I OPINION ox N~ ,viol c c L, 1° qk s A E I H T (4 ) To i N' IS O() Woeful Record Continued from Page 6 REBA TES A A ANNIV E U . B. E U A A A 8 A B OVER 500 CARS & TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM E A R H. E E DRIVE THIS WEEK ONLY LEADERSHIP $9750* $9150 * 1st Time Buyer . . NEW '90 CORSICA LT 4-DR. SEDAN R 33 At Similar Savings WAS LEADERSHIP DRIVE U N $11,652 $700 THIS WEEK ONLY $9525* $8925 * 1st. Time buyer E R H / Deep tint, 3.1 EFI V-6, auto., CL trim, AM/FM cass., pwr. wind. and locks, cruise control, remote sport mirrors, front and rr. floor mats, 2 tone paint and more. Stk. #3913X. WAS FACTORY REBATE THIS WEEK ONLY P175/70R13 ALS S/B radials, frt./r. mats. 1.6L MFI Lr eng., 5-spd. man. trans.. cloth buckets, p.s.. am/fm stereo w/seek 8 scan.. digital clock. lull whl. covers, sport mirrors. Stk. #3897. WAS LEADERSHIP DRIVE THIS WEEK ONLY 511,068 8900 1st Time Buyer $9225 - $8625 * NEW '90 DEAUVILLE WINDOW VAN 5 pass.. deep tint, rear heat, 350 V-8 EFI. 4 spd auto/od, ac. ow. pt . rec. buckets. tilt, cruise. an/fm cass. w/clock, aux. lighting 8 rally wheels.. WAS FACTORY REBATE THIS WEEK ONLY $20,490 —700 $169 836* 17,385 —900 NEW '91 S-10 PICK-UP 5 spd. man. O.D. trans., 2.5L EFI eng., steel belted radial tires, rr, anti-lock brakes and more. Stk. #7024X. WAS FACTORY REBATE $8395 $1000 NEW '90 WORK TRUCK NEW '90 CHEVROLET CONVERSION VAN 4.3 V-6, 160 H.P.. 5 spd., manual old, AM/FM radio, clock, p.s., p.b., P235/75815 steel belted radial tires, H.D. chassis H D. shocks, large mirrors. cloth seat, painted rear step bumper and more. Stk. /I 3693. FACTORY REBATE A B THIS WEEK ONLY $11,854 $500 $ 91345* Z CHEVROLET / R 350 V8 EFI, auto. trans. w/overdrive, air, pwr. wind. & locks, tilt, cruise, loaded chassis, 4 captain chairs. fold down sofa, color TV, custom table and more. Stk. #4542. WAS FACTORY REBATE THIS WEEK ONLY $24,833 $189 129* $700 MEDIUM DUTY TRUCK CENTER - 28 :111 TELEGRAPH AT 12 MILE & 1-696 SOUTHFIELD THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE - UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER 10 FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1990 E R E U N B E A E D E A R 355-1000 E A THIS WEEK ONLY Just add tax, title, dest. All rebates and dealer incentives included where applicable. Dealer participation may affect consumer cost. First Time Buyer deducted from price where applicable to qualified buyers. 7.9% for up to 48 months in lieu of rebate on select models. Based on approved credit. Prices Expire May 18, 1990. Geo Dealer E B $6710* TON PICK-UP E A $149474* WAS E A . NEW 4-DR. '90 SEDAN PRIZM . NEW '90 LUMINA APV E A E A NEW TRUCKS 1 12 N 23 At Similar Savings 19 At Similar Savings E D E A $8825* 8225* 1st Time Buyer 37 At Similar Savings Cloth buckets, r. wind. del., air, 2.2L EFI L4 eng.. auto.. P185/75R S/B radial tires. (-glass, inter wipers. floor mats, map lamps w/roof console and more Stk. #4305. E N B E A $10,705 $800 WAS LEADERSHIP DRIVE THIS WEEK ONLY ... $12,667 $1400 WAS H E 1.6L SOHC L4 MPFI engine. P185/60R M steel belt fires and more. Stock # 4046. 52 At Similar Savings E T SPORT COUPE 1st Time Buyer Cloth buckets. elec. r. wind. def. 2.2L EFI L4 eng.. auto., P195/70S15 ALS S/13 rad. BAY, air, elec. speed control w/resume. tilt inter wipers. floor mats. map lamps w/consolette and more. Stk. #3203. R NEW '90 GEO STORM 2+2 $8514 $750 NEW '90 BERETTA 2-DR. COUPE $5495 - $4895 * 28 At Similar Savings! $6825 *X6475 * A B D E A L - P145/80R12 ALS S-B radial tires, front and r sport mirrors, 1.0L TBI L3 engine. 5-speed manual tranear trans. mats, Stk. # 4354. K 8 M O i N I e L s y to the gallon. Number one m illa 9 e vehicle for 2 Y years standing. 9 THIS WE: 1st Time Buyer Cloth bucket seats. 2.2t EFI L-4 engine. P185/80R13 tires, 5-speed trans.. me- laic paint and more. Stk. #4246. WAS LEADERSHIP DRIVE THIS WEEK ONLY NEW '90 GEO METRO XFI 2 DR. H.R. NEW '90 2-DR. CAVALIER VL COUPE N E A- T A B Ge NEW CARS E T H E U N E A T A E D E A E R Palestine Liberation Organ- ization reneged on its agree- ment to cease terrorist ac- tivities, the United States opted to ignore the evidence. This is nothing new. In 1967, the American reaction to the closing of the Straits of Tiran by Egypt was to conve- niently forget their written assurances to Israel to keep the route open. In 1970, when a U.S.- sponsored security agreement between Israel and Egypt was grossly violated by Egypt, the American reaction was to avoid confrontation of any kind with Egypt over their actions. More recently, America violated agreements to share intelligence information with Israel. Among information withheld was such critical material as the development of nuclear and chemical weapons by various Arab states. When Jonathan Pollard asked his bosses why Israel was not being provided with this information he was told that Jews are too sen- sitive about gas. In light of the above, it would be ludicrous to expect Israel to enter into any agree- ment which relies on American guarantees in lieu of strategic depth. ❑ LETTERS Continued from Page 7 ed, galvanize the Jewish com- munity for action on behalf of Israel, and on many other im- portant causes relating to Jewish life and survival. The Jewish News has a great responsibility not to do anything, if possible, that would split our community or give comfort to Israel's enemies and possibly harm Israel. At this moment we are trying to raise emergency funds to save Russian Jews; do not think an attack on the Israeli prime minister is help- ing that holy work. Would you like to commis- sion an article about Labor leader Shimon Peres, how at 3 a.m. when he was fired from the Cabinet he raided the treasury and gave millions to the Histadrut, or the millions he was going to give the ultra- religious parties to join him? I hope not. The actions of these politi- cians might not be to our lik- ing, but it is not our business. It is up to the Israeli elec- torate to deal with their politicians. I have always stated that defense and foreign policy are off limits to galut Jews. The Israelis will live and die by their decisions and we have no right to interfere. It is our duty to support Israel regardless of who is in power because it is the only country ready to absorb any Jew in the world who needs a home. If we had Israel during World War II, I believe my family would not have been gassed in Auschwitz and most of the European Jews would have survived. David Kahan Troy Food Drive Help Was Appreciated I would like to thank The Jewish News for sponsoring Project Chametz Food Drive with the Jewish Community Council last month. The Com- munity Food Depots — St. Vincent de Paul received 806 pounds of food from this drive. Leonard Piasta Interim director, Community Food Depots — St. Vincent de Paul Reform Jews Respect Kashrut I would like to add one word of clarification to Rabbi Richard Hertz's comments about the relationship bet- ween Reform Judaism and kashrut. ("What Lies Behind The Laws Of Kashrut?" April 20). Rabbi Hertz wrote "Reform Judaism does not believe religion is primarily concerned with kitchen Judaism or with eating habits." I have to say that Reform Judaism is concerned (if not primarily) with eating habits for the many reasons noted in the article. Kashrut is an increasingly popular choice for Reform Jews, either biblical kashrut (avoiding prohibited animals mentioned in the Torah) or the more detailed restrictions detailed in the rabbinic literature. Indeed, my ex- perience is that while most Reform Jews do not keep strictly kosher homes, they do want certain levels of kashrut to be observed in their temples. As such, I believe it is pro- per to state that while we, as a community, do not always follow the dietary laws in their entirety, we do have regard and respect for them. This is a philosophy that also applies to the many other mitzvot that possess the potential to elevate our souls and spirits in our daily lives. Rabbi Daniel Pernick Beth Am Temple Pearl River, N.Y.