"Right Place.
Right Time."
NISSAN
MI
®
1993 SENTRA XE
13195;
24-month lease
AIR, AM/FM STEREO WITH CASSETTE,
CRUISE AND MORE! Stk. 111452.
1993 PATHFINDER XE
'2899*
mo
24-month lease
AUTO, 4 W/D, AM/FM STEREO CASSETTE, V-6, TILT,
CRUISE, POWER STEERING, BRAKES AND LOCKS.
Stk. 111319
1993 MAXIMA GXE
$234m1;
24-month lease
AUTO, AIR, POWER WINDOWS AND LOCKS,
MIRRORS, DRIVER SIDE AIR BAG, CRUISE,
AM/FM CASSETTE, ALLOY WHEELS AND
MORE! Stk. 111368.
24 mo. closed end leases require 1st mo. pymt., plates, DOC, title and tax at inception. Sentra requires $1240 down pymt., $150 sec dep. at inception.
Pathfinder requires $1540 down, and $350 aqc. fee plus $325 sec. dep. at inception. Maxima requires $1500 down and $275 sec. dep. plus $350 aqc.
fee at inception. Payments plus applicable taxes. Lessee has option to buy Sentra for $8401, Pathfinder for $14,907.50 or Maxima for $13,425.30 at
lease termination. To get total of payments multiply payment by 24. Subject to credit approval and prior sale, offer subject to change.
NISSAN
471-0044
Open Saturdays Sales and Service!
Grand River
at 10 Mi.
Farmington Hills
N
Custom made 118" seamless sheer draperies
by drapers boutique
Sin ce 1969
INC.
"LABOR FREE"
Michigan's largest and oldest custom drap-
ery manufacturer will fabricate your custom
sheer draperies "LABOR FREE" with Lizette
118" seamless slub batiste sheer fabric. Just
purchase the fabric only at $16.88 per yd.,
valued at $28 per yd. and will provide the
Iabor...FREE with 3 to 1 custom fullness. Call
1 800 444 3983 for your in-home appoint-
ment Monday thru Friday 9:00-5:30 or
Saturday 9:30-2:00.
-
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Sample Savings:
drapery size
80' w x 96' h
100' w x 84' h
120' w x 90' h
labor free price
(6-3/4yds.x $16.88)
(8-1/3yds.x $16.88)
(lOyds.x $16.88)
113.94
140.66
168.88
OTHER CUSTOM SIZES ...SAME SAVINGS
NOVI
NORTHVILLE
FARMINGTON
FARMINGTON HILLS
WEST BLOOMFIELD
BIRMINGHAM
TROY
BLOOMFIELD
ROCHESTER
CANTON
PLYMOUTH
LIVONIA
STERLING HTS.
WARREN
UTICA
Pepper Square
39253 Gd. River
At Haggerty Rd.
478-3133
Orchard Ur. -14 PA.Ctr.
30854 Orchard Lk. Rd.
S. of 14 Mile Rd.
Venus Plaza
6046 Rochester Rd.
At Sq. Lake Rd.
879-1010
Canton Corners
42T/5 Ford Rd.
At Lilley
981-7400
CrossRoads Ctr.
37130 Van Dyke
At 16 Mile Rd.
795-1500
626-4313
Fashion With
Value Always!
Murder Of Lawyer
Shakes Israel
Jerusalem (JTA) — The bru-
tal murder this week of an Is-
raeli lawyer who was working
with European officials to im-
prove the lot of Palestinians
in the Gaza Strip has shaken
both Jews and Arabs in the
midst of a sensitive time po-
litically.
The killing of Ian Feinberg,
30, took place in a Gaza office
just as the Palestinian dele-
gation to the peace talks with
Israel was deliberating
whether or not to return to
the negotiating table in
Washington.
Israelis were particularly
disturbed by the killing, since
it broke an unwritten rule
that non-partisan Israelis,
such as lawyers and journal-
ists, enjoy immunity from ter-
rorist attacks.
The murder of Mr. Fein-
berg, who was doing work for
a European Community-fi-
nanced aid provider called Co-
operation for Development,
proved there are no limits in
the bitter war between Jew
and Arab and that virtually
any means are justified to
achieve the end.
The Red Eagles, an armed
cell affiliated with George
Habash's Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine,
claimed responsibility for the
attack.
It posted notices on Gaza's
walls warning "every Zionist
who enters the Gaza Strip or
the West Bank will become a
target for our weapons. We
shall have no mercy for the
Zionists, just as they do not
have any mercy for our
women and children."
The killing prompted con-
demnations not only by Is-
raelis, but also by Palestinian
figures, including the heads
of Cooperation for Develop-
ment and Zakariya al-Agha,
a member of the Palestinian
negotiating delegation.
Mr. al-Agha told Israel Ra-
dio that no act of murder
against an innocent person
could be justified.
Referring to current politi-
cal developments, Mr. al-
Agha said that if Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin made
further gestures toward the
Palestinians, they would re-
spond in kind.
On the other hand, Arab
Knes set member Hashem
Mahamid of the Hadash Com-
munist Party triggered angry
reactions from the political
right when he declared that
the bloodshed in the territo-
ries was a result of Israel's
continued "occupation."
Mr. Mahamid visited Gaza
with truckloads of food,
clothes and medical equip-
ment for the local population.
Israeli troops seized the
clothes and medicine, saying
they would distribute it, but
turned back the food.
The attack occurred as Mr.
Feinberg, a frequent visitor to
the Gaza development
agency, sat in the office of its
director, Nibris Bseiso, after
the two had lunched togeth-
er.
Suddenly, two masked men
entered the room with bayo-
net rifles and attacked Mr.
Feinberg. As he was wrestling
with his attackers, Ms. Bseiso
pleaded for his life, but the at-
tackers pushed her aside and
would not listen.
Ms. Bseiso ran outside and
summoned help, but when
The killing
prompted
condemnations by
Palestinian figures.
she returned to the room, she
found the lawyer lying dead
in a pool of blood. He was bru-
tally beaten by ax blows and
stabbed with rifle bayonets.
A personal pistol was found
on Mr. Feinberg's body, but
he apparently had been un-
able to use it.
Mr. Feinberg, a married fa-
ther of three small children
who made aliyah from South
Africa in 1980, had studied
law at Bar-Ilan University in
Ramat-Gan.
He then joined the army as
a legal officer, working for the
army's advocate general office
in Gaza. After concluded his
military service, he joined a
Tel Aviv law firm specializing
in giving legal aid to Pales-
tinian and international bod-
ies working with the
Palestinian population.
Attorney David Schloss-
berg, in whose firm Mr. Fein-
berg worked, described him
as "an exceptional person,
everything that you could
dream of for a young Zionist
to be."
The slain lawyer was
buried at Tel Aviv's Kiryat
Shaul cemetery, in a special
section for victims of terror at-
tacks.