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110

Pack Your Bags,
Camp Starts Sunday

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26
1991 DEMO'S
MUST GO!
Lumina's, Tracker's
Cavalier's

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SPECIAL
FACTORY 1991
CHEVROLETS
Mileage cars at
unbeatable prices

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AS LOW AS

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$9781

$6999

Stk. *7797. With bucket seats, ot. ob., rear del., 5 spd., stainless
steel exhaust.
$414
With Panlan Discount
$510
GMAC First Time Buyer
$300
GM Rebate to Dealer
$417
GM Employe 2 Discoed

.A,$11,535

„„A3 ,15,158

Asu

Stk. MSS. LOADED. Al; Rw. pl., wise, cassette and much.

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NEW 1991

$11,100

NEW 1991
SUBURBAN

Stk. 07184. 57 stet V8, auto transmission, panel door. 2 tone
paint, a/c front S rent mar heat. N.D. trailering package. SiKarado
tlim, center S rear seat, cnise, tilt. ow.. pi, deep tint. rear defog-
get recinino buckets, alum. Owls.
WAS $25,052

NOW $ 20,525

AsuiwAsS6197

Sdc /4540. Mb 1.0 L &O.N.O. E.F.I. engine, rear defrost 5 dn.,
5 speed. boil I rear mats, stains Wel ratiati.
' MN
JOE MAN DISCOUIET
.S5111
GIUL FIRSENIE ROYER
.53511
ON OPTION 12 FOR EMPLOYEE

21.

NEW 1991 FULL SIZE
CONVERSIONS & ASTROS

Stk. #8315. Ad sins and equipment.

17,075

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$6687

Stk. OM. Aula, rear whim detrost54 stainiess steel ediaust,
floor mats.
tsa
GAM HOST ME INNER
.53U
RN OPOON #2 FOR EMPLOYEE

COME SEE OUR
SPECIALTY
TRUCKS

Dump, stake, light & medium
duty trucks, trackers with
ground effects, also 454's &
sports.

7-I
/ink VP-1/4

1991 DEMO FULL SIZE PICK-UP

Stk. *7743. RS., p.b., VS. 5 speed manual transmission. am/tm
cass., 2 tone paint villenered Tres, Stherado Vim, tilt S cruise, cloth
interior. security system. bedew rear step bumper
WAS $14,972

Now $ 12,100

MEDIUM DUTY
TRUCK CENTER

28111 TELEGRAPH
AT 12 MILE & 1-696
SOUTHFIELD

355- 1000

OPEN • MON. & THURS. TIL 9 PM

THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER

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FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1991

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NEW 1991 GEO METRO 2 DOOR

'Customer must qualify for first time program and/or GM Employee
option #2. Tax, Title & Destination ARE INCLUDED. All cars are subject
to prior sale.

Geo

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0 METRO WAGON

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CAB PICK-UP

Stk. *8502. P.S.. p.b., a/c, V6, 5 speed trans.. Tahoe trim. am/fm
cars., rear jump seat, bucket seats to lamps
WAS $12,709

;11101%
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Stk. 18337. V6, auto.. ak 60/40 seat, roar defrost., crulsetift, mate
stainless steel exhaust & more.
.51500
Mk Poeta Discent
.$1250
GM Neale lb Dealer
$741
Erapielle 2 ascent
OM Erspisyse aml
1708
Pnloisil I Obeemd.

GM

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NEW 1991 5-10 EXTENDED

NEW 1991 LUMINA 4 DR.

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AS LOW AS
SOL *8543. With bucket seats, stereo, auto., arc. cruise, pulse wip-
ers, stainless steel echaust
Wilk Pulse Menet $1100
$500
First Time law
GMAC
GM Employee 2 Discount
500
GM Cash Back Rebate
$400
Preferred Equip wile, pkg.

NEW 1991 Z-28 CAMARO

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NEW 1991 BERETTA 2 DR.

NEW 1991 CAVALIER 2 DR.

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KIMBERLY LIFTON

Staff writer

D

avid Jaffe, a Univer-
sity of Wisconsin stu-
dent from Farm-
ington Hills, doesn't re-
member many birthdays
away from camp.
In fact, he will celebrate
his 21st birthday on July 6
at his favorite place: Camp
Sea-Gull in Charlevoix —
his home away from home
since he was 7.
For years a camper, Mr.
Jaffe becomes head
counselor on Sunday, the
week Sea-Gull, Fresh Air
Society's Tamarack,
Tanuga, Walden and other
Michigan camps begin their
1991 seasons.
This summer, about 2,500
campers will pack their duf-
fle bags — complete with
shorts, swimming suits,
sunglasses, sunscreen, can-
dy and insect repellent —
and head north to one of the
four Michigan overnight
campS where many Jewish
families send their children.
"I'd like to spend my whole
life going to camp," says Mr.
Jaffe, a history major who is
considering law school after
graduation. "But I guess
that is not possible.
"The friends you make at
camp make it all wor-
thwhile," Mr. Jaffe says. "I
think I am getting paid for
playing and lying on the
beach."
Through Fresh Air Socie-
ty, some campers will
journey to the Upper Penin-
sula to attend Camp Ken-
nedy. Others through Fresh
Air will travel out West by
bus.
At the Jewish Community
Center on Sunday, hundreds
of youngsters will board
buses en route to
Tamarack's Camp Maas in
Ortonville.
Tamarack officials suggest
parents bring extra tissue on
Thursday to bid farewell to
their youngest children —
second through fifth grade
campers — who will travel to
Brighton (for some, their
first overnight camp experi-
ence).
"The kids don't cry, but
their parents do," says Mary
Blitz, who works in the
Fresh Air Society office.
"The youngsters are brave.
They know if they cry, they
don't get to go."
Some camps are offering
new programs this summer.
Tamarack this past week

hosted an Elder Hostel,
where seniors from all over
met for a week of camping
experience. Tamarack also
for the first time will provide
a water-skiing workshop.
In addition, says Sam
Fisher, Fresh Air Society's
executive director, "The Jew-
ish component of camp will
be fabulous." Tamarack
provides campers with
kosher food and weekly
Shabbat activities.
At Camp Walden in
Cheboygan, camp owners
Larry and Ina Stevens are
instituting a mountain bik-
ing program. Other camps
provide the usual camping
experiences of making new
friends, hiking, singing at
the campfire under the stars,
sports competitions and arts
and crafts.
Sid Friedman, 31, who
owns Camp Tanuga in
Kalkaska with his brother,
Howard, has been going to
camp for 31 years. The
former owner, his father, the
late Bernard Friedman,
made certain his children
always were on the premises
during the summers.
"The best part of camp is
the kids," Mr. Friedman
says. "I like interacting with
the campers and hanging
out with them all day — and
I like the kids hanging all
over ma"
Adds Ina Stevens, of Camp
Walden,"I like the kids. You
have to like kids, camping
and the outdoors to do
this." ❑

Federation Aids
Resettlement
The Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion has sent a cash advance
of $1.1 million to the United
Jewish Appeal to assist with
the immediate costs of the
resettlement of the more than
14,000 Ethiopian Jews
brought to Israel in 30 hours
last month.
Immediate needs include
housing, language and job
training, medical care, educa-
tion and clothing.
Like their predecessors of
Operation Moses, the new
Ethiopian immigrants face
the difficult problem of mak-
ing the transition from a sim-
ple agrarian society to 20th
century, industrial Israel.
Under the current absorption
plan, every Ethiopian im-
migrant will be settled in per-
manent housing no later than
May 1992.

