• OPINION THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER BLOCK BUSTER BLOWOUT CLEARANCE '91 YEAR ' - ' Peter Jennings Continued from Page 7 OVER 250 CARS & TRUCKS TO CHOOSE! tAN° O-t NEW '91 CAPRICE CLASSIC SED. 5.0L V8 eng., cloth 55/45 split bench seat, rear defogger, auto O.D. trans., full size spare, trailering pkg., Delco Bose stereo, pwr. driver and pass, seats, cruise, tilt, elec. mirrors, pwr. wind. and locks and much more. Loaded! Stk. #7249 BLOWOUT PRICE 7,650* LEASE FOR ONLY '299 per mo." NEW '91 CORSICA LT SEDAN Rear defog., auto trans., 3.1L V6 eng., air cond., cruise, tilt, inter. wipers and more. Stk. #7843 $12,862 WAS BLOWOUT PRICE X10,864* 1st 11ME BUYER DEDUCT AM ADDMONA1 NEW '91 CAMARO RS COUPE "T-Tops" 3.1L V6 eng., rr. defog., cloth seats, elec. rr. wind. defog., air cond., auto trans., AM/FM stereo-cass. , body sic!._ mldgs., mats and more. Stk. #87 - WAS 3.1L V6 eng., auto trans., pwr. door/tailgate lock system, deep tinted glass, rr. defog., cloth interior, a ir cond., tilt, auxiliary lighting pkg. and more. Stk. #8665 lst TUBE BUYER DEDUCT AN ADDMOIUL $16,610 WAS BLOWOUT PRICE $13 9 736* 3 TO CHOOSE FROM AT SIMILAR SAMOS, 'Plus tax. title, plates & dest. rebates assigned to dealer. 1st Time Buyer subject to GMAC approval. — Lease payment based on 48 month closed-end lease on approved credit. Customer responsible for 1st month payment, 5325 security deposit, license plates. To get total of lease multiply by 48. Customer has option to purchase at lease end at a price to be determined at lease inception. Mileage • not exceed 60,000 miles, 10' per mile charge for excess miles. Lessee responsible for excessive wear and tear. Subject to 4% use tax. Picture may not represent actual vehicle advertised. Geo E D A E *RN R . $12,795* NEW '91 LUMINA APV E U N B E A T A B L $14,820 BLOWOUT PRICE Dealer / MEDIUM DUTY TRUCK CENTER nr - i n 28111 TELEGRAPH AT 12 MILE & 1-696 solITHHELD 355-1000 OPEN • MON. & THURS. TIL 9 PM -. THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER THE UNBEATABLE DEALER 10 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1991 EA • tion is a program by itself. And you should know better, with the influence you have, to give the settlement issue such a small amount of time. Yes, ABC has done a great deal of reporting and special assignments in this area. But something this impor- tant in light of the presi- dent's decision to veto loan guarantees for settlements makes it even more imperative that you not fit such an issue into mere soundbytes. You cannot reduce this issue. But you did, and you also influenced those Americans who don't know why, for Israelis, 120 days of waiting is a big deal. But by watching what we did last Thursday night, we'd never know the whys, the historical placements of those whys, the internal feelings. All American viewers got out of what you did on Thursday is that a group of hostile Jews are try- ing to boot out those poor, victimized Palestinians. No, that's not what's happening. You know it. The Palestin- ians know it, and certainly the Israelis know it. If Israel is to be judged by a different standard than the rest of the world, then let's 'fess up to it. If that's not the case, then Peter, why not send your camera crews and producers into Syria? Let's talk to the Syrians and find out why through the years thousands of their people, not to mention Jews, disap- pear. But now the leader of Syria is our new "friend." Israel's Prime Minister Shamir, meanwhile, is a public relations negative. But, you are still allowed to go around Mr. Shamir's country freely with your camera crews. Go ask Hafez al-Assad if you can roam his country with a camera. Gee, I didn't see ABC do a special on what just happen- ed between Ethiopia and Israel. An airlift brings home 15,000 Ethiopian Jews. Too positive. We ex- pect that kind of good behav- ior out of the Jewish state. But based on what we see on ABC, Zionism is racism. Mr. Jennings, I'm sorry., I don't believe you anymore. I don't have confidence that you are not anti-Israel. I'm not going to invite you into my home again. In my home, there's a great deal of laughter and wonderful moments we get from our children. Every once in a while, like any other family, milk gets spill- ed; sometimes children cry; sometimes they sit in "time out." If your camera crew came to my house, ABC would put together a package called "Tears and Timeout: A Line In The Sandbox." It would be about how my wife and I strictly discipline our chil- dren to the point of making them sit in solitary confine- ment for two-minute inter- vals. You'd interview psy- All viewers got is a group of hostile Jews trying to boot out poor, victimized Palestinians. chologists on the subject of child discipline. You'd show lip- biting clips of a child cry- ing by herself in the corner. You'd interview me in an agitated state after my child had acted up and needed "time out." But you would leave out, because of "time con- straints," the moments that don't fit into the context you want. You'd leave out the family history. You'd fail to find out just who the people in the family really are and why they behave the way they do. But again, sometimes the interests of true journalism go out the window. Espe- cially when news becomes show biz. ❑ On June 27, 1967, following the liberation of East Jerusalem by the Israel Defense Forces, the •Knesset guaranteed free access to the Holy Places to all religions. On Nov. 29, 1968, this right was specifically extended to all citizens of those Arab states which still declared themselves at war with Israel and refused to recog- nize it as a sovereign state.