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October 07, 1988 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-10-07

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

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k II It kV

Unbelievable Deals
On '89 Wheels!

NEW '88 NOVA 4 DR. SEDAN

1.6L 2-BBL L4. 5-spd. trans., and more. Stk. #1222X
LIST
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
GO FOR IT REBATE

$9105
—900
—600

NOW $ 7605 *

Nows9126*

k 4 1

4403*0

NEW '88 SPECTRUM SPORT 2 DR. H/B COUPE

Frt. and rear color flr. mats, air, 1.5L L4 2-BBL, auto. trans.. P175170R13 rad. B/W. Stk. #2403-
$9280
LIST
—700
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT
—600
GO FOR IT REBATE

NOW S7980 *

NEW '88 CORVETTE COUPE

6-way pwr. seat, removable roof panels. air, 5.7L TPI V8, auto., Delco Bose system, Special Corvette secu-
ly system and more. Stk. #2318. JOE PANIAN IS THE #1 CORVETTE DEALER!
$33,866
LIST
—5,000
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT

Now$28,1366*

NEW '88 CORSICA XT's WITH SPOILERS

XT pkg. incl. full leath.seats, spoilers, alum. whls., special tires, air, cruise, 2.8L V6, auto., stereo, more.
$16,292
LIST
—2,300
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT

Now$13 992*

ONLY 7 AVAILABLE AT THIS PRICE!

NEW '88 SUBURBAN

Center & rr/seat; elec. T.gate window. flr. mats, air, ext. E/L mirr, T.gate body, 3.08 rr. axle ratio, spd. cntrl..
5.7L EFI V8 gas GM, 4-spd. auto. w/OD, 40 gal. tank, comfortilt strng., AM/FM stereo, P235/75R15XL S/B
WW, ALS, Silverado equip. Stk. #1780X

68 31 V 0 18 , 111 :N11111

Intermit. wipers, elk. itirghilisk defog., heavy duty battery, alum. wheels w/locks. Stk. #2342X
$10,726
LIST
—1,200
UNBEATABLEOUNT
—400
GO FOR IT

, 8 311130 318111 ,

:

NEW '88 BERETTA 2 DR. COUPE

BE ATA BLE DEALE ' '

`THE U NBEATABLE DEALE R " "THE UNBEATA B LE DEA

I

$15,875*

NEW '88 EXT. CAB FLEETSIDE PICKUP

Jump seat equip.. whl. opening mIdg.. 1500 lb. payload pkg., ext. B/L eye min:. console, Fleetside body,
3.42 rr axle ratio, 2.8L EFI V6 gas, 5-spd. man. w/OD, PS, P195/75R14 S/B BW, rr. step bumper, rally
whls. Stk. #2121

SALE PRICE

$8950

NEW '88 ASTRO CS PASSENGER VAN

Pwr locks, tint, carpet, blk. B/S mldgs., whl. opening mldgs., int. wipers, air, ext. B/L eye mitt, 3.23 rr
axle ratio, 4.3L EFI V8 gas. 4-spd. auto. w/OD, comfortilt strng., PS, P205/75R15 S/B WW, dlx. grill, aux.
lighting, complete glass body, std. body/chassis. Stk. #2349X

SALE PRICE

It3

$13,200*

NEW '88 SPORTSIDE PICKUP

. 1 ' 11 319 1/D138 ND 3H1,

ii i:I 11:1 :1/ACI :1 11110/111 41111

SALE PRICE

spd. auto. w/00, tilt, rr. step bumper, P225175R15 ALS S/B W/L rad., garnet custom cloth bench, 2.73 rr axle
ratio, 5.8L EFI V8 gas GM eng., cast alum. whls., air, stereo, Chevy truck saver Pac "3." Stk. #2413

$11,813*

NEW '88 S-10 BLAZER 4-WHEEL DRIVE

Tint, folding rr. seat, recl. seatback, int. wipers, ext. B/L eye miry., console, T.gate body, HD shocks, 3.42 rr axle
ratio, spd. cntrl., 2.8L EFI V8 gas, 4 spd. auto. w/OD, comfortitt strng., cast alum. whls., P205/75R15 S/B WW
tires, AM/FM stereo, Tahoe equip. Stk. #2340X

SALE PRICE

$14,358*

28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile
at 1-6%
CHEVY TILT
IVECO CENTER

Trackers
coming this fall

355-1000

CHEVROLET'S
HIGHEST AWARD FOR
rkk‘:'1
„," CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

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

_AO ERIDAYALTDBER 7 1988

, 8311130 3181111/38ND

`THE U NBE ATABLE DEALE ' "

See the
all new '89

0 18 , 8N HI,

SALE PRICE

OPINION

Gypsy

Continued from Page 7

Nazis. It has been said that
only a quarter to a half-
million perished.
All of these assumptions
are wrong. The "asocial" fac-
tor of congenital criminality,
with which Gypsies were in-
itially charged, became in-
tegral to Nazi race theory
from 1933 onward, and while
speaking an Indo-Aryan
language, Gypsies were never
regarded as Aryan
themselves.
None of the groups who
were exempted, whether Gyp-
sy or Jewish, was spared for
long; had the Third Reich not
fallen in 1945, both popula-
tions surely would have been
eradicated from the face of
Europe.
Regarding numbers, the in-
dependent findings of several
scholars in the past decade,
mainly in Germany, place the
total Romani loss at
somewhere between
1,200,000 and 1,500,000 — an
estimate that appears to be
rising as more facts become
known. The Nazis estimated
the total world population of
Gypsies to have been 2
million at that time.
Besides the Jews just one
other people — the Gypsies —
was targeted for complete ex-
termination by the Nazis on
racial grounds.
Gypsies had been the sub-
ject of cruel persecution in
Germany ever since their first
appearance there in 1407; the
first law against them was
put into effect in 1416, and by
1514 the first of many
murderous "Gypsy hunts"
had been legalized, in which
Gypsies were tracked down
like wild animals and killed
in the forests. In 1721,
Emperor Karl VI ordered the
extermination of Gypsies in
Germany.
By the end of the 19th cen-
tury, anti-Gypsyism had
become well-entrenched; in
the early 1890s, a conference
was held on the "Gypsy
scum," at which the military
was empowered to prevent
them from settling, and
means were devised to signal
their presence in an area by
ringing church bells. In 1899,
the Central Office for
Fighting the Gypsy Nuisance
was established in Munich,
and documentation on the
population began to be col-
lected. In 1920, Gypsies were
singled out as targets in a
German study by Binding
and Hoche justifying "the
destruction of worthless life."
After April 12, 1928, Gypsies
were placed under permanent
police surveillance, and in
that year Hans Gunther
wrote in his treatise

Rassenkunde des deutschen
Volkes, "It was the Gypsies

who introduced foreign blood
into Europe."
In 1933, Binding and
Hoche's notion of "lives un-
worthy of life" became the
basis for the "law for the
prevention of hereditarily
diseased offspring." Gypsies,
and the small number of in-
dividuals of African descent
in Germany (for whose
presence Jews were blamed),
were its prime targets. From
January 1934 onward, Gyp-
sies were sent to camps to be
built at Dachau,
Dieselstrasse, Mahrzan,
Sachsenhausen and Ven-
nhausen for sterilization by
injection or castration. Two
laws issued in Nuremberg in
that year forbade marriage
between Germans and "Jews,
Negroes and Gypsies."
In 1935, the Nuremberg
Law for the Protection of
Blood and Honor reaffirmed

'In Europe
generally, only
Jews and Gypsies
come under
consideration as
an alien people.'

this policy, forbidding inter-
marriage between Germans
and non-Aryan peoples, which
included Gypsies. A party
statement issued that year
read "In Europe generally,
only Jews and Gypsies come
under consideration as an
alien people?' A year later a
panel on racial laws reported
that "In Europe, only Jews
and Gypsies are of foreign
blood."
Between June 12 and 18,
1938, "clean-up week" took
place, during which hundreds
of Gypsies were brutally herd-
ed together and arrested.
Their mass sterilization was
recommened at that time
because "Gypsies place the
purity of German blood in
peril." The issue was
"categorically a matter of
race," according to a Nazi Par-
ty decree.
Nazi race scientists deter-
mined that if two of an in-
dividual's great-great-grand-
parents were even part Gyp-
sy, he had too much "Gypsy
blood" to be allowed to live;
this categorization was exact-
ly twice as strict as that defin-
ing who was Jewish. Romani
women married to non-
Gypsies were sent to the
camp at Dusseldorf-
Lierenfeld to be sterilized,
while a law was passed forbid-
ding Gypsy children from at-
tending school.
In 1939, Behrendt called for
the "elimination without
hesitation" of the Romani

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