UNBEATABLE DEAL
See LARRY KAPLAN

New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing

AMP'
man

Six Day War

Continued from Page 1

THE UNBEATABLE DEALER

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

.
: . SUMMER
.
SELLING
SPREE!

. m 1
1
Eci.

:

Lu

2.0L EWFI L4, auto trans., tinted glass, body
side moldings, elec. r. wind. defog., power
steering, AM/FM stereo. Stk. #1506X
LIST
$9148

DISCOUNT

a773
$8375

SUMMER CASH BACK

NOW

$500

$7875*

COLLEGE GRADUATES

Any students receiving a Bachelor's
Degree or better within the last calendar
year, can receive the best buy in town
on a new Chevrolet car or truck.

$400 REBATE or
90 DAY DELAY PAYMENTS
BUY OR LEASE

ALSO SPECIAL FINANCING RATES

This Offer is thru GMAC Financing

441is

123

A VAILABLAt/iii-
gq.A
.

Stick, 2-dr., pinstripes, steel belted radials,
inside hood release, halogen headlamps,
maint. free battery, more. Stk. #1533X
LIST
$7702
DISCOUNT
$577
$7125
SUMMER CASH BACK
$500

4-dr., white tinted glass, rr. defrost, air,
sport mirrors, cruise, auto, tilt stereo frt. &
rr floor mats. Stk. #989X
LIST
$12,345
DISCOUNT
$1,550
$10,795
SUMMER CASH BACK
$800

$6625 *

UP 1 000 **
TO

SUMMER CASH!
ON SELECT MODELS

NEW '87 NOVA

2-DR.
COUPE

NOW

$9995*

N W '88 CORSICA SEDAN
101
1 ° 1 defftt:ini_.,

A

V4ILA

•

r

_

.

P. door locks, t-glass, air, AM/FM stereo;
2.0L EFI auto. Stk. #066X.
UST
$11,555
DISCOUNT
$1,280
$10,275
SUMMER CASH BACK
$500

NOW

1775*

NEW '87 CAMARO Z-28

-7:
4.1111I

!TrirIN

34

AVAILABLE

11114,r
'

.11

H NBEATAB E DEALE R '

-`mo t

Air, floor mats, elec. rr wind. defogger,
auto, ETR AM/FM stereo. Stk. #057
LIST
$12,516
DISCOUNT
$1,401
$11,115
SUMMER CASH BACK
-$500

NOW

$10.615*

5-spd., silver, carpet fir. mats frt. & rr.,
P155/80R-13 RAD B/W. Stk. #1066
S8588
LIST
$643
DISCOUNT
$7945
$500
SUMMER CASH BACK

NOW

28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
at 1-696

GookArb24,64\

10

Friday, June 5, 1987

$7445*

Red cloth bucket seats, tinted glass, body side moldings,
elect. defogger, AM/FM stereo wiclock, r. window lub.,
305 V8, 5-spd. trans. Stk. #1419
UST
$13,999
DISCOUNT
$1,296
$12,703
SUMMER CASH BACK -$1,000

NOW

355-1000

001004/014

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

$11,703*

'Plus tax, title, dest., incl.
rebates
"On Camaro, Celebrity,
Spectrum, Nova, Corsica,
Beretta, Cavalier. Dealer par-
ticipation may affect con-
sumer cost. Offer expires
June 12, 1987, on Camaro,
Beretta, Celebrity Nova,
Cavalier, Corsica. Offer ex-
pires June 30, 1987, on Spec-
trum only.

31V30 31BV1V39N111 H

NEW T7 CELEBRITY

NOW

ATTENTION:

NEW '88 BERETTA

NEW '87 SPECTRUM

complished, above all, was give
power to the State of Israel and,
with it, a heightened moral
responsibility. As victims for
centuries, Jews were pure in
their powerlessness. Now, hav-
ing mastered the sword, they
were to be treated and judged
in a new way. Israel was no
longer a Zionist fantasy but a
real country, with real pro-
blems and mistakes and
solutions.

Those tensions are as healthy
as they are unending. And they
in turn raise new questions
over whether Israel is to be
judged by the moral standards
of the rest of the free world or
by a higher, Biblical standard
demanding the Jewish state to
be a light unto the nations.
That debate will surely go on
for more than another 20 years,
but one certainty that was
assured even as Israeli soldiers
embraced the stones of the
Western Wall in June 1967:
Israel must always maintain
the power to determine her own
fate.

Assad Eases _Conditions
For Syrian Jews

, H 1V 0 318V1V38 NII

COUPE

ITI

111TfickaWlinTIRTETIVIM

`TH U NBEATABLE BEALE ' '

NEW '87 CAVALIER

310
CCP

.

Across from Tel-12 Mall

28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696

sense of dread over the
possibility of another
Holocaust, now shared in a
pride of the Jew as one who
determines his own fate.
In America, there was a
resurgence of spirituality
among young people and a new
interest in tradition. Jewish
identification and pride spread
as far as the Soviet Union,
where the movement for
emigration can be traced to
Israel's victory on the sands of
the Sinai.
But the euphoria soon faded.
The belief that strength in-
sured security gave way to the
reality of a million Arags living
under Israeli rule on the West
Bank and Gaza. The triumph of
Zionism gave birth to a rekindl-
ed Palestinian nationalism.
Self-confidence among Israelis
led to hubris, or chutzpah, a no-
tion that Israel was invincible,
that the Bar Lev Line could not
be crossed. It took the horrors
of the Yom Kippur War, six
years later, to change that
attitude.
What the Six-Day War ac-

About 20 wealthy Jewish families in
Damascus have been "blessed" by the
regime, and are shown off to Western
leaders.

HELEN DAVIS

Special to The Jewish News

erusalem — There has
been a significant im-
provement in the condi-
tion of Syrian Jews lately, but
officials in Israel remain pro-
foundly concerned about the
ultimate fate of this "hostage
community."
According to Israeli
sources, the 4,500 members of
the Jewish community in
Syria are now permitted to
travel freely within the coun-
try, to have telephones in
their homes and to enroll at
Syrian universities.
In addition, about 20
wealthy Jewish families in
Damascus have been
"blessed" by the regime and
are shown off to Western
leaders who had previously
complained about the harsh
restrictions imposed on the
Jewish community. Among
the special privileges that
these families enjoy is the
ability to travel abroad. But
there is still a blanket ban on
Jews emigrating from Syria.
Members of families which
are "blessed" must travel
singly and only after they
have received permission
from the military authorities

j

and deposited the equivalent
of $5,000.
If they do not return on
time, they forfeit the deposit.
And if the military authori-
ties suspect they may not
return at all, reprisals are
taken against family mem-
bers who remain in Syria.
Earlier this month, two
such families, who had been
imprisoned at Al-Maza mili-
tary prison in Damascus for
almost a year, were released
after former U.S. President
Jimmy Carter, on a visit to
Syria, interceded on their
behalf with President Hafez
Assad.
Sources in Israel who close-
ly monitor Syrian affairs
believe that President Assad
embarked on his "liberaliza-
tion" policy in an effort to im-
prove Syria's image in the
West.
The effects of this policy,
they point out, became par-
ticularly evident after the
United States bombing of
Libya and after a British
court established a link be-
tween senior officials in the
Syrian regime and an at-
tempt to blow up an El Al
passenger airliner last year.
Despite the relaxation of
restrictions, however, Syrian
Jews are still kept under close

