LEMING
MAKES SEN$E

3 ESCORT GT

* 19162*

P2129

24 MOS.

PKG. 330A

PHILIP SLOMOVITZ EDITOR EMERITUS

• Rear Window Defroster • Air Conditioning • Luxury Convenience
Group • Tilt Steering Wheel • Speed Control • Tachometer
Instrumentation • 1.8L DOHC 4-Cyl. Engine • 5-spd. Manual
Transaxle • Premium Sound System

3 TAURUS GL

* 22194*

24 MOS

P2132

.

PKG. 201S

• Air Conditioning. • Rear Window Defroster • Frt/Rear Carpeted
Floor Mats • Speed Control • 3.0L EFI V6 Engine • Auto Overdrive
Transmission • Power Door Locks/Driver Switch

4111/1

9 3 PROBE GL

■

101mmulai

7,4

Ala

‘• A

;is
— ilk

P2127

$ 276 57*

PKG. 253A

24 MOS.

• Remote Keyless Entry • Power Group • Tilt Cluster Column • Speed
Control • Dual Electric Remote Mirrors • Rear Window Defroster • Air
Conditioning • AM/FM Stereo Prem./CassJClock • Convenience Group •
Light Group • Bodyside Molding • 2.0L DOHC 1-4 Engine • Auto Overdrive
Transmission • 15" Aluminum Wheels

ESCORT
WAGON

ars.

P2005

$175 76 *

PKG. 322A

24 MOS.

• Manual Air Conditioning • Power Steering • Rear Window
Defroster • Light Convenience Group • Lt. Group/Cupholder Tray
• Dual Electric Remote Mirrors • Rem. Fuel Dr/Decklid Rel
• Wagon Group • Deluxe Luggage Rack • Rear Window
Wiper/Washer • 1.9L SEFI 4-Cyl. Engine • Automatic Transaxle

9 6i AEROSTAR

P8006

Kehilla Illumines
The Balkan Crisis

L 565.
"s2a

24 MOS.

PKG. 401A

• XL Trim • 7-Pass. W/Dual Capt. Chairs XL • Air Conditioning
• Privacy Glass • Deluxe Paint Stripe • Speed Control/Tilt Steering
Wheel • 3.0L Engine • Automatic O/D Transmission • Electric Rear
Window Defrost • Electric AM/FM Stereo/CassJClock

'Closed-end non maintenance lease w/15,000 miles per year allowed, 11¢ per mile penalty. Lessee may have
the option but is not obligated to purchase the vehicle at lease end at a price negotiated with the dealer at
lease signing. Leasee is responsible for excessive wear & tear. A security deposit of one month payment
rounded upward to the nearest $25 increment plus 1st months payment in advance, license and title are due
at delivery. Plus 4% use tax which is collected monthly. Rebates, if any, already computed in payment. Capital.
ized cost of $1000 cash or trade required. Total payments are 24 times the base lease and use tax.

ED SCHMID
FORD

21600 WOODWARD - FERNDALE
11/2 Miles South of 1-696

399-1000

PARTS & SERVICE OPEN MON.-FRI `TIL MIDNIGHT

A

dding to the human
agonies created by the
Balkan crisis is the
demise of another
notable world Jewish com-
munity. Another rescue
effort is now marked by the
hurbar (destruction) of Sara-
jevo whose last surviving
Jews are finding their haven
in Israel.
This historic occurrence
became especially signifi-
cant with the announcement
of the expulsion of
Yugoslavia from the United
Nations General Assembly
to end the fighting in Bosnia
and Herzegovina and the
conflict in the Serbian re-
public. With Sarajevo as a
vital portion of the war-torn
Yugoslavia, the new occur-
rence gains significance in
developing Jewish historic
experiences as revealed in a
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
item:
The last 60 Jews in Sara-
jevo were evacuated from
the war-stricken city this
week and have arrived in
Split, Croatia.
The head of the Jewish
community in Sarajevo,
Ivica Ceresnjes, and his
two deputies, were among
the evacuees.
The departure of the
convoy brought to an end,
at least temporarily, 500
years of continuous Jew-
ish presence in the city.
The evacuation marks
the final chapter in a
complex air and overland
operation that began in
April. With the onset of
winter, emergency mea-
sures will be taken to aid
the evacuees.
This is a recognizable ex-
perience. Every crisis, every
threat to kehilla (commun-
ity) in Jewish life has called
for rescue and life saving.
Fulfillment of such aims has
become especially relevant
with every new exodus, with
emphasis on rescuing hun-
dreds of thousands of Jews
from growing prejudices and
pressures in Russia. Such is
the vitality of Israel and
Zionism as major in-
struments in redemption.
With Sarajevo's remaining
Jews benefiting from Israel,
its Zionist instrumentality
and world Jewish en-
couragement and support,

interest is renewed in that
community's background. In
the Standard Jewish En-
cyclopedia we are provided
with knowledge of the legacy
as kehilla:
Sarajevo: Town in
Yugoslavia. Epitaphs
evidence Jewish set-
tlement in 1551, and in
1581 the Jews were
assigned a small suburb
where a new synagogue
was built. Equal rights
were received as a result
of the Turkish legislation
of 1839, 1856, and 1876. Its
intellectual center during
the period of Turkish rule
was at Salonica, while

rabbis of Sarajevo were
subordinate to the au-
thority of the Hakham
Bashi at Constantinople.
In 1941, the Jews of Sara-
jevo numbered 10,500,
mainly Sephardim, most
of whom were murdered
by the Nazis. Jewish pop.
(1973): 1,100.
We keep learning from
every hurban, every calami-
ty. Our responsibility is to
Jews everywhere. We keep
learning and serving. We
never abandon a duty to
resuce fellow humans or to
serve in the historic redemp-
tion of humanism that is the
eternity of our people. ❑

Canada Seeks
To Bar Revisionist

Toronto (JTA) — Canada's
immigration minister has
barred a Holocaust revi-
sionist from entering the
country.
David Irving, 54, a British
historian who turned from
mainstream history into
rewriting the Holocaust, had
intended to come to Canada
after speaking engagements
in the United States.
Jewish organizations here
were pleased by the decision
by Immigration Minister
Bernard Valcourt, which re-
versed an earlier Immigra-
tion Department ruling that
the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police would watch
Irving but not stop him at
the border.
Mr. Irving's, lawyer,
Douglas Christie of Victoria,
British Columbia, a
defender of neo-Nazis and
Holocaust revisionists, filed
an appeal with the Federal
Court, seeking an injunction
against the ban.
John Laskin, counsel for
the Canadian Jewish Con-
gress, is asking leave to
intervene at that hearing.
Mr. Irving, author of pro-
Nazi apologia, such as The
Destruction of Dresden
Churchill's War and Goring,
had been slated to be in
British Columbia on Oct. 28

to receive the Canadian Free
Speech League's eighth an-
nual George Orwell Award
for courageous defense of
free speech.
His tour would have in-
cluded addresses to Holo-
caust revisionist groups in
Calgary, Alberta; and Kit-
chener, Hamilton, Ottawa
and Toronto, Ontario.
Mr. Irving was told of the
decision while he was in Los
Angeles for a speaking
engagement. The United
States did not bar his entry.
On Oct. 9, he was hand-
delivered a letter informing
him that he was denied en-
try to Canada because of his
criminal record and because
"there are reasonable
grounds to believe (you) will
commit one or more
offenses" in Canada.
Both the Canadian Jewish
Congress and the Simon
Wiesenthal Center's Cana-
dian office argued before
Judge Valcourt that Mr. Irv-
ing's conviction this year in
Germany on a charge of
defaming Holocaust victims
made him an "ineligible
class" under Canada's im-
migration laws.

The rabbi's first concern is
learning and scholarship.
- Rabbi David Philipson

