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For The
UNBEATABLE DEAL
see LARRY KAPLAN
New Cars - Trucks • Used Cars - Leasing
Shcharansky
nrican
Continued from Page 1
THE UNBEATABLE DEALER
28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696
(313) 355-1000
(313) 355-6414
Across from Tel-12 Mall
S-77
\
YEAR-END
DISCOUNT
FACTORY REBATE
$1 400
$10,945
-$700
NOW $ 10,245 *
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
FACTORY RFT' TF
-$350
*
NOW
3
White, bkts., t-glass, rr wind. defog., air cond.,
console, AM/FM stereo, floor mats/front/rear,
auto. trans., Stk. #1660.
18 AVAILABLE
DISCOUNT
-$2 249
31 1 80'
NOW $
'87 ASTRO
PASSENGER VAN
Burgundy, rally whls., 8 pass. seating, T-glass, pwr. door locks,
carpet, body side midg., inter wiper system, air cond., B/L eye
mir. 4.3L-EFI V6 gas, 4-spd. auto. w/ovrdrv., confortilt steering,
P205/75R15 S/B BW, deluxe gfrille, aux. lighting, hvy. duty batt.,
AM/Fm stereo. Stk. # 1973X.
LIST
DISCOUNT
$14.480
-$1,500
NOW $ 1
29980*
■ 11111•11111111111iX..
'87 S10 BLAZER 4WD
T-glass, Tahoe ecxprnient. per. T..G rind rise., redoing seat hack, oak/ fir. matsitrt./reax,
Wad whl. rridg., h edge guard rridg., inter. wkker syst., elec. rr detogg., aQ deflector, ai,
BA eye mi. bd., console. locking ritf.-RR axl. rr axle•9.11 ratio, elec. spd. cont., 2.5. EFT 06
gas, 4-spd. auto. w.. oxen., 20 gaL fuel tank, tit. us., cast akxrL whis., rr mtd. spare tie,
P235/75015 S/B Wt. Haiogen headlamps, HD ball., AM/FM stereo. rad/trans. cooler,
o ny. OR., special two-tone, oH-rd. chassis ecpt., H.D. traiering,
Stk u31
LIST
DISCOUNT
$18,477
-2,308
$16,169'
FACTORY REBATE -$1000
'E NBE ATABLE DEA L R '
NOW $ 15
169*
NEW '87 SPECTRUM
EXPRESS 2-DR. H/B COUPE
1.5L L4 2-BBL, 5-speed manual trans., P155/80R-13
Rad. B/W tires. Stock # 1925
15 AVAILABLE
DISCOUNT
FACTORY REBATE
NOW $6
5-spd. silver, carpet fir. mats., frt. & rr., P155/80R-13
RAD B/W. Stk. #1456.
32 AVAILABLE
DISCOUNT
5593
7995
-$500
FACTORY REBATE
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., P 185/80R- 13 ALS S/B, h. d. batt., AM/FM stereo, Stk. # 110.
41 AVAILABLE
$300
$6485
— TOM
I 85
NEW 1987 CAMARO
CONVERTIBLE
2 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
`THE UN BEATA BLE DEALE R '
NEW 1987
NOVA
NEW 1987
EUROSPORT VR
4 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
at 1-696
DISCOUNT
FACTORY REBATE
NOW
-51 368
$9765
----TS8b
$9415*
NEW '87 CORVETTE
2-DR. HATCHBACK CPE.
Pwr. seats, visor mir., spt. handling pkg., pwr. door
locks, air cond., 5.7L TPI V8, auto. trans.,
P255/50VR0 16 S/B rad., rr defog., lift off roof, white.
Stk. #1475.
29 AVAILABLE
T
DISCOUNT
NOW $271500 *
355-1000
Araw
*Plus tax, Otis, dinttnatIon
"On Camaro, Spectrum, Non, Conics, Serena, Candor, Celebrity, Caprice, Sprint and S-10 Pickups and
8 - 10 BLUM.
Dealer participation may elect consumer cost
"'On selected models. Length of contract may vary.
10
FRIDAY, SEPT. 11, 1987
r
33 AVAILABLE
rim
r
. 31 , 31 31: V1 V 313 NR
`T HE U N BEATA BLE DE ALE *
4-dr., white tinted glass, rr. defrost, air, sport mirrors,
cruise, auto, tilt stereo frt. & rr floor mats. Stk. #989X.
NEW '87 MONTE CARLO SS
2 DR. SPORT CPE.
1V 30 31BV1V 39 Nfl 3
NEW 1987
CELEBRITY
Ir-
INVENTORY
3 3 : :Llit11111
REBAT
UP TO ES $ ilp000 ** $.1000'000
,
1.9APR
1430 319 V1V 38 ND 3H ,
OR
OVER I
500
=ATMS
TO CHOWN
Avital, Rahel and Natan Shcharansky in November 1986.
hero, a man of great energy
and wit who discounts his
own accomplishments and
whose greatness is in his
ability to focus on his people
rather than himself.
"The struggle is not hard
for me," he said during an
interview, a rare quiet time
during his hectic visit. "My
involvement is very natural.
I feel the challenge. What
upsets me is the naivete of
people in the West who under-
estimate the danger of the
regime they are dealing
with."
Natan Shcharansky knows
that danger first-hand. He
defied the Kremlin in assert-
ing his will to emigrate to
Israel, and he paid a heavy
personal price by serving nine
years in prison, almost half of
that time in solitary
confinement.
Was he scared when he
went to prison? asked a
youngster during Shcha-
ransky's Baltimore visit. "It
was not a nice experience,"
said Shcharansky slowly,
"but I knew I would not be de-
stroyed. To me the difference
was between being a slave
and a free, proud Jew. I knew
during those nine years that
they could not make me
change."
Observing Shcharansky at
close range, one senses that
he is a private, modest man,
a bit embarrassed by the
commotion he causes. The
image of this small man
emerging from a long, black
limousine (to address the
rally) wearing a simple white
polo shirt, grey cotton pants
and an army cap seemed
incongruous at first. But that
is who he is. And that is what
he wore throughout the day,
including a meeting with
major contributors of the
Associated Jewish Charities
and with Soviet Jewry
activists.
Shcharansky tolerates the
glare of publicity because he
knows that the most effective
way to combat the success of
Gorbachev's Glasnost is to
speak out to the people and to
the media. "The most
important way to gauge the
success of our efforts is to see
how politicians are acting and
reacting, and to see how the
mass media is responding," he
says. He is deeply concerned
that the media is focusing on
the benefits of Glasnost, and
paying little attention to
Soviet Jewry. "That is an
indication that we have
become very weak," he says.
And when Gorbachev and
his wife come to the U.S. for
the summit, Shcharansky
fears that far more attention
will be given to "his smile
and her fashionable dresses"
than to human rights
violations.
Shcharansky understands
the -psychology behind this
Western willingness to
believe that the situation in
the USSR has improved.
"People are tired of this
tension between East and
West, the constant worry
about nuclear war. They want
to believe that the situation is
better." But, says Shcha-
ransky, it may be worse.
A Soviet law passed last
January stipulates that only
Jews with first-degree rela-
tives (parents, siblings) in
Israel are eligible to apply to
leave the USSR, thus dis-
qualifying 90 percent of
Soviet Jews. And Gorbachev
is winning the public
relations battle by freeing a
few well-known refuseniks
(like Yosef Begun and Victor
Brailovsky this week) while
closing the gates of mass
emigration. "Gestures,"
Shcharansky calls such
concessions, "cosmetics."
He predicts that as we
approach the East-West
summit, there will be several
more dramatic releases of
long-time Jewish dissidents
by the Kremlin. He named