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September 15, 1989 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1989-09-15

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



Jeep.

Eagle

CHRYSLER EMPLOYEES & JEEP EAGLE
SALES CORPORATION EMPLOYEES

SEE US FIRST
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS!

NO
MONEY
DOWN *

END OF YEAR
BLOW-OUT

53 1989s
TO GO!

REBATES UP TO

$2000 or
0% FINANCING

We'll show you
the Invoice and
you make us a
REASONABLE OFFER

On Select Models

1990 TALON "FWD"

1989 SUMMIT

"THE SCREAMING EAGLE"

DL 4 DR.

GRAND WAGONEER

4WD 4 DOOR

5 speed manual transmission, 2.0 Litre, DOCH
MPI eng., reclining front buckets w/drivers
lumbar adjustment, rear full folding seat back.

5 speed trans., 1.5 Litre MPI
eng., carpet protectors.
Stk. #94079

Auto trans., 5.9 Litre, V8, vivid
red. Stk. #98010

Stk. #903014

,,,,,11111111111111 ■
a 41

WAS $9650
LESS OAKLAND HILLS
$876.37
DISCOUNT
LESS CHRYSLER REBATE ..$1000

WAS $13,449
LESS OAKLAND HILLS
DISCOUNT

NOW $777363*

ALL AT 9.9%

-

'89 EAGLE PREMIER ES

Loaded. Stk. #107309

'88 EAGLE PREMIER LX

Like new. Stk. #107318

NOW $ 1 2

'89 JEEP CHEROKEE LTD 4 DR

'89 JEEP WRANGLER ISLANDER

Auto, air, hard top, 1500 miles. Stk. #218360

'88 EAGLE PREMIER LX 4 DR

Low miles

'88 JEEP CHEROKEE 4 DR LAREDO

Like new, loaded

'88 JEEP COMMANCHE PICKUP 4x4

Auto, air, 2500 miles

NOW $21,400*

-. ■ =1.1•• ■ •1

'89 EAGLE PREMIER ES -

13,595
Only $8950

Only $

'88 JEEP CHEROKEE 4 DR

1600 miles, like new

'88 EAGLE PREMIER ES 4 DR

Loaded, Ilke new

'88 JEEP WRANGLER

5 spd., 3200 miles

Only $ 12,795

'89 JEEP WAGON LTD 4 DR

only 9,650

1500 miles

Only

'89 EAGLE PREMIER ES

10,000 miles, like new, Stk. #108357

Object to approval by Chrysler Credit

. . .



354-2950

OAKLAND HILLS
JEEP.EAGLE

BETWEEN 12 & 13 MILE ROAD — IN SOUTHFIELD

13 MILE RD.,

29929 TELEGRAPH RD.

18

.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1989

Only $ 19,765

Only

'88 JEEP WRANGLER

1 .0p.

$11,475

19,795
$9995
Only $10,695

10,000 miles

'11,676

$9850.

Only

Auto, air, loaded

Only $ 16,867

Only $ 10,895

Loaded, 10,000 miles

'88 JEEP WRANGLER LAREDO

Only $ 13,600

1 ,295

Auto, 6 cyl., 4x4

'89 EAGLE PREMIER 4 DR

Only $ 19,602

Only $ 1

Only

'88 JEEP CHEROKEE 4 DR

Only $ 19,567

Only

Only $ 14,295

Leather, only 9000 miles

'87 JEEP CHEROKEE 4-WHEEL DRIVE LAREDO
Only $12,675
'89 EAGLE PREMIER ES
Loaded, low miles
Only $10,250
'89 JEEP GRAND WAGONER

Black, 9000 miles, on sale

649*

SPECIAL PURCHASE

Auto., air

4000 miles, loaded. Stk. #217292

$800

WAS $27,284
LESS OAKLAND HILLS
DISCOUNT
$4887
LESS CHRYSLER REBATE $1000

. Soni•:, :re*ttIOJO





1—BEHIND THE HEADLINES

Glasnost
Pogroms?

Continued from Page 16

Semitism depends on who you
talk to. There is a general
feeling of wanting Gorbachev
to succeed — but everything
is in ferment?'
And this awesome instabili-
ty, Eisenberg suggested,
creates fears that old patterns
of tangible anti-Semitism will
reassert themselves.
In some cases, Jews have
been caught in a peculiar
kind of squeeze as the "na-
tionalities" movement
spreads across the vast Soviet
empire.
In the Ukraine, anti-Soviet
nationalist groups have ac-
tually been seeking Jewish
participation in their move-
ment. Jews fear the tradi-
tional anti-Semitism of
Ukrainian nationalism, but
they also fear being outsiders
if the nationalist movement
succeeds.
At the same time, there is
good reason to fear the
possibility of official backlash
by the authorities in Moscow
if they do participate in the
anti-Soviet effort.
State Department officials
have expressed concerns, too,
about reports that the
primary beneficiaries of the
move towards "privitazation"
in the Soviet Union have been
Armenians and Jews. The
fear is that for the vast ma-
jority of Soviet people,
economic conditions have on-
ly worsened — which could
lead to the traditional
scapegoating of the Jewish
population.
Finally, there is a kind of
organizational imperative at
work in the recent warnings
of anti-Semitism. Privately,
Soviet Jewry activists worry
about a sense of complacency
in this country — a feeling
that with the remit relaxa-
tions in Soviet immigration
policies, the problem of Soviet
Jewry is over.
"Anti-Semitism is an ever
present part of Soviet life?'
said one Jewish activist here.
"Jewish groups have a need
right now to keep attention
focused on the issue; the
worst thing in the world
would be for everybody to just
start congratulating each
other and saying that the bat-
tle has been won."
Recent warnings of increas-
ed anti-Semitic activity may
be one way of reminding peo-
ple that the Soviet Jewry
dilemma is far from solved.
But some observers point to
the fact that widespread,
organized anti-Semitism is
still a fresh memory for
Soviet Jews. So is the realiza-
tion that hopes have been
raised in the past, only to be
dashed by quick and un-
predictable changes in Soviet
society.

The sense of positive
changes in the Soviet Union
is also tempered by what
some people here are calling
the "Tiananmen Square syn-
drome" the realization that
the move toward greater
liberalism in Communist
countries may go only so far
before the forces of reaction
strike back with the deadly
force that is still under their
command.
So the churning and
seething in Soviet society
creates the potential for undo-
ing all of the recent gains for
Soviet Jews — a potential
that Soviet Jewry groups
want very badly to defuse
through continuing official
and public interest in the
precarious situation of the
Jews of the Soviet Union.
"People are thinking more
about possible scenarios than
about specific acts of anti-
Semitism," said one top
Soviet Jewry activist. "But
when you look at what's hap-
pening over there, some of the
scenarios do seem worth wor-
rying about?'
So Jews continue to benefit
from the revolution sweeping
Soviet society — but continue
to have good, historically
sound reasons for anxiety. 0



11•1 ■ 111Nalit

I NEWS 1

The Intifada%
'Extras'

Bethlehem, West Bank,
(JTA) — There are extraor-
diary sights in Manger
Square these days.
Colorfully dressed tourists,
mainly from Europe, descend
from their tour buses only to
be surrounded by self-
appointed guides, who offer —
in broken English — tours of
the nearby Church of the
Nativity and other historic
sights.
Shopkeepers rub their
hands, smiling from ear to
ear. "Welcome, welcome," they
call from their _doorways,
displaying all manner of
wares.
But only a few dozen yards
away, Israeli soldiers and
Palestinian youths race and
dodge up and down the steps
of the marketplace, through
the narrow alleys and over
the rooftops, absorbed in their
duel of rocks and bottles
against rubber bullets.
The 20-month-old Palesti-
nian intifada continues
relentlessly. In places like
Bethlehem, however, tourism
is down, but not out.
In fact, the tourists seem to
be interested spectators and
sometime players in the dai-
ly drama.

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