OPINION THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE I BEAT THE GAS CRUNCH JOE PAPUAN HAS CARS W/THE HIGHEST MILES PER GALLON AVERAGE I 3 Years Standing I up to 58 Miles to the Gallon D THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER E A L NEW '9C NEW '90 STARCRAFT CONVER. VAN NEW '91 GEO METRO 2 DR. H.B. P145/80R12 ALS S-B radial tires, sport mirrors, 1.0L TBI L3 engine, 5 speed manual transmission, stereo, defogger. Stk. #7243. FULL SIZE THIS WEEK ONLY V-8, auto., air, pm., p.I., tilt, cruise, am/fm stereo/cass., 33 gal. tank, heavy-duty suspension. Stk. #884. WAS 1st Time Buyer BUY NOW $5995 $5395* $22,949* $16,515* NEW '90 3 /4 TON SUBURBAN NEW '90 GEO STORM 2+ 2 SPORT COUPE 1.6L SOHO L4 MPFI engine. P185/60R steel belt tires and more. Stk. #5268X. $10,705 WAS LEADING EDGE $500 THIS WEEK ONLY Center & rear seats, two tone paint, air, cruise, fill, stereo, bucket seals, deep tinted glass, rear heater, heavy-duty coding, heavy-duly suspen- sion, 350 cubic inch V-8. Stk. #3239. WAS 1st Time Buyer BUY NOW $23,964* $17.727 $8995* $8395* NEW '90 GEO PRIZM 4 DR. SEDAN. P175/70R13 ALSO radials, frflr. mats, 1,61_ MFI Lr eng., 5-spd. man. trans., cloth buckets, p.s., amlfm stereo w/seek & scan, digital clock, full whl. covers, sport mirrors. Stk. #4959. WAS $11,919 THIS WEEK ONLY NEW '91 S-10 PICK-UP 2.8 V-6, 5 speed man. trans. w/o.d., two-tone paint, Tahoe trim, p.s., p.b., am/fm stereo/cass. w/clock, sliding back window, chrome step bumper. Stk. #7331X. $8695* $8025* $9927 $7743* NEW '90 CORSICA LT NEW '91 GEO TRACKER CONVERTIBLE 1st Time Buyer WAS BUY NOW 6 At Similar Savings 4 DR. SEDAN. Cloth buckets, r. wind. def., air, 2.2L EFI L4 eng., auto., P185175R SIB radial tires, t-glass, inter. wipers, floor mats, map lamps wlroof con- sole, power locks and more. Stk. #4750. WAS $12,683 THIS WEEK ONLY $9495' $8825* 1st Time Buyer Rear folding seat, 1.6L, EFI 5 spd, man. trans., cloth interior. Stk. #7764. WAS $9724* $8619* BUY NOW 5 at similar savings '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 October 31, 1990 Dealer CHE VROLET MEDIUM DUTY TRUCK CENTER AT 12 MILE & I 696 SOUTHFIELD n 355- 1000 THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER 10 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1990 28 1 I TELEGRAPH THE UNBEATABLE DEALER Hard-Line Approach Continued from Page 7 If black leaders had settled for letters to the editor, debates on the morality of segregation or Op-Ed articles, we would still have separate bathrooms for blacks and, whites. We would still have segregated schools. Blacks not only won the rights which constitution- ally they deserved and which by any measure of human decency was their right, but they created a psychology that racism was not only wrong but would be attacked and challenged whenever possible. They have learned what it takes and they are not reluc- tant to act accordingly. But Jews as a people always have failed to participate in a policy of what might be call- ed confrontation. We like to intellectualize, but hatred and bigotry are immune from intellectual debate. We have practiced ap- peasement, but bigots cannot be appeased. We try hard not to offend; we try desperately to reason with the unreasonable. We don't want to make trouble. We worry about what they'll think of us. Jews throughout our history have never launched a movement of confrontation As a result, the anti-Semites have enjoyed immunity from being challenged. They recognize that Jews will not embarrass them publicly and, thus, they continue to thrive. We need to change all that. We need to confront, attack, embarrass. We need to make the haters pay. It is time to take the kind of steps necessary which will force the anti-Semites to look their own bigotry in the eye. It is time to force those leaders, who stand idly by when their constituents in- cite hatred, to act or risk em- barrassment or pay a political and economic price. Consider the issue of the Carmelite Convent at Auschwitz. What an insult to human dignity and desecra- tion of those who suffered and died in that hell that we even had to argue that the convent be moved. It was unseemly that we had to debate the issue with, of all institutions, the church. The intellectual arguments and appeals failed. What succeeded? A small band of Jewish ac- tivists climbed the barriers, drawing the world's attention to this indignity and succeed-. ed in bringing to the table the insensitivity of those who op- posed moving the convent. In the end, dignity prevail- ed. I am not suggesting that these activists were totally responsible for the ultimate decision. But they succeeded, as many of us remember, in bringing out into the open some of the unsettling private thoughts of church officials. When Louis Farrakhan spoke at Michigan State University, subsidized in part by a state university, where where the voices of protest? Yes, there were some but hardly a loud and forceful Jewish voice, one which could have made a difference. We should have protested with such force as to assure that never again will an in- stitution of a higher learning permit itself to be used in such a manner. On two occasions that I can recall in recent times have we spoken out and spoken out with uncom- promising commitment. Once, more than 200,000 Jews converged on the na- tion's Capitol to plead for Soviet Jewry. The other time, We must speak with uncompromising commitment. President Reagan did not understand the implications of his own actions and we as a people protested his visit to Bitburg. In our protests, we gave our people and the world a much needed shot of moral adrenalin, and it was an in- dication of what we can ac- complish when we unite and speak — loudly — in one voice. Following the discovery in 1945 of man's most ghastly crime, we created the philosophy of Zachor — remember. I share the philosophy of zachor; I believe we must remember. But let us not be misled by a false air of con- fidence that remembering is all that is needed. The world remembers but repeats its crimes nevertheless. Yes, we must remember, but we must do more. We must confront; we must attack; we must speak out; we must challenge; we must provoke. We must stand up for ourselves if for no other reason than self-respect. Others will not take up our cause. We have to do it ourselves. Let us merge the concept of Never Again with No More. No more, no more. Let us say it loud and clear and decide as a people that we will do what is necessary to assure the reality of "no more." ❑