Compm? A 24600 Grand River Avenue Detroit, Michigan 48219 Reform Movement Issues Conduct Code (313) 531-2600 PROUDLY PRESENTS A TREMENDOUS LEASE OPPORTUNITY A BRAND NEW 1994 SEVILLE SLS '499 45 per month for only 24 months* This lease is an exclusive for read- ers of The Jewish News! Be sure to mention this ad or The Jewish News for this outstanding offer. Closed end lease for qualified customers, lease payment of $499A5 for 24 months, 24,000 mile limitation, 15 cents per mile for excess mileage over 24,000 miles. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end for $22,363A6. Lessee is responsi- ble for excessive wear and tear. Total payment under lease is $11,986.80. Due at lease inception is first month's payment, down payment of $3,225 and refundable security deposit of $500 plus title fees. All taxes included. 1 696 10 MILE '. s 0 . 8WAI 7 MILE 6 MU 5 MILE iii.C.1.4 Eft 111 111111 4 1' At Dreisbach & Sons you're not just a customer, you're family. Cr) w Cr) LU CC LU LU 124 TEL- TWELVE MALL SOUTHFIELD 313 - 355-3660 — San Francisco (JTA) — Stung by accusations of sex- ual misconduct in the rab- binate, the governing body for Reform rabbis has ap- proved what it calls its most stringent ethical guide- lines ever. The new code, which is designed to remove the secrecy that often accom- panies charges of ethical misconduct, was passed by the movement's Central Conference of American Rabbis this summer in Mon- treal at its annual con- ference. The committee made three main changes in its original ethics code, which was last amended in 1991. Under the new rules: • CCAR's national Com- mittee on Ethics and Ap- peals is permitted to in- vestigate a rabbi when it be- lieves an ethical violation has occurred, even if no one has filed a formal complaint. • If a full-scale ethics committee investigation of a rabbi ensues, the com- mittee can recommend that the rabbi be frozen out of the CCAR's placement service. That could seriously limit a rabbi's chances of finding a new pulpit while under investiga- tion of misconduct. • Once a rabbi has been reprimanded or censured, news of the punishment will be printed in the CCAR's monthly newsletter. The newsletter, which goes out to the 1,700 North American Reform rabbis, will not, however, print the nature of the ethical violation. "These are enormous changes," said Rabbi Con- stance Golden, a member of the Committee on Ethics and Appeals who emphasiz- ed the need for greater openness about the in- vestigation process. "There's a big rumor mill out there," said Rabbi Golden, a pulpit rabbi in Philadelphia. "It used to be that the ethics committee couldn't do anything unless there was something in writing. If no one brought it to us, (an ethics violation) would have gone by the wayside." The changes in the code follow a string of highly publicized sexual miscon- duct allegations that have rocked the Reform move- ment — as well as the Catholic Church and several Christian denominations — over the past few years. Before those allegations began to surface, sexual misconduct among clergy was not seen as a major problem, said Rabbi Julie Spitzer, Mid-Atlantic Coun- cil regional director of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations' in Washing- ton, D.C., an organization that represents Reform syn- agogues throughout North' America. "When there were kids in- volved, or gross multiple violations, those things were considered rare, particularly in the Jewish community," said Rabbi Spitzer, also a member of the advisory board of the Center for Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence. "Among religious leaders in America right now," she added, "sexual misconduct is probably the hottest topic." The Rabbinical Code of Ethics — the formal name for the new CCAR Once a rabbi has been reprimanded or censured, news of the punishment will be printed in the CCAR's monthly newsletter. guidelines — includes sec- tions on the "avoidance of commercialism" by con- gregational rabbis to discourage the selling of spiritual services; regula- tions against rabbinic sexual relationships with congrega- tion, staff and other rabbis; and descriptions of how violations of the code will be investigated. Reform rabbis are required to follow all aspects of the code. The recent changes in the code "are in reaction to what has transpired not only in the rabbinate, but in organized religion in gen- eral," said Rabbi Arnold Sher, CCAR director of placement in New York. "The CCAR tried to give more teeth to its ethics code," he said. "The ethics committee can