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September 17, 1993 - Image 76

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-09-17

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

Leased
lightning.

,,,, .

•••••

With its gutsy V6 engine, ABS brakes and
but how little it goes for. Just $289 per month
special traction control system, our 1993
during our limited-time Special Value Lease
Passat GLX inspires a driving experience that
(with as little as $2,000 down). Few bona fide
can only be called electrifying.
German touring sedans are that easy to
One hundred and seventy-two
handle.
horses, harnessed precisely as
See us for a test
the driver desires.
drive. And hurry.
And you'll not only be im-
Opportunities like
a month*
pressed by how Passat goes,
this don't strike twice.

$289

suburban

TROY MOTOR MALL 649-2300

*$2,000 DOWN PAYMENT, $288.77 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 customer capitalized cost
reduction of $2,000. Other options, retailer prep., taxes, registration extra. Lessee responsible for insurance. Monthly payments total $13,860.96. At
lease end, lessee responsible for $.10/mile over 60,000 miles and for damage and excessive wear. Option to purchase at lease end for $8,242 in
example shown.

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

News

Palestinian Deportees
Return From Exile

Tel Aviv (JTA) — After nine
months of exile, 181 of the
Palestinian extremists who
were deported to Lebanon
last December have re-
crossed the border and
returned to the administered
territories.
The deporteesleft behind
207 other Palestinians, who
are scheduled to return to
Israel in December.
The deportees left behind
suspected members of the
Islamic fundamentalist
Hamas and Islamic Jihad
movements, had been living
in a tent camp at 11/1arj al-
Zahour in Lebanon, some
two miles north of Israel's
buffer security zone.
Israel had agreed to allow
189 of the deportees to
return, but eight decided to
remain in Lebanon, fearing
long prison terms if they ac-
cepted the offer, according to
a camp'spokesperson.
In all, Israel deported 415
Palestinians to Lebanon last
December, following a series
of murderous attacks by
Muslim extremists within
Israel.
According to a plan work-
ed out by Israel in mid-
August, the group of 189 de-
tainees were to return this
week, with the balance to
return by the end of the
year.
Nineteen of the original
group were returned to
Israel earlier this year be-
cause of illness or because
Israeli authorities admitted
they had been expelled in
error.
The 181 returning
deportees were divided into
groups of 20 at the tent
camp. They then made their
way on foot to the Zumriya
crossing point, where tents
had been erected for their
processing.
After they were given
medical examinations by

Red Cross doctors and went
through an identification
process, the deportees were
placed aboard waiting buses
for a short trip to another
holding area inside the
security zone.
They then boarded two
buses for their return to
prisons and detention camps
inside Israel and the ter-
ritories.
The windows of the buses
were painted over to conceal
the identities of the passen-
gers from curious passers-by,
particularly those in Kiryat
Shmona, many of whom
were angered by Israel's
decision to free the
deportees. The Galilee
panhandle town has been a
frequent target of Katyusha
rocket attacks by guerrillas
of the fundamentalist Hez-
bollah movement.
According to Israel Radio,
the deportees were bound
but not blindfolded, as they
had been.
The returnees were
Scheduled to be questioned
by Israeli security officials.
Those who were under arrest
before their deportation
were to return to jail. Those
not under suspicion of par-
ticipating in terrorist acts
were to be allowed to return
to their homes.
"Let us hope that those
who spent the past few mon-
ths in Lebanon have learned
a lesson and now know that
the government of Israel will
not rest in the face of
violence and terrorism car-
ried out against its citizens
and soldiers," said a state-
ment issued by Israel's
Defense Ministry.
"The government and the
security forces will not desist
in their struggle against
those who perpetrate acts of
terrorism and who seek to
undermine the peace pro-
cess," the statement warned.

©1993 Volkswagen

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Palestinian deportees demonstrate In a camp In south Lebanon.

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