southlidd

411.•

CHRYSLER

Jeep

Plymouth

Eagle

28100 Telegraph Rd..Telegraph at 111/2 Mile

Jewish Groups React
To Repatriation

At Tel-Twelve Mall, South End

Southfield • 354.2950

We Accept

gr.

ffE3A

Personal Checks & Cash

SERVICE OPEN
7 AM to MIDNIGHT

WHEEL
BALANCE AND
TIRE ROTATION

OIL AND FILTER
CHANGE

$ 1 2 00
Car

$14 00
Truck
$1692

MONDAY FRIDAY

We Perform Warranty and
Service Work on all Dodge Cars,
Dodge Trucks, Chrysler Cars,
Plymouth Cars, Plymouth Trucks,
Jeep Jeep Trucks and Eagle Vehicles.

• Balance and rotate
four wheels

(Special wheels
slightly higher)

mopor
CHRYSLER MOTORS PARTS

(Vehicles requiring special/ extra oil
and diesel filters slightly higher)

TOWING AVAILABLE

Offer Good Only
After 6 pm Mon-Fri

Exp. Feb. 29, 1992. Must be Presented

Price Includes:
• New oil (up to 5 qts. cars/
6 qts. trucks)
• New Mopar oil filter
• Check fluid levels
• Visually inspect battery

at Time of Write-up. Call for an appointment.
Chrysler Products Only

Offer Good Only
After 6 pm Mon-Fri

*Yes We Do Take Appointments*

Exp. Feb. 29, 1992, Must be Presented-

at Time of Write-up. Call for an appointment.
Chrysler Products Only

Introducing

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Chief Classic Frame and Unibody System
Black Hawk/Kansas Jack Tie Down System
Finest Urethane Refinishing
Lifetime Guarantee on craftsmanship

OPEN From 7AM - 12 midnight

Monday-Friday

This Allows
Us To Repair
Your Car
TWICE

— Onsight rental cars —

Complete
Parts
Inventory

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On telegraph of the Iel•12 Mall, Southfield

34

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1992

3543300

New York (JTA) — Mind-
ful of the way some Jews
fleeing Nazi Europe were
denied haven as they ap-
proached U.S. shores, Jew-
ish groups have strongly
protested the Bush ad-
ministration's forced
repatriation of Haitian boat
people seeking asylum in the
United States.
More than 1,000 of some
9,000 Haitian refugees given
temporary shelter at the
U.S. naval base in Guan-
tanamo Bay, Cuba, have
been forcibly returned to
their politically volatile
island nation since Jan. 31,
when the U.S. Supreme
Court upheld the Bush ad-
ministration's decision to
deny- them asylum.
The American Jewish
Committee, Anti-
Defamation League, Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society and
National Council of Jewish
Women are all calling for a
cessation of the forced
returns. Several groups are
also backing legislation in-
troduced in Congress that
would provide temporary
protected status for the Hai-
tians.
The Bush administration
maintains that the Haitians
are fleeing mainly for econ-
omic reasons, rather than
because of political persecu-
tion, and are, therefore, not
eligible for U.S. refugee sta-
tus.
But that has been disputed
by Jewish groups.
The Anti-Defamation
League said in a terse
statement last week that the
Haitians' "flight from their
native country is impelled
by justifiable fear for their
physical safety." It urged
the government to offer the
refugees temporary protec-
tion.
Joan Bronk, president of
the National Council of Jew-
ish Women, observed in a
letter to President Bush last
week that the "continuing
violence and terror" in Haiti
"has led the U.S. to recall its
ambassador — a clear con-
firmation of the extremely
dangerous conditions" there.
"Certainly the lives and
safety of the repatriated
Haitians cannot be guar-
anteed," she wrote.
"The United States, with
its current diminished em-
bassy staff, cannot effec-
tively monitor the safety of
people forcibly repatriated,"
Gary Rubin, director of na-
tional affairs at the Ameri-
can Jewish Committee, said
in a statement issued Feb. 3.

"To carry out the policy of
involuntary return is a se-
vere violation of our ethical
and legal obligations," he
said. "We urge the govern-
ment to cease the current
misguided policy immedi-
ately."
Similarly, Ben Zion
Leuchter, president of HIAS,
argued, in a statement
issued Friday, that it is "an
abrogation of the United
States' longstanding com-
mitment to humanitarian
values to return Haitians
whose safety cannot be
guaranteed in a country torn
by political violence and un-
rest."
He expressed concern that,
with Congress in recess, the
proposed legislation to grant
the Haitians temporary pro-
tected status may not be
adopted in time. He urged
the administration to halt
the repatriation operation
until Congress can take ac-
tion.
The bill has been introduc-
ed in the House of Represen-
tatives by Rep. Romano
Mazzoli, D-Ky., and in the
Senate by Sen. Connie
Mack, R-Fla., and Dennis
DeConcini, D-Ariz.

Israeli Arabs
Nabbed As Spies

Jerusalem (JTA) — An
Israeli Arab and his
daughter have been arrested
in Egypt on suspicion of spy-
ing for the Jewish state,
Israel's ambassador to
Cairo, Efraim Dubek,
disclosed Wednesday night
on Israel Radio.
Mr. Dubek said he learned
about the arrest from the
newspapers and it was later
confirmed to him by the
Egyptian authorities. The
case is believed to be the
first of its kind since Israel
and Egypt signed their peace
treaty in 1979.
The suspects were iden-
tified as Fares Subhi
Masrati, 41, and his
daughter, Faikes, a lang-
uage student whose age was
not given. They were re-
ported detained in a max-
imum security prison in
Cairo, pending further in-
vestigation.

The story first appeared in
a Saudi newspaper. The
Egyptian newspaper Al
Abram, al Mussawi then
claimed that the suspects
belonged to "a spy network"
working for "a country in
the region."

K

