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December 25, 1987 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-12-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

ANALYSIS I

For The

UNBEATABLE DEAL
See LARRY KAPLAN

New Cars - Trucks • Used CarS - Leasing
_ 4101

Arab Unrest

man

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

THE UNBEATABLE DEALER

Across from Tel-12 Mall

28111 Telegraph Rd. & 1-696

/ /-,7 /

a

Al

, 4
010 00 0 7,
cus,

'88 CELEBRITY m

4-DOOR SEDAN

2-DOOR

r.
"9
m

1 AY 11 , 11 1411h.
11"—Cas
—`411111--

41 11/4N NID.,.

7P
p

2F.

/taw - lizii

4

pJ



n -

Pwr. door locks, elec. rr. wind. defog., air, 2.5L EFI L4 ,
auto. trans., P185/75R-14 ALS S/B. Stk. #825

Grey cloth buckets, 2.0 ER L4 eng., 5-spd. Stk. #691

LIST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT

*6895*

NOW

$12.633

LIST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
CONSUMER CASH REBATE

$7423
-$ 528

NOW $

42 Available at Similar Savings

4 1857

-$ 600

10 176*

42 Available at Similar Savings

'88 BERETTA

'88 CORSICA

2-DOOR COUPE

4-DOOR SEDAN

11 -k■

- I P I

.4 ill I I I I V. P I I I I I I

_
'4411111111S;°''-

° ••• ■

\;

:j

T/glass, air, Corsica Pkg. #2, elec. rr. wind. def., 2.01 ER .
L4, auto., P185/80R-13 ALS S/B, HD batt., AM/FM stereo.
Stk. #110. •

Intermit. wipers, elec. rr. wind. defog., 2.0L EFI L4, 5-spd.
manl. trans., P195/70R-14 ALS S/B, AM/FM stereo. Stk.
#349X.

IS
LT
11 ,133
UN BEATABLE DISCOUNT
-1 1368
SAVER PACKAGE DISCOUNT - 620

LIST
$10,362
4 1229
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
SAVER PACKAGE DISCOUNT -$ 410

NOW

*8945*

*8723*

NOW

40 Available at Similar Savings

25 Available at Similar Savings

31V30 319 viv38 Nn 3IL1,

`T HE U NBE ATA BLE DE ALE '

UN BE ATA B LE DEALE '

2

OVER $6,000,000 INVENTORY 1

'88 CAVALIER VL

W
=
t"

=

OVER Z__ m

1 V30 18V1V 3: Ni 3 1,

- c 6"
; 1

z

-AR-END
YEAR

w
—a

'88 CAMARO

10

PASSENGER VAN

P.D. locks, T-glass. recline seat,
inter. wiper sys., air (*rid:, 4.3L EFI
V6, 4-spd. auto., 27.gal. fuel tank,
tilt, 205f75R15 S/B WW, deluxe
AM/FM stereo, rally whis.,
pass. seating, glass, solid paint,
cloth seats.

•■ ••

=9. r- .
- Mil

--

411111111 1

'88 S10

BLAZER 4X4

beep T-glass, folding RR seat. rec.
seat back, inter. wiper sys., elec. RR
wind. def., air ctor, air cond.,
B/L eye mil. bik., console. tailgate
body, HD shocks, RRR axle, 2.8L
EFI V8, 4-spd. auto., transfer case
shield, spare tire cover, P205775R15
SB BW,alogen headlamps, solid
paint, volt, oil. temp, odom., Blue.

a

Ti nted glass. body side moldings elec. rr. wind. defog. Stk.
*44 7

LIST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
CONSUMER CASH REBATE

$13,183*

5 AT THIS PRICE

NOW 1 01

$12,990
-$ 1572
-$ 600

818

*

$13,867*

2 AT THIS PRICE

30 Available at Sirnilar Savings

28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
at I-696

Ar ox

X55-1 000

O

LOOK, SHOP, GET YOUR BEST DEAL, BUT DON'T
BUY UNTIL YOU SEE THE UNBEATABLE DEALER!

*Plus tax, title, destination. Rebates included where applicable.

.GookArtuAd&

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1987

GM QUALITY
SERVICE PARTS

OINIIRAL MOTORS COIMOIATION

GM

3 V 30 319 v11138 tin 3H1,

ka,
4 I -
.4400.91111111111WW0014

'88 ASTFIO-CS

, U31V30 319111V 39Ni 3. 1,

`THE UN BE ATA : E I E ALE R '

`THE UN BEATABL DE ALE '

2-DR. SPORT COUPE

Continued from Page 1
authorities with a severe
headache that threatened at
any moment to explode into a
full-blown migraine. The
stabbing and accident,
however, were not the only
triggers of the latest round of
bloodletting, the most violent
and deadly in two decades of
occupation. Three other
events have served both to in-
crease Israel's discomfort and
to fuel the fervor of the
Palestinians.
The first — late last month
— was a daring attack by a
Palestinian extremist, who
crossed the border from
Lebanon on a hang glider,
blasted his way into an Israeli
army camp and took the lives
of six Israeli soldiers before he
himself was killed.
The incident caused acute
embarrassment for Israel's
military establishment,
which not only failed — with
all its supersophisticated
anti-insurgency technology —
to stop this primitive assault,
but also showed itself to be
conspicuously ill-prepared for
the occasion.
The other side of the coin
was evident in the schools,
colleges and universities of
the West Bank and Gaza,
where the incident was
greeted with joyous celebra-
tion and pride.
The Palestinians were fur-
ther encouraged by a naval
encounter off the Lebanese
coast which was initiated by
a boatload of Islamic funda-
mentalists from the pro-
Iranian Hizbollah movement.
It was of scant concern that
the boat was sunk and that
the four fundamentalists
perished; what mattered was
that an Israeli naval officer
had been killed in the clash.
The most recent incident in-
volved an Israeli soldier who
was kiled after his patrol
vehicle hit a mine planted by
Hizbollah fighters in the
Israel-proclaimed security
zone of South Lebanon.
Each of these events was
perceived as a humiliation for
the invincible Israeli Army;
together they combined to ex-
pose Israel's vulnerability.
And they positively cried out
for an encore.
The new martyrs and
heroes who perpetrated these
acts emboldened the Palestin-
ians under occupation, infus-
ing them with pride, renew-
ing their determination and
setting the stage for the next,
inevitable round in the persis-
tent confrontation.
But there was something
different about the quality of
the latest violent upheavals;
a new level of intensity and
determination that shocked
Israelis, who were already
pychologically beseiged by

the spate of attacks and
assailed by uncharacteristic
self-doubt.
For the first time, there was
a real fear that Israel was fac-
ing a full-scale civil rebellion
by its subject population; a
fear that was only fed by the
vigorous assurances — from
the Prime Minister, the Chief
of Staff, the military com-
manders and civil admini-
strators — that the situation
was under control.
One tell-tale symptom of
this unease was the way
Israelis turned on each other
in the search for causes and
effects, with the Labor and
Likud coalition partners ac-
cusing each other of inflam-
ing the demonstrators.
Likud Prime Minister Yit-
zhak Shamir accused his
Labor Foreign Minister,
Shimon Peres, of exacer-
bating the situation by sug-
gesting that Gaza be demili-
tarized; three leftist parties
tabled motions of no con-
fidence in the government;

The new martyrs
and heroes
emboldened the
Palestinians.

the politicians accused the
media of serving the aims of
Arab propaganda.
There was, to be sure, never
any suggestion that the fun-
damental security of the state
was at risk — or, indeed, that
the violence could not be con-
tained. But for a brief mo-
ment this month, Israelis had
the opportunity of peering
behind the curtain that hides
20 years of pent-up Palestin-
ian rage.
There is, in the rich annals
of journalistic folklore, an
anecdote about a British cor-
respondent who was sent to
cover the civil war in Greece.
Shortly after arriving in
Athens, he dispatched a one-
sentence cable to his editor:
"Difficult to exaggerate
gravity of situation," it read,
"but I will try."
Such special exertions are
not necessary in the ter-
ritories. However powerful
and pervasive the security
forces, the young Palestinians
have served notice that they
will not be denied expression
of their national and religious
aspirations.
Israel should have learned
that lesson in Lebanon,
where the full weight of its
military might was unable to
impose a political solution on
a society that was already
weak and fractured.
The Palestinians in the ter-
ritories are neither weak nor
fractured. Bottled up in their

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