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April 30, 1993 - Image 44

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-04-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Get more
than a Caravan
for lease.

The new EuroVan GL.

Now the van with more interior room than
tioning units, power windows, cruise
the Grand Caravan can be had for lease-
control, a central locking system, front-
a special lease rate of only $299 a month.
wheel drive and fully independent sus-
And even though EuroVan has more room
pension are all available through this
inside, it's actually shorter than most mid-size
special lease. So bring the family to your
cars, so it's easy to drive.
Volkswagen retailer
Best of all, even when
today. Then let
EuroVan GL is empty, it's still
yourselves get
Mont h*
loaded. Front and rear air condi-
carried away.

buburban

649-2300

EASY TO FIND ... On Maplelawn off
Maple Rd. Between Crooks & Coolidge

THE DETRO IT J EWIS H NEWS

13,185 DOWN PAYMENT, $298.77 FIRST MONTH'S PAYMENT AND $300 REFUNDABLE SECURITY DEPOSIT DUE AT LEASE INCEPTION. Offered to qualified
customers by VW Credit. Inc. through participating retailers until 9/30/93. 48-month closed-end lease. Price based on $21,845 MSRP of a EuroVan GL with power win-
dows, central locking, cruise control, front & rear air conditioning. metallic paint and destination charge less a customer down payment and/or retailer contribution to
capitalized cost reduction of $3,185, which could affect final negotiated transaction. Other options, retail"r prep., taxes, registration extra. Lessee responsible for insur-
ance. Monthly payments total $14,340.96. At lease end, lessee responsible for $0.10/mile over 60,000 miles and for damage and excessive wear. Option to purchase at
lease end for $8,738 in example shown. See participating retailer for details.

I Seat belts save lives. Don't drink and drive.

I

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"So far, this move has
proved itself," he said.
"But who- knows what will
happen in two or three
weeks? This is not a final
solution, everything is liq-
uid.
"But if over the long
run, Jews are not being
killed, maybe many
Israelis will come to the
conclusion that there
should be a sepAration,"
he said.
In the meantime, he
added, the settlers are
feeling somewhat neglect-
ed by Israelis on the other
side of the Green Line.
"They feel their case is not
understood as it should
be," he said. Noting the
katyusha rockets that had
been falling these days on
Israeli towns near the
Lebanese border, Mr.
Harel said that all of
Israel stands in sympathy
with these Jews under
fire, but when settlers are
attacked in the territories
"their sorrow is not
shared" to the same
degree.
Living her life in
Herzliya and its environs,
Mrs. Elazari has no con-

tact with Jewish settlers.
She doesn't see them as
the front line in the
defense against her
enemy, the Palestinians —
she simply sees them as an
inconvenience to cutting a
neat divide between Israel
and all that trouble over
there.
The settlers' only choice,
she said, will be to aban-
don their homes and come
over to this side of the
line, where life is safe.
"Pay them off," she sug-
gested, "we'll get the
money somewhere."
But these people were
once heroes, they've lived
constantly with terror,
they built their homes
with tremendous encour-
agement from past Israeli
governments.
Now that the govern-
ment is different, and the
policy towards the territo-
ries is completely differ-
ent, can we just tell them
to give up, to uproot their
lives. Is it that simple?
Mrs. Elazari took anoth-
er piece of crumb cake and
said, "They should have
thought of that when they
moved there." D

New Shin Bet Rules
For Interrogations

$29 9

AT THE TROY I
MOTOR MALL

SUBURBAN VIEW page 43

•• ■ ••

Jerusalem (JTA) — The
country's domestic intel-
ligence agency, the Shin Bet,
will be instituting stricter
guidelines on the use of
physical and psychological
pressure during the inter-
rogation of Arab suspects.
The Shin Bet acknowl-
edged the new guidelines in
response to a court case filed
with the High Court of
Justice by a public human
rights committee aiming to
prevent torture.
A general description of
the new guidelines was pre-
sented to the court in a
public document, while the
full and detailed directives
were given in a separate,
classified affidavit.
The new guidelines are
more specific than in the
past. They no longer give
interrogators a general
license to use severe mea-
sures on all suspects.
The new guidelines state
explicitly that the measures
that can be used by an inter-
rogator will be determined
in each case individually,
according to the background

of the specific suspect and
the value of the information
that can be obtained from
him.
Applying limited physical
or psychological pressure is
only allowed with inmates
suspected of "serious" viola-
tions of the law.
Those measures which are
not mentioned specifically as
being allowed are pro-
hibited.
Thus measures such as de-
nying the suspect food and
drink, denying him the use
of a toilet, or exposing him to
extreme cold or heat are
banned.
According to the Shin Bet
head, whose identity is kept
secret, the changes in the
guidelines came about after
recommendations made by a
ministerial committee com-
prising Justice Minister
David Libai and Police Min-
ister Moshe Shahal. The
changes were approved last
week by Prime Minister Yit-
zhak Rabin, who is responsi-
ble for the agency.
The new guidelines are
still in line with the recom-

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