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November 29, 1996 - Image 176

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-11-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

C

r

I

f

,50-ary.e

itv fifAte

for /14kAiN cat iefm

rap\ k5

VAt

Saab

r\ o,ber or\

t4f•5

Lease a '97 Saab 900 S
3 Door

$279*

J45f
.4

e.

o \ e of our

Lease a '97 Saab 900 S
Convertible

989*

36 Months

Tortuous Decision

36 Months

11.-‘ fr ess iu e

Lease a '97 Saab
9000 CS

$419*

36 Months

According to a recent report by the

Insurance Institute for Highway

Safety, the Saab 9000 has the lowest

driver-fatality rate of any car in the

study. In addition, the Saab 900 5-

door scored best among all mid-size sedans for injury loss in a report by the Highway Loss Data Institute. These

kinds of results spring from a design philosophy that emphasizes safety in unpredictable real-world situations

rather than controlled crash tests. And right now, our entire line of cars is available at prices that are compatible

with real-life budgets. For complete lease details and a

test-drive, see Glassman Saab.

k•-

itvfl IOur Owl\ road. SAAB

• Subject to credit approval, dealer prices may vary. You must place order or take delivery by December 6, 1996. Terms apply to 1997 900S 3 Door w/ 5 speed and sunroof, based on MSRP of
523,325 (including destination). 1997 9005 Convertible ve/ 5 speed based on MSRP of 535,520 (including destination) and 9000CS w/ 5 speed, leather/Power seat and sunroof, MSRP of 535,430
(including destination). Lease payment for the 9005 3 Door is 5279 for 36 months with 51199 down. 900S Convertible is 5389 for 36 months with 51999 down, and 9000CS is 5419 with 51999
down. Lessee is resp. for 1st month's payment, ref. sec. dep., down pymt., and 5450 acq. fee plus 6% tax. 12,000 miles per year allowed, 154 per mile over and for excess wear. Title and regis-
tration tees extra.

Facing potential suicide bombs, Israel's Supreme
Court expands the boundary of "permitted torture"
while civil libertarians reluctantly agree.

ERIC SILVER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

T

he main thing about the Is-
raeli debate on torture is
that there is no debate. As
with nuclear weapons, this
most argumentative of nations
prefers to leave life-and-death de-
cisions to "those who know best."
In the past weeks, the
Supreme Court has twice autho-
rized the internal security ser-
vice to use harsh "physical
pressure" in interrogating sus-
pected Palestinian terrorists, one
from Islamic Jihad, the other
from Hamas. Both were said to
be withholding information that
could prevent future terror at-
tacks.
The country has been under a
state of alert for more than a

investigators about projected sui-
cide raids against the Shalom
Tower, the tallest building in Tel-
Aviv, shopping malls and buses.
Apparently, security still
wants to know who the bombers
are and whether they have fil-
tered through the porous pre-
1967 border. After reviewing
classified material, a panel of
three generally liberal judges ac-
cepted that such information
could "prevent a real tragedy,
save human lives and thwart
grave attacks."
In what is defined as a "tick-
ing bomb" situation, the court
permitted the security forces to
use physical pressure within
(broadly defined) legal limits.

Glassman Saab

Telegraph • At The Tel-12 Mall • Southfield
& Thursday 9-9
810-354-3300 Monday
1-800-354-5558
Tues-Wed-Fri 9-6

Sat 10-4

NoommINMINIMMMINSIIIMIW

ckmation. to

oiNA

fe•ok&

cr dofiLltion/

OW('

Your Tribute Gift helps the agency serve people of all ages,
lifestyles and circumstances.

To phone in a Tribute Gift or for convenient Tribute Order
Forms, please call (810) 559-1500.

JFS Program and Name Funds are also available to support
specific agency services. Please call 559-1500 for additional
information.

Minimum Tribute Card donation remains only $5.00/card.

110

JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE
24123 Greenfield Road • Southfield, MI 48075 • (810) 559-1500
6960 Orchard Lake Road • Suite 202 • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 • (810) 737-5055

A Palestinian man asks an Israeli

policeman to return his identity
document.

month following reports that Is-
lamic Jihad was planning to take
spectacular revenge on the first
anniversary of the assassination
of its exiled leader, Fathi Shka-
ki, by gunmen assumed to be
working for the Mossad, Israel's
CIA.
The security services ac-
knowledged that the arrest six
weeks ago of Mohammed
Hamadan, a West Bank Jihad
organizer, was behind these pre-
cautions. He is said to have-told

These included "shaking,"which
at least once has killed a pris-
oner.
The case of Khader Mubarak,
identified as a "very senior ac-
tivist in Hamas's military wing
in the Hebron region," was less
cut and dried. The judges ques-
tioned some of the interrogation
techniques, like blindfolding him
with a sack, and ordered that his
handcuffs should not be so tight
that they caused him pain. But
they agreed that the prisoner
could be kept pinioned for hours
on end, crouched in an uncom-
fortable position with his arms

DECISION page 112

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