I NEWS 8.7% FINANCING FOR '87 CADILLACS* "Where You Come First" Kosins ONLY AVAILABLE AT CRISSMAN CADILLAC - Uptown Southfield Rd. at 11 1/2 Mile • 559-3900 ASK FOR DAVID BIBER •MAXIMUM LOAN $20,000 FOR 48 MOS. GOOD THRU FEB. 15, '88 Continued from Page 1 Southfield at 101/2 Mile • 569-6930 tl f: 4 , '1/40ek vos (Ne NG246**C) 1:00 0090 00 71:0 °Z°N. 00E1000. 0 C/4eitZ4 N.S1P EE BOOT SALE ALL WOMEN'S BOOTS 1 WEEK ONLY 2/12-2/19/88 ADDITIONAL 40% OFF EXAMPLE: ZODIAC BOOT Reg. $12500 Our Retail $104 00 RED DOT Retail $5500 40% OFF .$2200 YOU PAY $3300 NUSRALAS WE PUT FASHION IN A BOX AND A LID ON PRICES Name Brand Shoes Nullities equates • 31045 Orchard Laic. Road • Farmington Hills Howe: Mon.-FrL 11100 im pm eat. 1000 a ► n - 6 pm, Sun. 12.410 pm - 5.-00 pm 855-2050 30 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1988 MOPAC Support Big & Tall 1350 N. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM, MI 644-1930 ,cx‘e I + TAX I MOPAC Treasurer Bob Naf- taly said the group has donated money to several House candidates, including State Sen. Lana Pollack of Ann Arbor, who is vying for the seat held by U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell, R-Plymouth, and State Sen. Mitch Irwin of Sault Ste. Marie. Naftaly said other reci- pients of MOPAC funds in- clude congressional in- cumbents John Dingell of Dearborn, William Ford of Taylor, Dennis Hertel of Detroit, Bob Carr of East Lansing and Howard Wolpe of Delta Township. MOPAC also has given money to U.S. Senator Don Riegle of Flint as well as out-of-state senators Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio and Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey in their respective re- election bids. Naftaly said the PAC never would support an anti-Israel candidate and added that recipients of MOPAC funds should also believe in the separation of church and state and pro-choice on the abortion issue. Credentials also include being a staunch advocate of minority rights. Naftaly, the former state budget director, said MOPAC supports candidates who have demonstrated the best overall records. MOPAC does not mandate that each candidate supports every issue, he said. "We need people to help us," Naftaly said. "That includes out-of-state politicians who can help us speak out for a vote:' Naftaly said the group does not intend to endorse a presidential candidate. But, he added, Jesse Jackson is the only candidate the group would oppose. The group expects to con- tribute to other congressional and Senate races, he said. MOPAC, which was founded in 1986, raised about $100,000 to funnel money to Democratic Party candidates in the 1986 election. It is spearheaded by Klein, who declined to discuss the PAC and its financial disburse- ments. The idea for a local Jewish PAC followed the 1984 gener- al elections when prominent Detroit Republicans started hosting fundraisers for Re- publican candidates in Mich- igan and elsewhere. MOPAC's members include Mandell Berman, Lawrence Jackier, David Mondry, Jack Robinson, Laurence Deitch, Jane Sherman and Sidney Lutz. The group has a nine- member executive committee and a 17-member board of directors. . U.S. Jewish Groups Vow 'Unity' With Israel New York — Fifty-one American Jewish organiza- tions released a statement of "unity and identification" with Israel. The statement, which was circulated last week by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish organizations, includ- ed the signatures of four groups that have been public- ly critical of Israel's use of beatings to quell Palestinian violence in the administered territories. The statement said the signators had "received assurances from the president and prime minister of Israel that the policy of restraint continues,' that they "have expressed to them our con- cern regarding any depar- tures in contradiction" of the policy and that they "trust that this policy will be uniformly implemented?' The statement voiced regret at the loss of life in the ter- ritories and welcomed the ef- forts of the United States and others "to move the peace pro- cess forward to a just and lasting peace." It also noted that for decades the Arab world "ex- ploited and victimized" the Palestinians by refusing "to come to the peace table to negotiate a settlement with Israel." After declaring that Israel's security "is a prime concern to Jews everywhere," the signators said, "We believe we speak for the overwhelm- ing majority of Jews across the country and around the world in this expression of unity and identification with the embattled nation of Israel?' Among the 42 constituent members and nine observer groups of the Conference sign- ing the statement were the American Jewish Congress and two Reform organizations — the Union of American Hebrew Congregations and the Central Conference of American Rabbis. All three organizations had previously issued critical statements. A third Reform organization that signed the statement, the Association of Reform Zionists of America, had voiced "alarm and distress" over the beatings.