MEL FARR
Up to $2000 in Rebates
on New Vehicles
plus a Whole Lot of
Used Vehicles From Just
$ 9 per month
_AL
LINCOLN
MERCURY
TA
MAZDA • VW
CONTINENTAL
"Best Beal In Town"
•
NEWS7TOYOTA CANTLE OR NEW17 MAZDA 626LX
Over 75
Available at
Similar
Savings!
AIM& J.11111111111 ■
170508, Leather, nicely equipped,
LEASE $00ft*
52900 down, 5350 Sec. Dep. 24,000
24 IV105. ■
%IVO M0 .
miles closed end lease- 24 mos.
1111%.
/7958, Auto., air, pwr. pkg., gold pkg., elite
pkg., rear spoiler, mud guards, woodgrain
dash and more. 52310 down, $200 Sec. Dep.
COLN MARK VIII T
tit
Over 47
Available at
Similar
Savings!
170397, Leather, nicely equipped,
$2900 down, plus $500 Rebate down,
5425 Sec. Dep. 24,000 miles closed
nil - 4m
LEASE Sq0c*
24 MOS. 160U . 21 MO.
4178 Highland
Rd. Waterford
/7959 Auto,. air, pwr. pkg., am/fm/cass..
rear defrost and more! S1922 down, 5200
Sec. Dep.
NEW '97 TOYOTACOROLLA DX
24ErVIEs.$15%
12961, Auto., air, am/fm/cass., woodgrain dash, gold pkg.,
$1971 down, 175 Sec. Dep.
rear spoons and morel
CALL NOW! 24 HOUR INFORMATION CENTER 1765 S. Telegraph Rd.
Bloomfield Hills
1.800-MEL-FARR
Ask For Lou Gordo
* All prices plus tax, title, plate, lic., doc., and destination or acquisition lees. Leases all require 1st mo. & sec. dep. plus down pymt. Based on conventional financing. To get pymt. multiply by no. of
mos. Option to purchase at lease end for predetermined amt. Price determined at lease inception. 15,000 mile/yr. limit on leases. I lc per mile excess (12,000 miles/yr. limit on Import leases, 10c
mile excess). Lessee responsible for excessive wear & tear. Dealer not responsible for typographical errors. Pictures may not represent actual vehicles on sale. Prior sales excluded. Dealer
financing on select vehicles only. Others require conventional credit approval. ♦ Customer must meet min. down pymt. requirements for approved credit w/ FMCC. Valid on 2 or 3 yr. Red Carpet
Leases only. Valid on new vehicle leases only. On vehicles of greater value than pay-off of trade-in. Difference between cash value & of trade & pay-off amt. will be added to cost of new lease.
Pymts. on lease may increase accordingly. The difference may be paid. up front w/ down pymt. on lease if customer chooses.SALE ENDS Friday October 25th, 1996 at 6 p.m.
Retirement Workshop & Fair
Shotwell-Gustafson Pavilion
Oakland University-Adams (South of Walton)
Rochester Hills
• Four Workshop Sessions:
Saturday 9am & fpm;
Sunday 9:30am & 1:30 pm
• Live presentations concerning
financial and lifestyle issues.
• Exhibits and demonstrations of
products and services of special
interest to retirees and pre-retirees
• Special offers and discounts.
• Win a cruise! A Vegas vacation!
Many other prizes!
Saturday, October 26
8:30 am-12:30 pm
1:00 pm-5:00 pm
RESERVATIONS
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CALL (810) 952-1744
Sunday, October 27
9:00 am-1:00 pm
1:30 pm-5:30 pm
COMPLIMENTARY
ADMISSION FOR
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(810) 354-6620
SWISS page 63
Switzerland's Parliament,
meanwhile, has promised a com-
prehensive investigation, exempt
from all bank secrecy laws, into
the fate of all assets that reached
Switzerland as a result of Nazi
rule. Such an investigation will
likely take five years, Swiss of-
ficials say.
A separate inquiry by the
Swiss Bankers Association and
the World Jewish Congress, led
by former U.S. Federal Reserve
Chairman Paul Volcker, will de-
termine the value of dormant
Swiss bank accounts belonging
to Holocaust victims.
The WJC claims that up to $7
billion in Jewish money is lan-
guishing in those accounts, while
Swiss bankers say they have only
found about $32 million in un-
claimed assets.
"What is needed now is an
unimpeded search for the truth,"
Swiss Foreign Minister Flavio
Cotti said recently. After reports
that Switzerland may have held
on to 90 percent of the Nazi gold
stash, Sen. Alfonse D'Amato,
chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee, called for a renego-
tiation of the postwar agreement
between Switzerland and the Al-
lies on the redistribution of loot-
ed assets.
After the war, the Allies had
settled for $60 million, believing
that was the most they could get.
In response to a letter to Sec-
retary of State Warren Christo-
pher from Sen. D'Amato, the
State Department promised a
"thorough and immediate study"
of all aspects of the agreement,
including the extent of U.S.
knowledge about the disburse-
ment of Nazi assets.
Indeed, Jewish officials say
Switzerland is not the only coun-
try that owes an accounting.
Part of the $60-million gold
stash Switzerland turned over to
the Allies 50 years ago is now ly-
ing in central banks in the Unit-
ed States and Britain, according
to documents uncovered by the
WJC.
The Federal Reserve Bank of
New York is believed to be hous-
ing two tons of looted Nazi gold,
estimated to be worth about $28
million. An additional 3.5 tons of
gold, worth about $56 million, is
in the Bank of England, WJC of-
ficials said.
After allegations about the
gold holdings, Edgar Bronfrnan,
president of the WJC and the
World Jewish Restitution Orga-
nization, appealed to top Ameri-
can, British and French officials
to make the money available to
"individual sufferers from Nazi
persecution, their heirs and their
families."
None of the Nazi gold has ever
found its way back to Holocaust
victims, according to WJC offi-
cials.
"What we're talking about
here has nothing to do with mon-
ey," Mr. Steinberg said. "It has
everything to do with justice.
What is important is that this
last bit of gold, as a final measure,
as a final bit of justice, go back to
some of the victims from whom
it came."
❑
(c)Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Pharmos Corp.
Begins Phase II
Jerusalem (JPFS) - Pharmos
Corporation, the Rehovot-based
developer of original pharma-
ceuticals, announced it has be-
gun a phase II study with its lead
neuroprotective agent,
dexanabinol, in moderate and se-
vere head trauma patients.
Pharmos, which trades on the
Nasdaq over-the-counter ex-
change, is developing dexanabi-
nol as a treatment for
neurological damage associated
with stroke, head and spinal cord
injuries.
LEADING ISRAELI STOCKS
TRADED ON U.S. EXCHANGES
Symbol
Name
Exchange
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Change
SCIXF
Scitex
NASDAQ
'11.25
'10.63
-'0.62
ECILF
ECI Telecom
NASDAQ
'20.63
'20.50
TEVIY
Teva P harm
NASDAQ
'44.00
'43.12
I EC
PEC Israel
NYSE
'17.12
'16.86
ELBTF
Elbit Computers
NASDAQ
'12.25
'12.12
ELT
Elscint LTD
NYSE
'8.50
'8.00
ELRNF
Elron Electronics
NASDAQ
'10.50
'10.50
'0.00
TAD
Tadiran
NYSE
'26.38
'25.38
5 1.00
CMVT
Comverse
NASDAQ
'37.00
'37.50
$0.50
ISL
First Israel Fund NYSE
'11.12
'11.50
'0.38
5 0.13
Source: Allen Olender, Prudential Securities,
West Bloomfield.