VOLVO
94'S HERE NOW!
No Decision In N.Y.
Jewish Press Wars
LEASE PER MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS
A
VOLVO FRONT WHEEL DRIVE 850 SEDAN
LEASE PER MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS
VOLVO 850 SPORTSWAGON
FINAL '93 ONE-PRICE-SALE
al25995
L
Demo '93 940 4 Door
New '93 940 Turbo 4 Door
New '93 960 Wagon
white/grey leather, sunroof,
air bag & more stk. 12819
Dk. blue met./black lthr. ,
sunroof, air bag, loaded.
stk. 13011
6 cyl., leather, dual air bags
sunroof.Save $7000
Choose from two.
s
$23,995
10 5 995
Demo '93 940 Wagon
New '93 960 4 Door Sedan
Demo '93 940 Wagon
Ruby red met./beige leather
sunroof, air bag and more
stk. 12718
6 cyl, leather, auto climate
sunroof, choose from two
Save $7000
leather, sunroof, cassette
cruise, loaded.
Choose from two.
09 G ag
5 444
$29,995
$23,995
CHOOSE FROM OVER 50 NEW MODELS!
* plus tax, title, license
DWYER
ANDSONS
VOLVO/SUBARU
Maple Rd. West of Haggerty
624-0400
Due at inception: capitalized cost reduction of $4500
plus first monthly payment; Volvo lease acquisition fee
of $450.00 security deposit equal to the monthly pay-
ment rouniled up to the next $25.00 Increment. all
applicable taxes and license due on delivery. Total
obligation equals monthly payment times 36. 45,000
miles allowed. 15 cents per mile over 45,000.
Purchase options are $15,950 (850 sedan) and
$17,950 (850 sportswagon). Based on approved cred-
it. Lessee responsible for excess wear and tear. Other
down payment and term options are available. Offer
expires 12-31-93. See Dwyer & Sons Volvo for details.
HURRY
SALE ENDS
DEC. 31
VISIT OUR NEW SHOWROOM
OPEN SATURDAY
Stamell's Dynamic Muffler Brake
Bring In Your Coupons
And Warranties —
We'll Work With You!
• Mufflers • Brakes
• Shocks • Alignment
• Maintenance
' `o
MILE RD,
X5 00
.
with this ad
g
TUNE-UPS
DYNAMIC
CAR CARE CENTER
starting at
$39.95
Open Monday-Saturday
Northwestern Hw . Farmin ton Hills • 851-3883
DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S.
353-2200
o DENTURE
CENTER
4 cyl.
CA$H
FOR LIKE-NEW
WOMEN'S ✓ CHILDREN'S
DESIGNER
fashions
& accessories
CONSIGNMENT
CLOTHIERS
Call today for a FREE
housecall appt. or
In-store appt.
347-4570
HARVARD ROW MALL
21774 WEST 11 MILE RD.
SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076
ARTHUR J. MAGMA SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS
EXTRACTIONS
DENTURES & PARTIALS
RELINES & REPAIRS
QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
43041 W. 7 Mile • Northville
CLASSIFIED
GET RESULTS!
Call The Jewish News
354-5959
half-year battle waged
against massive sub-
scription purchases of
the New York Jewish
Week by the United Jewish Ap-
peal-Federation of New York
was not resolved last week as
expected.
Although the federation's
board met on Dec. 1 for more
than three hours to review its
newspaper purchasing policy,
it is not expected to make a fi-
nal decision for another three
months, said Irwin Hochberg,
chairman of its Jewish media
committee.
In the interim, the federa-
tion's management committee
will review the points made at
last week's meeting and for-
ward its recommendations to
the board. The management
committee will meet in about
two weeks.
A memo from the manage-
ment committee to three other
UJA-Federation committees
last week indicated that it be-
lieves that some kind of sub-
scription-purchasing policy is
necessary for the federation's
"message" to be properly com-
municated to donors.
"If we permit the market-
place to determine the surviv-
ing newspapers," stated the
memo, "we may end up with no
viable Jewish newspaper that
delivers the UJA-Federation
message and also serves the to-
tal community."
The fracas between the Jew-
ish Week and other local Jew-
ish papers, especially the Long
Island Jewish World, has been
a cause celebre in New York's
Jewish circles. The outcome
could influence the policy of
some Jewish federations
around the country toward their
local Jewish newspapers.
The wrangling centers on the
UJA-Federation's present pur-
chasing of about 80,000 Jewish
Week subscriptions. These go to
anyone who contributes more
than $36 to the federation. The
Jewish World and the Forward
want a new system that would
give federation donors a choice
of which paper they would re-
ceive.
Should The Pope
Repent?
Columnist James Carroll of the
Boston Globe recently urged
Pope John Paul II to repent for
the Vatican's alleged failure to
protest the Holocaust. But two
high officials in the Catholic
hierarchy believe it is Mr. Car-
roll, a former Catholic priest,
who should repent.
"The guy doesn't know his
facts," said Archbishop William
H. Keeler of Baltimore. "People
really have to do their home-
work on this issue."
Eugene J. Fisher, associate
director of the National Con-
ference of Catholic Bishops' sec-
retariat for ecumenical and
interreligious affairs, said,
"There's a need for all Chris-
tians to ask for repentance
[from Jews regarding the Holo-
caust]. But first let's develop an
objective and accurate state-
ment of the facts..."
Below are some incidents
Mr. Carroll used to back his
claim that the Vatican's rela-
tionship to the Holocaust is "one
of the great moral failures in
history" — and Archbishop
Keeler's and Mr. Fisher's refu-
tation of them:
Pope John Paul II: Who's sorry now?
• In 1933, Pope Paul XI
signed a concordat with Hitler
that traded church freedom in
Germany for suppression of
the anti-Nazi Catholic Center
Party.
The archbishop referred to
"Three Popes and the Jews" by