THE VOLVO 850. AVAILABLE IN TWO SIZES: Both the front wheel drive Volvo 850 Sedan and 850 Sportswagon come equipped with a peppy 168 horsepower engine. Four wheel anti-lock disc brakes. And Delta-Link rear suspension. Both have been designed with a sleeker, more eye-catching body style. And both are available at your local Volvo dealer. Stop by and try one on for size. We'll make sure you get a perfect fit. VOLVO Drive safely. REGULAR. he Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case that could pit Jewish groups against some of their usu- al partners in the ongoing fight to prevent legislation mandating prayer in the public schools. The justices decided to hear a Virginia case involving the ques- tion of whether state-funded schools can deny subsidies to stu- dent religious publications while funding similar non-religious publications. A lower court ruled that the University of Virginia was right by refusing to provide funding for a magazine published by a Chris- tian group on campus. The case is controversial in the religious community because it involves the treacherous intersection be- tween free speech rights, church- state separation and what some people see as a growing discrim- T THEISM VOLVO 850 SEDAN: $25,580* EXTRA LARGE. • THE 1993 VOLVO 850 SPORTSWAGON: $25,880* '959 IN STINK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Michigan's *1 Volvo Dealer DWY E R AND SONS 624-0400 Maple Rd. West of Haggerty *Includes automatic transmission, all standard equipment. Destination charge, option packages, tax, license are additional. ED HAROUTUNIAN Candidate for Board of Governors Wayne State University T HE D ET R O IT J E WIS H NE WS Ed Haroutunian, a practicing attorney in Southeast Michigan for over 25 years, primarily as a stockholder with the Southfield law firms of Rubenstein, Isaacs, Haroutunian and Sobel, P.C., and Rubenstein Plotkin, P.C., is running for the Board of Governors of Wayne State University. Being a resident of Detroit for 30 years, Haroutunian and his wife Susan (Licata), a lifelong Detroit resident, received their law degrees from Wayne State. 124 Church-State Case Before High Court Haroutunian is dedicated to: • Maintaining the urban mission of Wayne State. • Keeping tuition levels low. • Aggressively seeking to augment public funds with alumni contributions. • Strengthening alumni pride in and identification with Wayne State University. Paid for by Haroutunian for WSU Committee, 14926 Rosemont, Detroit, MI 48223 A Perfect Family Gift... A Subscription to the Jewish News. 810-354-6620 ination against religion and reli- gious groups. It was complicated by the fact that the university had provided funding to Jewish and Muslim groups for cultural programming.. The Anti-Defamation League plans to file a brief supporting the lower court decision. "We believe the university is right in denying funds to an overtly religious group," said Michael Lieberman, the group's Washington counsel. "People ar- gue that this is discrimination against religion, that religious speech is treated worse than oth- er forms of speech. Our response is that religious speech is differ- ent." Jewish activists say that giv- ing state money to groups pro- moting sectarian views has the effect of promoting those views. Death Of Judge Delays Deportation WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (JTA) that Mr. Demjanjuk did commit —The sudden death of the Cleve- other Nazi war crimes while serv- land judge in the John Demjan- ing as a guard at the Sobibor juk case has delayed indefinitely death camp and at the Flossen- a new round of denaturalization burg and Regensburg concentra- hearings against the notorious tion camps. The Israeli Supreme Court's Nazi war criminal. U.S. District Judge Frank Bat- decision cleared the way for his tisti, 72, died from what doctors return to the United States in said were complications from tick September 1993. Earlier this month, the U.S. bite suffered during a fishing trip Supreme Court elected not to last month. Sources close to the case ex- hear an appeal of a lower court pressed both grief and frustra- ruling that found Justice De- tion that any new judge partment officials mishandled appointed to the case will not Mr. Demjanjuk's case when its have as much knowledge of the Nazi-hunting unit, the Office of Special Investigations, pursued issues as Judge Battisti had. Judge Battisti was the origi- his original denaturalization. The court's move cleared the nal judge who had ordered Dem- janjuk's extradition to Israel in way for Judge Battisti to re-open a new round of denaturalization 1986. "What had been a clear path hearings. The hearings would be to deportation is no longer clear. based in part on charges that he This will certainly delay things," lied about his Nazi past when he said a source, who spoke on the applied to immigrate to the Unit- ed States in 1951. condition of anonymity. Successful prosecution of the The case now is expected to be heard by another district judge 74-year-old retired Ohio auto in Cleveland, Ohio, or to be di- worker in denaturalization hear- ings could clear the way for his rected to a deportation court. After Mr. Demjanjuk was ex- deportation. Throughout his protracted tradited to Israel, he was con- victed and sentenced to death for legal battle, Mr. Demjanjuk has being the brutal Treblinka con- said he is not guilty and is, in- centration camp guard known as stead, a victim of mistaken iden- "Ivan the Terrible." After spend- tity. "Every day this Nazi war crim- ing seven years in an Israeli prison, however, the Israeli inal draws breath in the United Supreme Court last year over- States is atrocious," said Michael Lieberman, associate director and turned his conviction. However, the American and Is- counsel of the Anti-Defamation raeli courts have not questioned League's Washington office.