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August 13, 1993 - Image 116

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-08-13

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

Inconspictious
consumption.



•e

• .•• •

wee



MPH in 7.9 seconds.
Not to mention 4-wheel ABS with power
disc brakes, and electronic traction control.
And Passat GLX is now available for a pretty
inconspicuous lease rate. See
your retailer for details.
Passat GLX. A car that
consumes your emotions
without consuming your net
worth.

Contrary to popular belief, you don't have to
pay more to get more.
Take Passat GLX, for example. A true
German touring sedan: comfort, luxury, and
performance but without the
pretentious price tag.
Flawless fit and finish.
Meticulous attention to
detail. And a new V6 engine
that can take you from 0-60
$2,000 Downyayment

$289Tonth.

uburban

TROY MOTOR MALL 649-2300

* $2,000 DOWN PAYMENT, $2:.:.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 September 30, 1993. 48-month closed-end lease. Price
based on $21,690 Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price of a Passat GLX sedan with metallic paint, and destination charge less a combination of
customer and/or retailer contribution to capitalized cost reduction of $2,000, which could affect final negotiated transaction. Other options, retailer
prep., taxes, registration extra. Lessee responsible for insurance. Monthly payments total $13,860.96. At lease end, lessee responsible for .10 per
mile over 60,000 miles and for damage and excessive wear. Option to purchase at lease end for $8,242 in example shown.

© 1993 Volkswagen

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

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with this ad

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4 cyl.

Yemenite Jews still observe old country traditions in Israel.

Violent Incidents
Prompt Changes

Jerusalem (JTA) — A few
violent incidents among new
Yemenite immigrants at an
absorption center have
prompted a call by a Jewish
Agency official for a change
in the way these newcomers
are settled.
Uri Gordon, the agency's
head of immigration and ab-
sorption, said the incidents
showed that problems arise
when immigrants are con-
centrated at centers and that
the recent spate of publicity
about the Yemenites' arrival
has added to the tension
there.
He suggested in news
reports that the next group
of arrivals be absorbed
directly in Israeli neighbor-
hoods with the help of so-
called benefits baskets.

Last week, Yemenite im-
migrants living in the
Oshiyot Absorption Center
in Rehovot blocked traffic
near the center and attacked
a reporter and photographer
who apparently had come to
record their actions.
A policeman arrived on the
scene to investigate and had
his har broken while try-
ing to intervene in the at-
tack.
Two immigrants taken
into police custody later ex-
plained they were merely
trying to prevent the
desecration of the Sabbath

and did not know they were
violating the law.
Days later, a journalist
visiting the center re-
portedly was attacked by
some immigrants and had
his tape recorder broken.
The center's director,
Akiva Barel, said that the
attacks on reporters are
prompted by fears that the
publicity could harm the
immigrants and their
families who remain in
Yemen.
He said the Shabbat
violence came as a result of
tension that had built up the
Sabbath before, when Israeli
teens rode provocatively
around the center on motor-
cycles.
Jewish Agency spokesman
Yehudah Weinraub said
that the immigrants, who
are deeply religious and
have little or no prior expe-
rience with secular Jews,
said that "when they were in
Yemen, the Arabs knew it
was their Sabbath and did
not disrupt it, and they
didn't see why it should be
disrupted in a Jewish coun-
try."
Mr. Weinraub said that
Mr. Barel and the police ex-
plained to the Yemenites
they could not take the law
into their own hands and
that Barel urged that the
newcomers be educated
about Israeli law. ❑

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