I OPINION I For The UNBEATABLE DEAL see LARRY KAPLAN New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing man THE UNBEATABLE 28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696 Our Struggle s. •. DEALER Across from Tel-12 Mall Continued from Page 7 (313) 355-1000 (313) 355-6414 YEAR-END REBATES UP TO ... $ 1 000 ** $ Z0009000 INVENTORY NEW 1987 CELEBRITY NEW '87 MONTE CARLO SS 2 DR. SPORT CPE. 33 AVAILABLE White, bkts., t-glass, rr wind. defog., air cond., console, AM/FM stereo, floor mats/front/rear, auto. trans., Stk. #1660. 4-dr., white tinted glass, rr. defrost, air, sport mirrors, cruise, auto, tilt stereo frt. & rr floor mats. Stk. #989X. DISCOUNT 1 0 245* NEW '86 BERETTA 2-DR CPE. Intermit. wdsh. wpr., elec. RR wind. defog., 2.0L EFI L4, 5 spd. manl. trans., P195/70R-14 ALS S/B, AM/FM stereo, Stk. #349X. 23 AVAILABLE LIST $10,362 DISCOUNT -$1, 229 $9133 "E 1 :EATA BLE DEAL ' 1 "E UNBE ATABLE DE AL R ' `T H B ATA : LE I E A E ' ' FACTORY REBATE NOW -$350 $8783* '87 ASTRO PASSENGER VAN Burgundy, rally whls., 8 pass. seating, T-glass, pwr. door locks, carpet, body side mldg., inter wiper system, air cond., B/L eye mir. 4.3L ER V6 gas, 4-spd. auto. w/ovrdrv., confortilt steering, P205/75R15 S/B 8W, deluxe gfrille, aux. lighting, hvy. duty batt., AM/Fm stereo. Stk. # 1973X. LIST DISCOUNT NOW $ '87 S10 BLAZER 4WD T-glass, Tahoe equipment, pwr. 1/C wind. rise., recining seat back, color fir. mata/trtirear, black whl. midg.. dr edge guard rridg., inter. "Mel' sysL, elec. rr delogg., air deflector, BA. eye mi. bet. console, locking lilt.-RR axl., rr axie-4.11 ratio, dec. spd. cont., 2.81 ffl V6 gas. 4-spd auto. wkniciv., 20 gal fuel tank, tat. p.s., cast aim. vas., a mtd. spare tie, P235/75R15 S/B K. Halogen headarnps, 14) batt., AM/FM stereo. HD tad/trans. coder, 'luggage cart-brt. operating cony. pkg., special two-tone, oft-rd. chassis eqpt., H.D. traieric 72,'12 Red/Vilite Stk. n317. LIST DISCOUNT $18,477 -2,308 $16,169' FACTORY REBATE -$1000 NOW $ 1 5, 169* NEW '87 SPECTRUM EXPRESS 2-DR. H/B COUPE 1.5L L4 2-BBL, 5-speed manual trans., P 155/80R- 13 Rad. B/W tires. Stock # 1925 FACTORY REBATE NOW $6 12,980* NEW 1987 - NOVA 5-spd. silver, carpet fir. mats., frt. & rr., P155/80R-13 RAD B/W. Stk. #1456. 32 AVAILABLE DISCOUNT NOW $7495* NEW '88 CORSICA 4 DR. SEDAN T-glass, a. c., Corsica pkg. #2, elec. rr wind. def., 2.0L EFI L4, auto. trans., P185/80R-13 ALS SIB, h. d. batt., AM/FM stereo, Stk. #110. 41 AVAILABLE $300 $6485 1 85 NEW 1987 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE 2 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW 1987 EUROSPORT VR 4 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile at 1-696 LI ST DISCOUNT $111 , 33 -$1 368 $9765 FACTORY REBATE NOW $9415* NEW '87 CORVETTE 2-DR. HATCHBACK CPE. lPower s seaatri, visor handling pkaguio.pwrt.radnoo s.r cond . P255/50VR016 S/B rad., rr defog., lift off roof, white. Stk. # 1475. 29 AVAILABLE DISCOUNT NOW -$4 892 $27,500 355-1000 'Plus tax, titte, distinstion ••On Caimans, iilmactruni, Nov., Corsica, Beretta, Cavalier, Ceiebdty, Caprice, Sprint and S-10 Pickups end 8-10 Blazers Dealer participation may affect consumer cost. •••On selected models. Length of contract may vary. 10 FRIDAY,'SEPT. 4, '1987 593 $7995 -$500 FACTORY REBATE 15 AVAILABLE DISCOUNT $14.480 -$1,500 p NOW $ 18 AVAILABLE LIST $15,429 DISCOUNT -$2,249 , U 31 1130 318111V eNn 3 , E UN:EATA BL: FACTORY REBATE $1 400 $10945 -$700 3:0 .17 1V30 318V1V38NR 3H , % 4— OR APR ped arresting the Hebrew teachers. He wears an attrac- tive personality, he presents more flexibility in arms negotiations, he sends us theater troupes and invites our students on exchange pro- grams. He has deprived us of the dramatic individual cases which used to be the focus of our struggle. Yosef Begun has been re- leased from prison but has no visa for Israel. No doubt he will get one — accompanied by a fanfare of publicity — whenever the Soviet leader feels he wants to be seen as making more "humanitarian concessions." The struggle for Soviet Jewry is no longer a simple humanitarian campaign for the rights of persecuted in- dividuals. It is a struggle for the survival of an entire peo- ple doomed to captivity. The situation today seems less dramatic, but the real drama is that we have reached a critical moment in the history of the Jews of the Soviet Union. Their future will be determined by the ac- tion we take today. Our major task is to recap- ture public opinion. For the first time, it is not we but the Soviet-orchestrated "good news" emanating from Mos- cow. Never has there been such a gap between them and those who claim to be defend- ing their cause in the West, where the Soviet Jewry organizations are being com- pletely outmaneuvered. These organizations con- tinue to have good intentions, to hold meetings, to pass resolutions. But no one is listening. Even within the Jewish community, Gorba- chev has a greater impact on public opinion than Jewish organizations. And if our own community isn't listening, why should Gorbachev? We used to face two major enemies in our struggle: Ex- ternally, there was the tyran- ny of the Soviet Union; internally, there was our own despair that nothing we could do would change the situa- tion. The Soviet tyranny is still there, but Gorbachev has fooled many people into be- lieving that, left alone, he will somehow solve the problem by himself. Our internal enemy is no longer despair, but rather the false optimism born of complacency. Gorbachev has kidnapped our principle of linking the question of Soviet Jewry to other issues on the interna- tional agenda and now uses his own form of "linkage" as a threat — that if we protest 'Our major task is to recapture public opinion' there will be no arms agree- ment, no trade, no summit. He has paralyzed the Jews of the West into silence and pretends that such silence is good for the Jews, good for East-West relations, and good for the peace process in the Middle East. Of course, the reverse is true. We remain silent while the Soviets are free to act as they wish. Gorbachev, by promising minor and insubstantial changes, is using the Jewish organizations in the West. The initiative and the strength with which they campaigned for so many years is being undermined by the new subtleties of Soviet policy. Take, for example, the case of those who are refused exit visas because they allegedly possess "state secrets." For years, the Soviets have claimed that every Jew could leave, except those possessing secrets. In practice, however, the Soviets used this "regime con- sideration" as a reason for holding anyone. We never took them seriously. Earlier this year, Western Jewish leaders returned from the Soviet Union claiming they had "assurances," phrased in exactly the same terms, and presented them as a sign of important progress. But since then, more and more Jews have been refused for knowing "secrets," and ac- tivists in our movement in Moscow are convinced that the display of western Jewish - gullibility and the serious broadening of this problem are closely linked. Every visitor returning from the Soviet Union over the past few weeks has reported the usual range of attitudes and opinions among the refusenik community, but on one thing they are all agreed — now is the time to act; now is the time to put Gorbachev to the test and de-