I LOCAL NEWS I tAitelett SEE THE ALL NEW 1989 FLEETWOOD SEDAN and SEDAN DEVILLE SEVERAL NOW AVAILABLE IN STOCK • Sedan de Ville Alan Teitel, left, receives a plaque from Spencer Partrich "in recognition of his donation of a computer center at the Sally Allan Alexander Beth Jacob School for Girls." The center is named the Mickey Teitel Computer Resource Center in memory of Teitel's son, Michael David Teitel. NEWS Fleetwood Sedan LONG ON STYLE AND LUXURY The 1989 Cadillac Fleetwood Sedan • New, longer design • Distinctive profile with fender • Luxurious interior • Increased legroom • Tufted seating areas • "Tiffany" carpeting take tEArE sp of our ALSO ' ecials NO MONEY DOWN! NEW 1 (1 )89 SE;AN DEVILLE Lease for $430 35 Stock #9095 or purchase for 7100 ORCHARD LAKE RD, WEST BLOOMFIELD MI 48322 Per Month $24 g 500* PHONE 851.7200 The "Good Service" Dealer" 3 GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS Gt 140101. C0.1.0.1t0 60 mo. closed-end lease for qualified customers. Lease payment based on 60 mos., 75,000 mile limitation. 10. per mile for excessive mileage. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at lease and for $9,922.17. Lessee is responsible for excessive wear and tear. 1st payment in advance w/refundable security deposit of $450.00. To get total payments, multiply payment times 60. 4% use tax and plates extra. • The invoice total includes factory holdback and advertising association assessments, and is not a net factory cost price to the dealer. Invoice may also not reflect the ultimate cost of the vehicle due to the possibility of future rebates, allowances, discounts and incentive awards the manufacturer. — Just add tax, title. 100 FRIDAY DECEMBER 16 19:8 Intifada's Second Year Ushered In By Violence Jerusalem (JTA) — The Palestinian uprising entered its second year last weekend with violence — juar as it had when it began on Dec. 9, 1987, in the West Bank and Gaza. But some of the worst con- frontations in recent months occurred last weekend in east Jerusalem. Two Palestinians, a teen- ager and a 40-year-old man, were killed Saturday by Israel Defense Force soldiers in the Gaza Strip. At least 12 were wounded in various incidents in both territories, according to the IDF. Arab sources placed the number of wounded at 24. There were general strikes, commercial strikes and new curfews enforced. Public transportation was at a stand- still. Nevertheless, the civil administration went ahead with plans to reopen junior high schools in the territories on Sunday. Some 70,000 pupils re- turned to classes after an en- forced absence of five months, when the schools were shut down because of rioting. Violence broke out in sev- eral parts of east Jerusalem as well. The most serious disturbance took place out- side Red Cross headquarters in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood. About 200 demonstrators hurled rocks and bottles at passing vehicles, overturned trash cans and blocked the road to Mount Scopus. Police fired tear gas and I rubber bullets. Twenty-five Arab youths were arrested. There also were incidents on roads linking downtown Jerusalem with the city's northern precincts and with the Hebrew University cam- pus and Hadassah Hospital on Mount Scopus. Trouble also erupted in the usually quiet Bedouin village of Ibtin, near Haifa, where a new mosque was set on fire, apparently by Jewish extrem- ists who believed rumors that several villagers had been ar- rested on suspicion of ter- rorist acts. The mosque itself suffered only slight damage, but many prayer rugs and about 50 Korans were destroyed. The Religious Affairs Min- istry promised to make good the losses, estimated at tens of thousands of dollars. Statue Honors Wallenberg Los Angeles (JTA) — The memory of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swede who saved more than 90,000 Hungarian Jews from almost certain death in the Holocaust, was honored recently with an 18-foot bronze statue in Los Angeles. The statue was unveiled at Raoul Wallenberg Square, in the Fairfax district of Los Angeles, by the Raoul Wallen- berg Fund of the Jewish Com- munity Foundation. The statue, sculpted by ar- tist Franco Assetto, depicts Wallenberg reaching forward to save those doomed to die.