▪ 96 MILLENIA 96 MIATA PICK YOUR COLOR! War Crimes Alarm Sounded NO SECURI DEPOSIT Air, AM/FM cassette, anti-theft device, power steering and more! Air, ABS, power windows, locks, mirrors Stk#8445 99 36 MONTH LEASE 24 MONTH LEASE OR BUY FOR /4,299 OR FOR P18,89 96 PROTEGE * * (M.S.R.P. $29,045) NEW 95 RX7 96 626 LX ..................... .41111111• ■ Air, AM/FM cass.. anti-theft device and more! 99* OR BUY FOR Air, AM/FM cass., anti-theft device and more! 99* Stk #841J5 24 MONTH LEASE Red with Tan Leather, 5-Speed, LOADED! 2: MOM 11 $12,495** 24 & 36 month leases based on approval credit. S1000 down plus tax, title, plates. 1st months pymt & ref. sec. dep (no security deposit due on Millenia) acq. fee & dest. 12,000 miles per year w/100 overage. Lessee responsiable for axcess wear and tear, and has option to purchase vehicle at lease end for a price to be determined at inception. To get total, multiply pymt by term. All rebates to dealer. — Plus tax, title, destination, plates, all rebates to dealer. ***Option of 4.8% on approved credit in lieu of customer incentives. .... .... .... • GUARDIAN ALARM 24 HOUR PROTECTION FOR YOUR HOME OR BUSINESS lase stuff today. reduce garbage tomorrow. reuse slof today. redrxe tMorsow reuse s reduce garbage tomorrow. reuse stuff today. reduce S * Installed Complete OfrOM. reduce duce educe garbage torn:cow. reuse stuff today. reduce garbage tomorrow. I. Eat aft the jetty 2. W94u7, We(/(r' 3. sfidy .1( *JM j&Netkny nets' Preserve Nature 'Telephone Connection Kit. monthly monitoring f. of S19.95 and mcnitcritv agreement required. You can do more than you think. • 800•STAY•OUT For more ideas on reusing and reducing, call: 1-800-9W1LDLIFE Russ OW today narrow p 116 National Audubon Society — • t% EPA \9 0 er ,0.0 s‘ .01\ 1 ,,,,e\oe GUARDIAN ALARM 4 20800 Southfield Rd, Southfield, MI www.stayout.com A prominent Jewish congress- man is encouraging Jewish or- ganizations to get more involved in the effort to bring war crim- inals in the former Yugoslavia to justice. Rep. Ben Cardin, D-Md., recently returned from a session of the parliamentary assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Mr. Cardin is a c7/\ member of the American dele- gation to the group, which is charged with monitoring the 1975 Helsinki human rights ac- cords. "We're trying to focus the in- ternational community on the fact that our commitment to hold those accused of war crimes accountable has to be a high pri- ority," Mr. Cardin said in an in- terview. "The best way to ensure the peace and prevent future atrocities is to demonstrate clearly that war crimes will not be tolerated." But that process is proving difficult in Bosnia, where efforts to apprehend several high-pro- file figures accused of war crimes, including Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, have been stymied. NATO forces implementing last year's Dayton accords have, so far, refused to actively seek out Mr. Karadzic and oth- ers. "Two actions are needed," Mr. Cardin said. "First, we need to encourage the various countries participating in this process to help the tribunal more. Sec- ondly, we need a commitment that the international forces now in Bosnia should help pick these people up. That's been a problem; they're not doing it. But they say they will, if given a mandate by the participating nations." Jewish groups in this coun- try, he said, need to get more in- volved. (_\ "Yugoslavia represents the first war crimes tribunal since Nuremberg," he said. "The Jew- ish community, with our special sensitivity to the need to hold people accountable, can have an especially big impact on whether our country makes this a high priority." The Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe was created to promote human rights in Eastern Europe; it was a major part of the effort to pro- tect Soviet Jews. "It's not by accident that the same mechanism that protect- ed Soviet Jews is now helping ( deal with these terrible war crimes," Mr. Cardin said. "This is perfectly consistent with its mandate."