LETTERS I For The UNBEATABLE DEAL seeLARRY KAPLAN New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing Pollard Wan Continued from Page 6 THE UNBEATABLE DEALER 28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696 Across from Tel-12 Mall Si 8,0 CC W (313) 355-1000 (313) 355-6414 0 0 ,0 0 4- = 0 IfT1 0 CC LLI z INV N ORY . FACTORY CLEARANCE . 0 ILI Ca CC I.... LLI CCI CO 141 VP 3:1 ITS Z. 0 NEW '87 CAMARO Z-28 = 4111,- ,...,-;.- p6' - ' .. ,. ATTENTION: "--------1. . 11L --- . ! -- ..-,-----' --------T -1 Red cloth bucket seats, tinted glass, body side rnoithis, elect defcg" AMIFM stereo wIdock, r. window bb., 305 V8, 5-spd. trans. Stk..1419 UST $1309 DtSCOUNT $1,296 12,703 SUMMER CASH BACK -$1,000 = LLI ..I 'IOC w . CI LLI —I NOW $ 1 1 , CC I— Q 1.0 703 z * LLI Offer Is thru GMAC Financing CX • uu NEW '88 0 . LU —a _ 125 AVAILABLE NOW r D -, (: . IL CCI MI' = *Verified Driver's License *Verified Social Security Number *Verified Residence •Reasonable Debt to Income Ratio LLI NOW = .-: $ 0,235 NEW '87 CAVALIER This Offer is thru GMAC Financing * * 2-DR. COUPE 0 LLI ...II CC1 CC U.I 0 M - 0 •\?)allIC.MIIMII ,11 -, .. . -- N —a ct AVAILABLE A... =%, ...„....--- -..-- 0 — NOW .'",...... - U.I 0 $500 * NOW 28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile ca ti 1-.. cc (0, - I) . CO \.--) W M = W = 1.... - '---- 1) f (C) : -.- ff .11)1 %......D FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1987 .......i." ' .— 1 /,, VI .. rim z CA m xx ,..i Zli C12 I. M I= $9475* .Plus 0 Q OM QUALM G m SERVICE PARTS — ...... LAMM ONNalaal THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ITI = = I= fTI 3:0 30. CA Il ITI 0 RI X:I r- M .73 •. ....1 = M co tax, title, destination. 3:31 Spectrum, Nova, Corsica, Beretta, co Cavalier. 0 .. III 0 - On Camaro, MI* )IA -GrX4tdr-AWA 10 . • at 1-696 CC 4.., ,I/ , 'Tinted glass,a1r, r, wind. defog .,2.0L EFI, auto, heavy 'duty battery, ETR AM/FM stereo. Stk. #t48 UST $11,201 DISCOUNT $1,226 $1,__ 975 _ SUMMER CASH BACK MOO $7945 $7445 Agig2:ijmi\im ___ 101 a a ii ,j - I. — ,,, -----lie -- SUMMER CASH BACK 4-DR. SEDAN N W '88 CORSICA ' FA,. `,\.... 5-s silver, carpet fir. mats. frt. & rr.,, P155/80R-13 0R-13 RAD B/W. Stk. #1456 LIST $8568 DISCOUNT $643 7.: CIC W 213 4 Nows6825* •offlaitalMUMO .. = 0• ■ •• $7875* 4 0 .."- ... Stick, 2-dr., pinstripes, steel belted radials, inside hood release, halogen headlamps, free battery, more. Stk. #1533X ST $7702 DISCOUNT On $7 125 SUMMER CASH BACK $500 NEW '87 NOVA 78 III 3::• 41111. ■ ••• 17 ......"............„. ..,.... AVAILABLE CIVAILABL E = I- NEW '87 SPECTRUM 0 611: NQW = IM 3:0, ITI Ef*iiiitilimila ma' ,,LAIr tilE 5 ex Ca rf'l /It 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 $773 $8375 • SUMMER CASH BACK $500 CC r. 171 a V IL -4 = •Limited or No Credit History Air, floor mats, r. wind. defogger, auto, ETR AM/FM stereo, intermitent wipers, cruise, tilt, 4 cyl.. Stk. #133X LIST $12,065 DISCOUNT $1,330 ,735 $1 -0 SUMMER CASH BACK $500 eZ $10 P 795 * ATTENTION: • 1st TIME BUYERS Aigoollr _-_, ..... ,- - CO Q $12,345 81 560 UST DISCOUNT m r— 4-dr., white tinted glass, IT. defrost, air, sport mirrors, cruise, auto, tilt stereo frt. & rr floor mats. Stk. #989X 2-DR. COUPE .,,, ..slis = . ,i,:air,0 ,waym w . '" -- SUMMER CASH! ON SELECT MODELS U.I = . CCI W- .....- 0111111101L )Ita E ■ =70.....,..., - -1111111.". __ -__ _-- - UP TO $ 1 - 9000** .7: = = m 61________ FP7 11 • J. -i Il■ — AVAILABI - 41 NEW ' : 7 CELEBRITY OR = 1■.. - . ALSO LSO SPECIAL FINANCING RATES Annual Percentage Rate Financing = v. *400 REBATE or 90 D DAY DELAY PAYMENTS BUY OR LEASE *** 3119 A CO ITI Any students receiving a Bachelors Degree or better within the last calendar year can receive the best buy in town on a new Chevrolet car or truck. v , I—• COLLEGE GRADUATES 31 ay COL. , -- CI PTI . Dealer participation may af- fact consumer cost. Offer expires Aug. 3, 1987, on Camaro, Beretta, Celebrity, Nova, Cavalier, Corsica. — On selected models. --I 1,, T— 177 CI rill 3:I. 17 =I bitterness directed towards Caspar Weinberger — whose grossly exaggerated characterization of Pollard's actions and their supposed implications was no doubt in- strumental in the judge's decision to impose the max- imum sentence that even the prosecution didn't request — is understandable. The Secretary of Defense obvious- ly went out of his way to make sure Pollard received the harshest sentence possi- ble; the kind of behavior the true motivation of which is at best highly questionable. Last but not least, Israel's handling of the situation can't be called its finest hour and neither is that of large portions of the Jewish com- munity who hurried on the bandwagon of the harshest condemnation of the Pollards. Here I have to agree with Prof. Shlomo Avineri, who suggested that this sort of behavior, reminiscent of the forever insecure . . . "galut" Jew, is evidence that the American Jew isn't after all as secure as he wants to believe. "Prisoner of Zion?" Perhaps not quite, but neither the villain Jonathan Pollard was made to be. And to David Holzel kudos for a direct, courageous article. Rachel Kapen West Bloomfield Unverified Brazen Tirades Aggressive, investigative journalism, probing and challenging the "establish- ment," which seems to be gaining ascendancy in the American Jewish press, may be a healthy phenomenon provided it adheres to accep- table standards of fairness and accuracy. Hopefully, Mar- vin Schick's piece in the June 26th issue of The Jewish News ("Abuses Abound in Zionist Agencies") is not symptomatic of this type of journalism. In a sweeping "faccuse" in- dicting the World Zionist Organization (WZO), the World Zionist Congress, the Jewish Agency for Israel and the Welfare Federations, Mr. Schick's piece is crawling with ad hominem innuendoes and reckless accusations without a shred of evidence or documentation to substan- tiate his charges. In the opening paragraph, Mr. Schick made the gratuitous disclaimer that he is not now and never has been a membert of a Zionist organization. Many Jews (un- fortunately) have never been affiliated with a Zionist organization; yet, except for the American Council for Judaism, of unblessed memory, few, if any, have flaunted their "non-Zionism" as a means of enhancing their credibility. As a non-Zionist, the writer revealed, he and his non- Zionist acquaintances have, nevertheless, received ballots for elections to the World Zionist Congress. However, he has not divulged whether he had actually voted or was dis- qualified by the "outside agency," which the "Zionist umbrella organization" had hired to audit membership and voter lists." Most elec- tions — whether within the trade union movement or other membership organiza- tions — are, to our knowledge, supervised by an impartial, outside agency. If anything, the American Zionist Federation is to be commended for taking the necessary steps to insure that phony ballots, such as Mr. Schick's, are eliminated by the computer system employed by the American Arbitration Association. The number of Congress election participants is reported to be in the neighborhood of a quarter of a million. Does the group or groups Mr. Schick represents have better credentials to "speak on behalf of American Jewry?" Mr. Schick correctly in- dicated that "there are per- sons extant who are fully knowledgeable about the unbelievable, complicated mechanism that is the Jewish Agency/WZO." It's obvious that he is not one of them. Further into this diatribe, he questioned the "potency" of American "bureaucrats" to review and scrutinize WZO/Agency operations "6,000 miles" away. Had he bothered to find out, he would have known that the WZO has an American Section, which, along with the board members of the Jewish Agen- cy, travel to Israel at frequent intervals and that the Coun- cil of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds now has an of in Israel. Mr. Schick referred to "Jewish Agency scandals," but failed to cite his sources; and he attacked the welfare federations, which "are removed from the pain and the struggle of needy Jews as they divert more of their domestic dollars . . . to coun- try clubs and other projects which aid upper middle-class persons." It's quite con- ceivable that some federa- tions' list of priorities is out of balance, but the charge that federation funds are be- ing used for "country clubs"