Dreisbach & Sons CompNil/ 24600 Grand River Avenue Detroit, Michigan 48219 JDC Evacuates Sarajevo Jews (313) 531-2600 The 1994 Models are Here! Sarajevo, Bosnia- Herzegovina (JTA) — With You wouldn't read yesterday's news .. . Why buy last year's car? Our 1994 lease payments and pricing is comparable to 1993 Call or Stop in for your lease vs. buy comparison Eldorado Touring Coupe Don't pay extra for the Northstar System. It's standard in the 1994 Seville and Eldorado. Seville 1-696 10 MILE 9 MILE IL 7 MILE 6 MILE M 5 MILE 96 mu. At Dreisbach & Sons you're not just a customer, you're family. •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Congregation Beth Achim and Nancy Gurwin Productions • • present lEroadwavy • • • Then itt Now!! • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Anni t, ve rsary le: 4( "There's No Business Like Shul Business" • nick-Off Even-ft Entertainment for the Entire Family Sunday, September 12 at 1:00 PM Nancy Gurwin Champagne and Gourmet Dessert Reception C/D w w F- C) CC LLJ w F- 54 Narrated by Edgar Guest III, you'll hear excerpts and melodies from "Call Me Madam," "Gypsy," "Pal Joey," "Les Miserables," "Fiddler On The Roof," "Phantom" and more. * Bring your friends Reservations preferred by September 7 and relatives and 41( celebrate good times! Advance Tickets: Members $10.00 At the Door: Adult $15.00 Child $10.00 Non-Members $12.00 Children 12 & under $5.00 Table of 10 $100.00 Call for information ... 21100 W. 12 Mile Rd. & reservations 352-867u Southfield cf.LEBA, r.r% the cooperation of Serbian, Croatian and Muslim au- thorities, the American Jew- ish Joint Distribution Com- mittee has succeeded in evacuating 21 more Jews from the besieged Bosnian capital of Sarajevo. Amid a sea of crying fami- ly members, U.N. officials and machine-gun-toting French soldiers, the group of 21 left Sarajevo over the weekend and arrived safely in the Croatian resort town of Makarska, after a dangerous journey lasting more than 24 hours. There the evacuees will be housed by the Joint Distribution Committee while arrangements are made for their relocation. Two of the evacuees will join family members in Britain, others will fly on to Israel and many of the rest will remain in Croatia, according to Ivan Ceresnjes, a leader of the Sarajevo Jewish com- munity. The weekend operation was the 10th such evacua- tion mounted by JDC in the 17-month civil war. All told, JDC has managed to evacuate more than 3,000 people — Jews as well as non-Jews —from Sarajevo, said Ambassador Milton Wolf, the international hu- manitarian agency's presi- dent. In a statement, Mr. Wolf stressed the non-sectarian nature of JDC's work in Bosnia, pointing out that the team that executed the latest evacuation brought 3 tons of food into Sarajevo, for the benefit of the entire community. The latest evacuees, 14 women and seven men, were chosen from a much larger list of nearly 150 Sarajevo Jews slated for evacuation by community leaders and JDC. "We had originally drawn up a list that included about 150 men, women and chil- dren to be taken from Sara- jevo," explained Raviv Tuvya, director of the Jew- ish Agency for Israel in Budapest, who was brought in to help process those planning to continue on to Israel. "But the Serbs and Bos- nians allowed us to only take people over the age of 60 and under 18 years. That left us Milton Wolf: President of JDC. with who you see on the buses this morning," Mr. Tuvya said as the group prepared to depart. The convoy of two buses carrying the evacuees was escorted out of Sarajevo by two U.N. armored personnel carriers. At one point during the journey, Croatian forces had to clear a section of highway of mines before the buses could pass, a JDC offi- cial reported. Later, when the convoy reached Serbian lines, the Serbian forces provided an ambulance, highlighting the potential for danger. But in the end, the evacuees arriv- ed safely in Makarska, a town on the Adriatic coast, southeast of Split. They left behind a city that has been hard-hit by the ethnic fighting among Muslims, Serbs and Croats in Bosnia-Herzegovina. While there is new hope that a peace agreement will soon be signed by the warring fac- tions, those who left over the weekend were not prepared to take any chances. Many Bosnian Muslims watching the evacuees' departure cried tears of joy, with one saying she was happy when anyone could escape "this hell." This most recent evacua- tion leaves Sarajevo's once large, bustling Jewish com- munity at a crossroad. With less than 700 mem- bers remaining, many open- ly wonder whether continu- ing evacuations which decimate a community that has survived war, pogroms and hardship since 1665 is such a wise choice. El