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I I

The Advantages of SmartLease
Cadillac Style .. .

Continued from Page 18

No. 2669

Sedan DeVille

so DOWN

Power
Astro
Roof I

36
Mos.

$468 00

+ Tax

No. 2337

only

Eldorado

$I I

PER MONTH

Roger Rinke
Cadillac will
install a Power
Astro Roof for
only $2.00 per
month when you
GMAC
SmartLease a
new Cadillac
I during the month
of

I
I

$ 0

I

DOWN

00
+ Tax

mt.

I

I

No. 2551

Seville

I

IJ UNEi

Guidebook

so DOWN

30
Mos.

`GMAC LUXURY SMAR-11F_ASE 30 a 36 Mcnths. First pyrnL plus
$500 ref. sec. dep. and plate or transfer clue on delivery. 4% sales
tax additional. Mileage limitation. 150 per mile excess over limita-
tion. Lessee has opticn to purc:hase at lease end. To get total pyrnts.
multiply by 30 or 36.

$508

00

+ Tax

Roger Rinke
Cadillac

guidebook in hand like
tourists literally do with
other popular guides. In-
stead, he hopes future
travelers will use it to plan
side trips.
"I don't know too many
people who go to Europe
strictly to see Jewish com-
munities," Mr. Frank said.
"But if you have one after-
noon in London, you should
visit the Bevis Marks Syn-
agogue. If you go there or to
the Portuguese Synagogue
in Amsterdam or certain
places in Paris, at least
you'll come away with some-
thing."
These small side trips
often lead to experiences
that provide for unforget-
table memories, he said. "I
think there's enough here
for people to start them on
their journey. It's the
journey that counts."
In his book, Mr. Frank de-
scribes the Jewish peddlers
who sell cameos in St.
Peter's Square in the Vat-
ican. The peddlers addressed
Mr. Frank in Yiddish with,
"Hello, lantsman." Mr.
Frank comments that
although the Jews of Italy

are Sephardim who do not
know Yiddish, "like all good
businesspersons, those
Italian Jews get attention by
shouting out a Yiddish word
in the Vatican."
In addition to travel in-
formation, the guidebook
provides short biographies of
famous Jews who lived irk
the countries being de-
scribed. These include Moses
Maimonides for Spain, Ben-
jamin Disraeli for England,'-
Chaim Herzog for Ireland, j
Theodore Herzl for Austria
and Rabbi Bent Melchior for
Denmark.

He also describes famous
gentiles who stood up for
Jews being persecuted.
Robespierre, for example,
was one of the first Fren-
chmen to demand Jews
receive citizenship. Writer
Emile Zola made a public
plea for the release of Capt. -2- )
Alfred Dreyfus. And
Christopher Columbus "had
a strange affinity for Jewish
and Marrano society," Mr ,
Frank writes.
A Travel Guide to Jewish
Europe is published by Peli-
can and sells for $15.95. El

New addition
0
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20

FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1992

313676.3020

)

Liberals Are Losers
In Czechoslovakia Vote

fashions
& accessories

Patio Furniture
Factory Outlet

NEWS

OUIV 10:so

greatest ".;•w

Natural

Resource

Prague (JTA) - The main
losers in Czechoslovakia's
general elections over the
weekend were the liberals in
the center of the political
arena, who presumably
received most of the Jewish
votes.
Otherwise, the results do
not bode well for national
unity two years after the so-
called "Velvet Revolution"
ended 40 years of Commu-
nist rule.
They brought into power
two strong-minded politi-
cians with agendas so diff-
erent that their chances of
agreeing on a national coali-
tion are regarded here as
very slim.
The Czech winner was Fi-
nance Minister Vaclav
Klaus, whose conservative,
free market-oriented Civic
Democratic Party amassed
just over 33 percent of the
ballots cast for the national
Parliament. Along with its
small ally, the Christian
Democrats, it will occupy 83
of the 300 seats in the
bicameral legislature in
Prague.
Mr. Klaus' party won
about 30 percent of the vote
cast for the Czechoslovak

Parliament, making it the
largest single bloc.
Slovak populist Vladimir
Meciar and his Movement
for a Democratic Slovakia
also won about a third of the
votes for the national
Parliament, giving him con-
trol of 57 seats. He got 37
percent of the Slovak
Parliament, which sits in
Bratislava.
Neither Mr. Klaus nor Mr.
Meciar can form a central
government without the
other. But they differ fun-_
damentally on the future
form of Czechoslovakia, on
the depth and speed of econ-
omic reform, on social as
well as on personal issues.
They disagree most sharp-
ly on the next chief of state.
Mr. Klaus insists on the re-
election of poet-playwright
Vaclav Havel as president.
Mr. Meciar will not accept
another term for Mr. Havel,
who has been supportive of
Israel and has spoken out
strongly against the res----
urgence of anti-Semitism.
The differences between
Mr. Klaus and Mr. Meciar
may make it impossible to
agree on how to establish
national rights.

