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July 02, 1993 - Image 52

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-07-02

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

&K J.

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'1

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mo.
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LEASE FOR

1993 ALTIMA GXE

per

Auto. Trans., air conditioning, AM/FM stereo with cassette, cruise, Tilt steering, power
windows, locks & mirrors. Stk. #11301

24 14,995*

MSRP

$16,199

LEASE FOR

1993 MAXIMA GXE

tO DOME $26100"

-Two

per
mo.
24
Months

Mil

Automatic trans., air conditioning, air bag, power mirrors, locks & windows, AM/FM
stereo with cassette. Stk. #11746

pg $17,153

MSRP

$21,460

'Plus tax, title, destination fee, license & DOC tees. "All leases require 1st mo. pymt., DOC, title, license, $350 acq. fee at inception. Pymts. plus applicable taxes. 15,000 miles per year
limit w/150 per mile over at lease end. Altima 48 mo. closed end lease requires $1500 cash down, ref. sec. dep. of $225 w/option to buy at lease end for $7,613.53. Sentra 24 mo.closed
end lease requires rel. sec. dep. of $150 w/oplion to buy at lease end for $8,424.00. Maxima 24 mo. lease requires ref. sec. dep. of $300 w/option to buy at lease end of $13,519.40.
Subject to credit approval, prior sales excluded. Oiler subject to change.

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Vatican-Israel Ties
Seen In A Year

New York (JTA) — Cardinal
John O'Connor, this coun-
try's ranking Catholic au-
thority in the field of Jewish-
Catholic affairs, says he ex-
pects the Vatican to con-
clude negotiations with
Israel and establish full dip-
lomatic relations a year from
now.
"A year from now we
should be very close to an
agreement," Cardnial
O'Connor told the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency after
making a speech to the New
York Board of Rabbis.
"I'd be surprised if a year
from now we weren't all get-
ting ready for a big celebra-
tion," he said.
The official commission
working on the task, which
is composed of Foreign Min-
istry representatives from
both Israel and the Vatican,
is presently meeting in
Jerusalem, he said.
Although Cardinal
O'Connor, who is archbishop
of New York, is not a mem-
ber of that commission, he is
as close to the proceedings as
any other Catholic leader
outside the official delega-
tion.
Cardinal O'Connor, who is
the moderator of Catholic-
Jewish relations on behalf of
the National Conference of
Catholic Bishops, told JTA
that the commission is
presently "working on the
knottiest aspects of it all."
Those issues include access
to all of Jerusalem's holy
places by members of every
religion and what Cardinal
O'Connor termed the "minor
question" of ownership of
property in Jerusalem.
He was likely referring to
St. John's Hospice, a
building that was once
under Greek Orthodox con-
trol and sold to religious
Jews determined to settle in
areas of Jerusalem's Old
City that have not
historically had Jewish
residents.
"I suspect that when the
question of the status of
Jerusalem is resolved, we
will be very close" to the es-
tablishment of diplomatic
relations, said Cardinal
O'Connor.
A Jewish expert on inter-
religious affairs agreed with
his assessment.
"Everything I've heard
from Rome and Israel is that
the talks are substantive
and on track," said Rabbi A.
James Rudin, director of

interreligious affairs at the
American Jewish Corn-
mittee.
"There are some points
that remain to be worked
through, but relations will
be normalized," he said.
"The sticky technical ques-
tions remaining are about
taxation and custodial rights
of property.
"But the strategic
obstacles have been over-
come, and all agree there
should be full and forinal re-
lations," he said.
One indication that the
Catholics expect the issue to
be resolved by next year is
that the International Liai-
son Committee of the official
Catholic-Jewish dialogue
has scheduled its next bian-
nual meeting in Jerusalem,
in May 1994.
The Vatican, which par-
ticipates in the liaison group
with the International Jew-
ish Committee on Inter-
religious Consultations,
would not likely have agreed
to hold the meeting in
Jerusalem if the estab-
lishment of diplomatic rela-
tions were further off.

Immigrants
Launch Protest

Jerusalem (JTA) — More
than 200 recent immigrants
from the former Soviet
Union demonstrated in front
of the Jewish Agency's of-
fices here last week, saying
they desperately needed a
low-cost rental housing pro-
gram, particularly for the
elderly and single-parent
families.
Agency officials who spoke
with the demonstrators said
they were trying to solve the
problem, but that they need-
ed the government to help
fund such a project.
The agency seeks a hous-
ing plan whose estimated
cost is more than half a
billion dollars — beyond the
budgetary reach of the
Agency, said Yehuda
Weinraub, spokesman for
the agency.
A delegation of protestors,
who came to Jerusalem from
around the country and rep-
resented a group called
"Roof for the Needy," met
with Moshe Nativ, the agen-
cy's director-general.
Mr. Nativ "was receptive
and said he recognized the
need for a solution," said Mr.
Weinraub.

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