NEW 1995 SEDAN DEVILLE •" . Rightists Speak At Commemoration 24 MONTH LEASE RGEST INVENTORY OF SEDAN DEVILLES IN THE WOR cOow, eft 40475 Ann Arbor Road in Plymouth 3 13 453 7500 - - CADILL AC CREATING A HIGHER STANDARD * Payment based on a 24 month closed end Smartlease on a Sedan DeVille (MSRP $36,462). Plus tax, luxury tax, GMAC acquisition tee, license, refundable security deposit of $425, transfer plate fee & title fee. GMAC must approve lease. Option to purchase at lease end for $24,064.92. Mileage charge of 15C per mile over 24,000 miles. Requires 1st month.lease payment and $2,000 cash down. Based on Cadillac Owner Loyalty. Total of payments is payment times 24. Expires 8/31/95. Lorna Sakalovsky • Distinctive • Collectible • Charming Tradition! Tradition! Available at: 88 (810) 557-0109 Alicia R. Nelson Budapest (JTA) — Hungarian ultranationalist Istvan Csurka, who in the past was ejected from Parliament for his anti-Semitic statements, reiterated some of his sentiments at a recent public commemoration in Budapest. In the vicinity of Budapest's Parliament building, a huge crowd of nationalists gathered to remember the 75th anniversary of the signing of a treaty that led to the loss of Hungarian territo- ry. In June 1920, a treaty was signed in Trianon, France, which, among other things, resulted in the loss of two-thirds of Hungar- ian territory. Mr. Csurka, known for his anti-Semitic diatribes and for an anti- Semitic speech on the floor of the Hungarian Parliament, failed in a recent attempt at re- election. Before the 5,000 to 6,000 peo- ple at the commemoration, Mr. Csurka said that "the present po- litical situation is equal to the tragic event of the Trianon peace treaty, which meant the death of the Hungarian nation." He added that all key political positions are "held now by liber- als, and while the number of Hungarians is gradually dimin- ishing, the number of the immi- grant Jews, and the Russians, and the Ukrainians are increas- ing. , During his speech, Mr. Csur- ka predicted that Hungary would one day be inhabited only by Rus- sians, Ukrainians, Jews and Gyp- sies. The ultranationalist has often said that Jews run the country and that they, along with Jews around the world, seek to domi- nate Hungary. Mr. Czurka's Hungarian Truth and Life Party is against Hun- gary's membership in the Euro- pean Union, which is a goal of the liberal coalition now in power. Relatedly, about 100 people gathered recently to listen to Al- bert Szabo, who oversees the or- ganization of the neo-Nazi followers of Ferenc Szalasi, the Fascist leader of the Hungarian Arrow Cross Party during the 1940s. Mr. Szalasi was executed after World War II as a war crim- inal. Meanwhile, in the town of De- brecen in northeastern Hungary, skinheads recently held a meet- ing to remember the treaty sign- ing. One of those who spoke at the event, Andras Ris, has been charged in connection with the February burning of Torah scrolls in the Debrecen Synagogue. According to some Jewish ac- tivists and observers, it was not a coincidence that the national- istic commemorations took place while Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Horn and his liberal team were on their first official visit to the United States. One topic of discussion during the trip was restitution for Hun- garian Jews victimized during World War II. More than 100,000 Jews now live in Hungary. Judge Releases Bombing Suspects Buenos Aires (JTA) — An Ar- gentine judge has released seven Lebanese and Brazilian nation- als who had been suspected of links to the bombing of Jewish buildings here. The seven were extradited fiom Paraguay in connection with a separate investigation into illegal stocks of weapons found near Buenos Aires in April 1994. Argentine officials had hoped that the seven also would provide information regarding last year's terrorist bombing of the Jewish community's headquarters here, as well as the 1992 bombing of the Israeli embassy. Judge Roberto Marquevich freed the seven suspects on July 27, after they underwent two days of interrogation. Mr. Marquevich, who report- edly had based the extradition re- quest on domestic and foreign intelligence reports, said last week the information he now had was not sufficient to bring a ju- dicial case. The suspects — six Lebanese and one Brazilian — were arrested in Paraguay in February. After months of legal wrangling, they were extradited to Argentina on July 23 and held at a military base outside Buenos Aires. Although three of the suspects — Sergio Salem, Luis Nader and Johnny Moraes Baalbek — ad- mitted to having sympathies to- ward the Islamic fundamentalist Hezbollah movement, Marque- vich said there was no basis to sustain allegations that they were part of a terrorist cell. The Argentine government has come under sharp criticism for its handling of the investiga- tions into the two bombings. The July 18, 1994, bombing of the Buenos Aires Jewish headquar- ters killed 86 people and left at least 300 wounded. The March 1992 bombing of the Israeli Em- bassy in Buenos Aires claimed the lives of 29 people and wound- ed more than 100. The government's investiga- tions have yielded no arrests. N N