OPEN SATURDAY OLDSMOBILES FOR LESS • STK. 193P140 • •;`.;: --s • : STK. /93P84 177."" w-- J AMMIORIMMILV:i SILHOUETTE VAN 98 REGENCY SEDAN Retail Price... $26,475 Retail Price... $23,912 Your Price $ 15,988 Your Price $15,988 STK. 93P251 CUTLASS CIERA STK. 193P188 DELTA 88 ROYALE Retail Price... $14,995 Your Price News cc Retail Price...$18,995 $9,988 i Your Price $ 13,988 , r's Ni 'Jar 0 0 I Smoke from shells billows among houses in south Lebanon STK. 193P191 BRAVADA UTILITY VEHICLE Retail Price...$25,740 Your Price $ 17,988 STK. 193P184 CUTLASS SUPREME . Retail Price...$18,995 Your Price $11,988 STK. 193P244 OLDSMOBILE ACHIEVA Your Price $8,988 Retail Price...$14,995 GLASSMAN OLDSMOBILE ON TELEGRAPH AT THE TEL 12 MALL, SOUTHFIELD 354-3300 Sales price plus tax, license, freight with approved credit. 92 Special Purchase Vehicles are advertised. Hang Your Television... Off waLL • Many Models & Colors Available • Simple Installation • Perfect for home & office • Dealers Wanted • Retail/Wholesale CI) For sales information, call — Midwest Television Communications - 313-960-3737 4Ni= ■•■ 1111P ■ 11M--4. 08 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today, Call 354.6060 Brokered Cease-Fire Brings Some Calm Tel Aviv (JTA) — Civilians in both northern Israel and southern Lebanon began returning to their homes as a U.S.-brokered cease-fire took hold along the border between the two countries. The cease-fire was arrang- ed by U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who spent hours in telephone conversations from Wash- ington negotiating with Israeli Prime Minister Yit- zhak Rabin and leaders in Lebanon and Syria. The Syrians and Lebanese, in turn, acted as go-betweens to put pressure on Hezbollah guerrillas operating in southern Lebanon. Additional talks were held over the weekend between the U.S. coordinator for the Middle East peace talks, Dennis Ross, and Itamar Rabinovich, Israel's ambas- sador to Washington. The talks have resulted in a verbal understanding that Hezbollah will refrain from firing Katyusha rockets into Israel, and Israel will cease its artillery bombardment of guerrilla strongholds and villages in southern Leb- anon. But if such an understan- ding was reached, Hezbollah was not admitting it. The Iranian-supported guerrilla organization stressed it would not cease its military activities against the Israel Defense Force or South Lebanon Army, in the hope of trying to force Israel to withdraw from Lebanon completely. The Shi'ite fundamentalist group insisted that it had never agreed to stop rocket attacks against Israel and that "all options remain open" in dealing with the Jewish state. There were also contradic- tory reports about a Syrian consent to halt the transfer of Iranian missiles through Damascus to Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon. And initial reports that Washington had agreed to remove Syria from a U.S. list of states sponsoring terror- ism, in exchange for Syrian cooperation, were later de- nied by U.S. officials in con- versations with American Jewish organizations. Israeli officials, for their part, praised the U.S. role in orchestrating at least a tem- porary halt to the exchange of fire across the border. And hinting at a possible far-reaching deal, Mr. Rabin said at a news conference that if things quiet down, the various parties might The Syrians and Lebanese, in turn, acted as go-betweens. well be able to find a solu- tion "for the entire problem of south Lebanon." Fleshing out this hint, Israeli leaders are saying that if Hezbollah were com- pletely disarmed, Israel would be willing to recon- sider its stationing of forces in the security zone it has set up along the border in southern Lebanon. For now, the cease-fire enables Mr. Christopher to carry out his planned peacemaking trip to the Middle East this week in a calmer atmosphere and without having to devote time to persuading the par- ties to halt their fire before the talks can resume. The secretary, who was originally supposed to arrive in the region over the weekend, now plans to hold 1