I NEWS The Advantages of SmartLease Cadillac Style . • • 11141, omit, Seville 00 so DOWN + Tax 1992 Dealer Demo Sale Sedan DeVille All cars with under 7,000 miles! GMAC LUXURY SMARTLEASE 30 Months. First pymt. plus $500 ref. sec. dep. and plate or transfer due cn deRv- ery. 4% sales tax acidRicnaL 30,000 mBe limkation. 150 per mile excess charge over Imitation. Lessee has option to purchase et lease end. To get total pyrnts. mall* pymt 30 months, - R Roger Rinke Cadillac 4.9 OGER RINKE CDILLAC 01 # ♦ Intimate i ♦ -7 Nk, °tors 1.917 eI It MASTER DEALER - 696 AT VAN DYKE 7 5 8 — 1 8 0 0 I . "ER.sir'8€41° = Personal EJ Professional L_ ♦ Hair Care, Nail Care and Makeup Junior Stylist Blow-Dries, Haircuts, Colors, Perms — All $15 Lengths, texture and design of hair and products used may vary pricing. Call for appointment & information Saturday, Sunday, Monday Men, Women & Children Welcome 6219 Orchard Lake Road, In Sugartree Open Sundays 10:00-2:00 West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (313) 539 1234 - 36 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1992 Muslim Fighting Boosts Aliyah Jerusalem (JTA) — In- creased ethnic tension in the Muslim republics of the former Soviet Union could lead to a new surge in aliyah, according to Jewish Agency Chairman Simcha Dinitz. About 1,500 immigrants from the region are expected to arrive in Israel during the month of September, and Mr. Dinitz indicated that the upward trend is likely to continue, given the shaky political and economic climate in the republics. One indication of the tense situation is the fact that 95 percent of the 180,000 Jews in these areas hold approved family reunification re- quests — the first step in the aliyah process. During the past two and a half years, 62,300 people have im- migrated from the Muslim republics. Mr. Dinitz noted that Ta- jikistan, home to 12,000 Jews, is on the verge of civil war, while in Kyrgystan, where 8,000 Jews live, a law was recently enacted that prohibits anyone not fluent in the Kyrgiz language from holding a public or civil ser- vice post. The president of Ta- jikistan, Rakhman Nabiyev, an old Communist leader, was forced to resign follow- ing a week of violent pro- tests. The leader of the oppo- sition Democratic Party, Dost Mohammed Dost, said the country could expect more bloodshed in the internecine fighting. The country's woes are further compounded by op- position from the nascent and increasingly powerful Islamic Renewal Party. In Azerbaijan, Jews have suffered through the pro- tracted war with the Arme- nians, Mr. Dinitz said. Direct flights have eased the aliyah process, he said, and noted that the agency is pursuing ways to add more routes using local airlines. The agency just signed an agreement with Uzbekistan Airways, and the inaugural flight, from Tashkent to Tel Aviv, was to arrive early Wednesday morning with 35 new immigrants, Mr. Dinitz said. While the situation seems to be deteriorating in the Muslim republics, there are indications that at least some of the republics seek improved relations with Israel. In the first-ever state visit to Israel by the head of a Muslim republic, Kazakhstan's prime min- ister, Sergei Tereschenko, pressed for cooperation bet- ween the two countries. During his brief visit this week, Mr. Tereschenko said that Kazakhstan could benefit from Israeli know- how in the agricultural and technological sectors, but noted that his country had many things to teach Israel about desalination tech--- niques. Mr. Tereschenko vowed that his country would not sell any of the nuclear hard- ware it inherited when the Soviet Union collapsed. "Nuclear weapons will not . be sold, not to Iran or any other country. Kazakhstan is peace-loving. Israel has nothing to worry about," the prime minister said. Jews Urge No Plane Sale New York (JTA) — The organized American Jewish community is strongly urg - ing President Bush not to allow Saudi Arabia to buy as many as 72 sophisticated F-15 fighter aircraft. But the community has _ not decided what course of action to take if the presi- dent decides to go ahead with the sale, valued at $5 billion. The president is legally required to give Congress 30 days' notice of an arms sale and the chance to vote it down. Sources say formal notification of the sale could come within the next week. In a statement the Con- • ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations warned that such a sale "would erode Israel's qualitative edge, upset the military balance in the region and necessarily intensify the Middle East arms race." The prospective sale was also opposed by the National Jewish Community Rela- tions Advisory Council. Its chair, Maynard Wishner of Chicago, urged Bush in a letter to delay its submission to Congress and to "work in- stead to implement the guidelines that you yourself proposed requiring restraint in the production and supply of arms to the Middle East." Both groups also asked Democratic presidential nominee Bill Clinton to op- pose such a sale. -