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Stk. #2342X NOW $33.866 $5000 $28,866* NOW $7605* NEW 88 SUBURBAN Center and rr/seat, elec. t'gate window, flr. mats, air, ext. B/L eye mirrs., tailgate body, 3.08 rr. axle ratio, spd. control, 5.7L EFI V8 gas GM. 4 spd. auto. w/overdrive, 40 gal. fuel tank, comfortilt strng., AM/FM stereo, P235/75R15XL S/B WW, ALS, Silverado equipt. Stk. #1780X SALE PRICE $15,875* NEW '88 ASTRO CS PASSENGER VAN Pwr. dr. locks. tinted glass. carpeting, bik. bdyside nildgs.. whl. opening midgs.. inter, wipers. air, ext. SA. eye mirrs., 3.23 rr. axle ratio. 4.3L EFI ye gas. 4 spd. auto. w/oyerdriye • comfortilt stmg., p.s.. P205/75R15 S/B WW. dlx. grille. aux. lighting, H.D. battery. AM/FM stereo. rally whIs.. 5 person seating, complete glass body. std. body/chassis. Stk. #2349X SALE PRICE JOE PARIAH IS THE #1 CORVETTE DEALER! "NEW" '88 CORSICA XT's WITH SPOILERS XT Package incl. full leather seats. spoilers. alum. whls., special tires. air, cruise, 2.8L V6, auto., stereo and more. LIST UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT NOW $ 916.292 _woo 13 1 992* NEW '88 S10 BLAZER 4WD Tinted glass, folding rr. seat, reclining seatback, interv. wipers, air, ext. B/L eye mirrs., console, tailgate body, H.D. shocks, 3.42 rr. axle ratio, elec. spd. contr., 2.8L EFI V8 gas. 4 spd. auto. - w/overdrive, comfortilt strng., cast alum. P205/75R1b S/B WW tires. AM/FM stereo, Tahoe equipt. Stk. #2340X SALE PRICE :18V1V3: Nt z Only 7 Available At This Price! CXI CX 1 .■ z Continued from Page 5 United States; and that he is a "Zionist ideologue." "What he did," Jonathan's father said, "he did out of con- science." Pollard also noted that his son, whom he calls Jay, was convicted only of assisting and transmitting classified information to Israel. The charge usually accompanying this accusation — that of pass- ing information injurious to the United States — was drop- ped for lack of evidence. Yet from the very beginn- ing, Pollard said, his son was pursued relentlessly by the Navy and top figures in the U.S. government. He singled out then-Secretary of Defense Casper Weinberger who, Pollard said, expressed con- cern that Jonathan had pass- ed along information that would make Israel strong. "What kind of talk is that about an ally?"_ Pollard said. Upon his arrest, Jonathan was placed in a Washington, D.C., prison and allowed to speak with his parents only when separated by a glass partition. His wife, Anne Henderson-Pollard, was jailed and denied medical treat- ment despite a life- threatening illness. She originally was accused of spy- ing for China, Pollard said. Anne, who married Jonathan three months before his arrest, was con- victed as an accessory after the fact, a misdemeanor. She pleaded guilty only because she was assured this would reduce her husband's sentence, Pollard said. Following what he feels was poor advice from his attorney, Pollard at first did not speak out about his son's case. That, he now realizes, "left the Jewish community in the dark." Now, Pollard said, he is hop- ing to change that situation Morris Pollard: Cross-country campaign. by speaking to Jewish groups throughout the country. Already he has appeared in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia "and I have yet to hear one word of opposition," he said. One group Pollard is not op- timistic about reaching is the "so-called establishment Jews (who) have sunk their heads in the sand," hoping the case will go away. Pollard claimed that while interned, Jonathan was urg- ed to implicate prominent Jews as helping him transfer information to Israel, but that he insisted he worked alone. Jonathan recently was transfered from the federal prison in Springfield, Mo., to Marion Penitentiary in Il- linois, the most secure federal prison. Pollard described prison conditions as very harsh. Though it did not confirm Pollard's charges about the Marion Penitentiary, an Amnesty International observer's report of 1987 recommended an investiga- tion of allegations that in- mates had been beaten, and stated that certain practices at Marion were in violation of the United Nations Minimum Rules for the treat- ment of prisoners. OPINION Election GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION IA1 Continued from Page 7 28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile at 1-696 355-1000 ....crievRossrs NR:r1 HIGHEST AWARD FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION LOOK, SHOP, GET YOUR BEST DEAL, BUT DON'T BUY UNTIL YOU SEE THE UNBEATABLE DEALER! 10 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 , H311130 318111VMM 3 1,, H U N BEATA E I EA E " Pollard The same is true of the Moral Majority, anti- abortionist groups and other single-issue constituencies. A spokesman for one of these organizations has stated pubicly that he is not in- terested in having everyone vote. If he can muster his forces, he says, then the lower the turnout, the better for his group's goals. Alarmism is premature. But I wish to pose two ques- tions to the Jewish communi- ty. First, where are our voter registration programs and sites? And second, what steps are we taking to enable the elderly, the infirm and those without transportation to vote on election day? We had best get moving — and fast — on college cam- puses, at synagogues, Jewish centers, federtion offices and local community relations councils. Whatever our party preference, we Jews must vote, lest we find ourselves wringing our hands in dismay on the first Wednes- day in November at what might have been. 1 Ql