I LETTERS I •••,., •••Z•A ••• ••• •• • •• ••• • • _ •••• • • ow_ ■ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• -••-• ••• •• • • •• • •• • • e • • • • • • • • • • . • • e• • • • • • • •• • • • • . • ... • • .O. • . .*. .• .. •• . A V TO . ••• • • • ••• •••• •••• ow •• • • •••• •••• •••• •••• •••- •••• •••• •••• •••• •• • • • 41 0 0 •• • • SHOW ••• • SPECIALS NEW '90 CAVALIER VL 2 DR. CPE NEW '89 SUBURBAN 3/4 TON 454 CUBIC INCH EFI V-8 Irons., EFI WAS GM REBATE NOW $ ONLY 17,800* Heavy duty (bossy, 8600 GM 350 EFI auto., auxiliary lighting, sliding rear window and more! Stk. #3401 $19,500 $15970. , NEW '90 S 10 BLAZER 4X4 - 4.3 EFI V-6 eng., air, 5-spd. man. O.D. trans., alum. wheels, Tahoe, deep t - gloss, tilt, inter wipers, stereo, reclining buckets and more. Stk. No. 3566 WAS GM REBATE ONLY $1 7,088 $1250 $1 3,650* Cloth buckets elec. r. window def., 2.2 liter . EFI IA eng., auto trans., P195/70 R14 ALS S/B radial B/W, air cond., elec. speed control, w/resume, tilt steering, Intermittent wipers, floor mats, map lamps with consolette, and more. Stk. #3203. WAS KICKOFF '90 REBATE FIRST TIME BUYER 5.7 liter EFI VA 3 speed auto., heavy duty radiator 8 cooler, rear step bumper, spare tire 8 more! WAS GM REBATE $ $15424 5750 1 2,500 - * $12,667 $800 $600 $9950* LY VIW P145/80 R-12 ALS S/B radial tires, front and rear mats, sport mirrors, 1 OL TBI L3 engine, 5 speed manual trans. Order No. 225L6V "58 Miles to the Gallon" #1 Mileage Vehicle For 2 Years Standing FIRST TIME BUYER $600 rgt?ity $5395 NEW '90 GEO STORM 2 + 2 SPORT CPE. Front and rear mats, auto trans., 1.6L SOHO L4 MPFI engine, P185/60 R-14 Steel belt tires and more. Order #372E0C. WAS UNBEATABLE DISCOUNT FIRST TIME BUYER NOW ONLY 27 At Similar Savings NEW '90 CORSICA LT 4 DR. SEDAN Cloth bucket seats, rr. wind. defog, air, 2.2L EFI L4 eng., auto trans., P185/75R S/B radial tires, t- glass, inter. wipers, floor mats, map lamps w/roof console and more. Stk. #3314. WAS KICKOFF '90 REBATE FIRST TIME BUYER O NONW LY $11 ,632 $800 $600 $9025 * '. 4 OR SEDAN NEW 90 PRIZM n t and rear mats, 1.61 MEI P1 75/70R-13 ALS S/ B radial, L4 engine, 5-spd. man. trans., cloth buckets, p.s., AM/FM stereo w/seek and scan, digital clock, full wheel covers, sport mirrors. Stk. #3800 $11,069 $1400** $600 * $8295 WAS WILL TO WIN REBATE FIRST TIME BUYER NOW ONLY 26 At Similar Savings 44 At Similar Savings NEW '90 LUMINA 4 DR. SEDAN NEW '90 GEO TRACKER - Cloth seats, elec. rr. wind. defog , 2.5L EFI L4 eng., auto trans., P195/75R 14 ALS S/B radial tires, me- talk paint and more. Stk. #3051. WAS KICKOFF '90 REBATE NOW ..„ $11,280 $1130 $600 $9550* 4.5 At Similar Savings 14 At Similar -Savings NEW '90 HEAVY DUTY FULL SIZE 3/4 TON PICKUP 02V LY 19 At Similar Savin•s NEW '90 BERETTA 2 DR CPE. NEW '90 4x4 FULL SIZE PLOW TRUCK OW ONLY $8494 WAS $600 FIRST TIME BUYER * NOW ONLY $7225 $22,664 51,000 WAS NEW '90 GEO METRO XFI 2•DR. H.B. Cloth bucket seats, 2.2 L EFI L4 engine, P185/80 R13 tires, 5 speed Irons., metallic paint and more! Stk. #3627 eng., auto. Panel door, deep tinted glass, 3 seals, 5.7 40 gallon tank, Silverado, power windows, and locks, tilt, cruise, inter. wipers, locking differential, front 8 rear air and much more!. Stk. #1192. $12,483 $1050 $ 10,799 22 At Similar Savings * 1.61 EFI, 5-spd. man. trans. w/O.D., P205/75R15 on-off road tires, AM/FM stereo w/seek and scan, cassette, air, digital clock, cloth interior and more. Stk. #3834X WAS FIRST TIME BUYER NOW ONLY $ 1 1 $18083 5600 * ,680 'Just add tax, title, dest. All rebates and dealer incentives included where applicable. Dealer participation may affect consumer cost. Ad expires Jan. 11, 1989. First Time Buyer deducted from price where applicable to qualified buyers. "Chev. Will To Wil Rebate $800 plus $600 import owner rebate with proof of ownership. Ge Dealer Look. Shop. Get Your Bess Deal Rot Don't Buy Until You See The Unl, oatat!le Dealer' 28111 TELEGRAPH AT 12 MILE & 1-696 SOUTHFIELD 10 FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1990 Letters Continued from Page 8 CHEVROLET'S HIGHEST AWARD FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 355-100@ studies have been established to try and answer. I think The Jewish News can and is providing a partial solution to the question by publicizing and popularizing the many resources our com- munity has to offer in the area of Jewish education. Your constant, favorable focus on our day schools, afternoon schools and outreach net- works will undoubtedly lead to greater enrollments, broader financial support and heightened programming to meet the increased demand. But, more importantly, your paper can create a radical change in our community's collective priorities and perceptions. Hopefully, with thorough and constructive attention such as The Jewish News is providing, Jewish education will move to the forefront of our communal agenda. . Rabbi E.B. Freedman Administrative director, Yeshiva Beth Yehudah Of Bugs And 'Kosher' Lettuce I must comment on the Nov. 17 "Purely Commentary" editorial by Editor Emeritus Philip Slomovitz on the sub- ject of "kosher lettuce." A few points need clarification and/or outright correction. First of all, the issue is not whether or not the lettuce is kosher; it always was and always will be. The problem is that the bugs, which may be found on lettuce and other vegetables, are not and never were kosher. It also must be noted that there is no halachic prohibi- tion, as was cited in the report from the Jerusalem Post, with microscopic bugs. The Almighty does not give us laws that are impossible to keep. The problem is with bugs that can be seen with the naked eye, but only if one knows how to check for them. They are rather common, too. Because of the increasing resistance to pesticides, it is now usual to find a few aphids on about every fifth head of lettuce. If you look closely, you can often find little thrips crawling around on the top of an onion when the outer dry peel is removed. The prohibition against eating these insects is inclued in the mandate against shrat- zim (creepy crawlies), along with all the other kosher laws in the 11th chapter of Leviticus. This prohibition against shratzim (which in- cludes crabs, shrimp, lobsters) is mentioned five times in the Torah, whereas the injunction against pork is mentioned on- ly once. This is for emphasis and to teach us more about the laws. It does not, as was stated in the article, make "eating one tiny bug . . . as bad as eating five pigs." I was taken aback by the fact that Mr. Slomovitz chose to draw a comparison bet- ween this law and the customs of shloggin kapores and beating hoshana bran- ches. The injunction against insect consumption is an issur d'Orysah (a Torah pro- hibition), whereas the prac- tices of shloggin kapores and hoshanas are merely minhagim (customs). This is not to imply that our customs are not important; however, the seriousness of violating a halacha d'Orysah in no way compares to non-observance of a minhag. Susan Tawil Oak Park Let Us Know Letters must be concise, typewritten and double- spaced. Correspondence must include the signa- ture, home address and daytime phone number of the writer. NEWS 1"'w""Imm Intifada Price Tag $1 Billion Jerusalem (JPFS) — The second year of the intifada cost the Israeli economy between $200 million and $400 million, a survey prepared by Bank Hapoalim's economic department showed. The bank's economists said the cost for the first year totalled about '$600 million, which means an ac- cumulated cost of between $800 million and $1 billion for the two years. The bank's survey attributed part of the drop in cost to the fact the country had begun to adjust to the intifada as a perma- nent fixture for the economy. According to Hapoalim, during 1989 companies con- tinued to look for alternative markets to those in the ter- ritories, where Israeli sales have been hurt by the the espcially weak economy as well as by boycotts against Israeli products. At the same time, corn- panies continued substituting workers from Israel and abroad for Arab workers, while introducing labor-saving technologies.