100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 05, 1988 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-08-05

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

NEW '88 CORSICA 4-DR. SEDAN

LIST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
GO FOR IT REBATE

'88 SPRINT 2-DR. H/B COUPE

Tinted glass. air cond., elec. a wind. defog., console. 2.8 L MFI
V6. auto. trans., P185/808.13 ALS S/B.Stock 022530.

1.65_ 2 BBL L4, 5-spd. trans. and more.
Stk. # 1222X.

UST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
GO FOR IT REBATE

$9105
-9 900
4 SOO

my *7605*

Frt. and mar color flr. mats, 1.01. 2 AL. L3 Suzuki,5 spa
manual trans.. P145/8041•12 tad B/W. ETA am/fm
tereo, white. Stk. *1985.
*Mr.,
LIST
Se,051
GO FOR IT REBATE
-8 300

s

$11,248
$1,300
—$300

9648*

NOW 5

47 AVAILABLE AT SIMILAR SAVINGS!

NOW

16 AVAILABLE AT SIMILAR SAVINGS!

*552 1

*

14 AVAILABLE AT SIMILAR SAVINGS!

'E I NBE ATABLE DE AL R '

1988 S10 BLAZER 4X4

OeeP Wet Om ink% sealkual um. Rim prise info.. inlet woo system.
arcond .aonx and reatIng tam ed. b/1 eye mt. ptd.. n ac* 3.23 ratio. mg. of
cooing sys . eX, speedo:41[mi. 4 31 et vy gas. 4 spd. auto ward, 27 gain
toirlortit stetmg.P2C6,758 15 S/B WW. hem duty battery. wheels. 8
kr
Ran seating, special nio4c7e Demo. Stock O5#.

1

NOW

s n

I I

Deep tinted geass. Wet rper system. elec. rt ord.Cdoo., Or HD dads. m
0ile-4.11 station. roc speed med. 28L EFI W # 5'spe. had. Wm**.
51 steerna cast akrt reels F225/751115 S8 w4 . MAI Cerro. tachometer
and note. Dena Stock #5450

New

000 *

$141400*

1988 SUBURBAN

Power door locks. inter wiper system. air. our airle•3.73
ratio,
EFI V8 gas. 4 spd auto w/oyerdriVe. 40 gallon
fuel tank. comfortilt steering. AM/FM stereo.
8235/751115XL S/8 WW. and more Stk n2173

15,000*

Starting from

17 TO COCOS! AI SAMAR SAMOS

.4411/14
-74

11...
-

(i&

INV SPECTIWN SPORT ZAN/ICOR

Frt atm. cor rAr.04atzt

ii:Ui 5L IA 298L.

UST
IN SEATADLE 089COUNT
FOR 111 REBATE

00

rr.

-8 SOD

„„s7980*

30 AVAILABLE AT SIMILAR SAVINGS!

NEW '88 BERETTA 2 DOOR CPE

Intermit. windshield wipers, electric rear window defog.,
heavy duty battery, alum. wheels wllockS. Stk. 12342X

LIST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
GO FOR IT REBATE

$10,726
$1,200

S400

$9126*
13 AVAILABLE AT SIMILAR SAVINGS

gt:FIIT IM111:1111T1:1;11 1F131,

[ NEW '88 NOVA 4-DR. SEDAN

NEW '88 ASTRO O. PASSENGER VAN

`THE N :E . : i E E s " " H NB ATA BLE D AL R '

I

:N

I . T 7

GM FAC'T'ORY REBATES UP TO $75005

MEEIRUTillilattjaff
:

, U 31V30 118 1/11/39 N Nil,

<< H

BIM

`THE

B ATA BL DEALE "

`T HE UN BEATA BLE DEALE R " "THE U NBEA TABLE DE ALE

I LETTERS

NOW

z

tin

NEW '88 CONVERSION VANS
MINI & FULL SIZE

•Starcraft
•Bkmuac
•Van Express Starting
From

STK. #2226

s15,900*

Many To choose From

tin

GM QUALITY
SERVICE PARTS

2:e
—.4
);10
CC

*Plus tax, title, destination. All rebates included where applicable. Rebates expire 9-28-88. Picture shown m
may not be actual vehicle advertised.

28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
at 1-6%

355-1000

471c,CHEVROLET'S
HIGHEST ANARD FOR
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

2:1

Continued from Page 6

please, to make only one corn-
ment: He mentioned in refer-
ring to the book the "warn-
ing" and "guarantee" and
added "one must wonder
whether it should be treated
seriously," and later ". . . war-
nings and fear of reprisals
should be questioned."
We were being entirely
tongue-in-cheek on those two
pages — seeking to set an ap-
propriate tone for the book.

David A. Harris,

Washington representative,
American Jewish Committee

AIPAC Article
Needs Clarifying
The article written by
Helen Davis (July 15) re-
quires corrections of some of
the mistaken perceptions it
leaves.
While it is true that AIPAC
(and the government of Israel)
in principle oppose all arms
sales to Arab countries not at
peace with Israel, not all
arms sales are fought. We
believe it is in the best in-
terest of the United States to
only sell arms as part of a
coordinated foreign policy and
only to advance American
interests.
Over the last five years
roughly $17 billion in sales
have been made by the U.S. to
"moderate" Arab states. Of
those, only about 15 percent
have been actively fought.
On July 27, King Fand was
quoted by the New York
Times as saying that Saudi
Arabia will buy arms
wherever it pleases and that
their purchases are for cash.
U.S. foreign policy must con-
sist of more than simply sell-
ing arms to anyone who
stands in line with the money,
otherwise we might begin
selling to Khadafi or expand
sales to Khomeini .. .
The second assumption is
that Israel will be somehow
safer with arms sold by the
United States than by others.
Unitd States weaponry is
superior to arms manufac-
tured in other contries and
Arab promises about United
States arms have not always
been kept. Would Israel be
safer if the Saudis purchased
the highly reliable Lance
missile from the United

Let Us Know

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

Letters must be concise,
typewritten and double-
spaced. Correspondence
must include the signa-
ture, home address and
daytime phone number of
the writer.

States than the longer-range,
but less-accurate Chinese
CSS-2? .. .
AIPAC has supported a
balanced policy of trying to
reduce the dangerous arms
escalation in the Middle East.
We believe it is in America's
interest to do so. The Arab
contries spent approximately
$50 billion on their armed
forces last year. Some day
they will want to use those
forces.

Toby Dershowitz

Director of Media Relations
America-Israel
Public Affairs Committee,
Washington

Editorial Politicized
Library Situation
It was greatly disappointing
to read The Jewish News
editorial "Book Ban" (July
29), a distortion of fact and an
attempt to politicize a dif-
ficult situation.
United Hebrew Schools is
struggling to find a responsi-
ble and lasting solution to the
maintenance of the Com-
munity Jewish Library. To
date, the library has neither
been closed nor the hours cut.
The only action taken has
been to inform the communi-
ty that library hours will be
reduced in September. A
meeting with the Jewish
Library Association has been
scheduled to try to explore
alternatives satisfactory to
all.
I was advised that your
editorial was based upon an
interview given to The
Jewish News in June. With
permission, we taped that
interview.
I have replayed the tape,
listening in vain for any hint
that we "blamed" Dr. Miler;
or, that board members were
"given very little choice." To
the contrary, what I heard
specifically was that we did
not indeed blame Dr. Teller,
that UHS board members
and officers shared feelings
and options in a long and dif-
ficult meeting before finally
deciding on cost-cutting
measures.
I urge the editorial board of
The Jewish News to listen to
the tape, and then publish a
retraction of their inflam-
matory editorial.

Jerry Knoppow

President, UHS

Editor's note: Both Jerry
Knoppow and UHS Executive
Director Ofra Fisher praised
The Jewish News article of
June 24 as fair and accurate.
That article states on Page 16:
"Knoppow and Fisher blam-
ed the prior administration for
budgetary problems at UHS."

H

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan