tone to
be harsh in an uncalled-for
degree and I was disturbed
by the fact that its author

chose to impute the council's
integrity on this important
issue.

I myself am certainly not
qualified to judge in this
matter, but that is precisely
why the council exists. The
purpose of kashrut — per-
forming a mitzvah and striv-
ing for holiness — are better
attained by creating a posit-
ive constructive atmosphere.
Such an atmosphere, as op-
posed to one of harsh criti-
cism, will inspire others to a
greater degree of observance
with the joy and moral uplift-
ing that can and. should ac-
company it.

Leslie M. Goldstein
Southfield

McFarlane: Differing
Aims In Iran Deal

Washington (JTA) —
Former National Security
Advisor Robert McFarlane
portrayed the different objec-
tives Israel and the U.S. had
for selling weapons to Iran in
his testimony May 13 before
the Senate-House Select
Committee investigating the
Iran-Contra affair. He
stressed that Israel never
sought to "influence us un-
duly."
McFarlane agreed with
Sen. James McClure (R.-Id.),
a member of the panel, who
suggested that Israel was in-
terested in assisting Iran in
its seven-year war with Iraq.
"Our interest was in stopping
the war and restoring rela-
tions with Iran sometime in
the future," he said.
"They're very different

from Israel's. That's very
clear and both sides were
conscious of that. The
President was very conscious
of that," McFarlane said.
He referred at length to a
meeting he had with David
Kimche, then director gen-
eral of the Israel Foreign
Ministry. "He (Kimche) said,
`but this (negotiations with
Iran) doesn't make any dif-
ference to us. If you don't
want to have anything to do
with it, then we would
understand. We bring it to
your attention as an ally, if
you wish to do it. And if you
don't, good, it is there for you
to consider'."
Characterizing Kimche as
"a very careful man" who
"came on clear instructions
and said what he was told to

