Cauley Cars
Go
C
CSLIAP A
.
PROW
Purchase*
ith Vehicle
W
That's Because They're
Priced To Move!
Model 0E610
Stk. #308
'94 CAVALIER
COUPE
* 24
99oo Month
Lease
4 Wheel ABS, Air, Stereo, Auto., Plus Much More!
Stk. #164
'94 CORSICA
You
Pay $ 1
2 5 584t
Air, Automatic, ABS,
Airbag, Stereo, Plus Much More!
'93 BLAZER TAHOE
4X4 4 DOOR DEMO
Stk. #13891
Was $23,247
You $18 5495 t
Pa y
4 Wheel ABS, LOADED!
'94 CORVETTE
COUPE *
24
$399oo Month
LOADED!
Several in stock.
Stk. #386
Lease
Jack
Cauley
Ci.r7 CHEVROLET
Geo
U1
ORCHARD LAKE RD.
CC
LU
Between 14 Mile & 15 Mile
855.9700
LU
F-
HOURS: Mon. & Thurs. 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Tues., Wed., Fri. 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
GMAC SMARTLEASE APPROVED CREDIT REQUIRED, 15,000 MI. PER YEAR 30,000 MI. TOTAL ALLOWED 00.10 PER MILE OVER 30,000 MI. MUST ADD 4%
USE TAX, LICENSE PLATE AND $1,000.00 CAP. COST REDUCTION. CORVETTE $2,000 CAP. COST REDUCTION, 24,000 MILES TOTAL ALLOWED, 150 PER MILE
OVER.TOTAL OF PAYMENTS X 24. OPTION TO PURCHASE AT END OF LEASE, LESSEE RESPONSIBLE FOR EXCESS WEAR AND TEAR.
** Requires Ameritech activation through our dealership. tMan. rebate already deducted, just add 4% sales tax, & license/title fee.
Religious Freedom
Hailed By Groups
Washington (JTA) — Jewish
groups joined religious
organizations from all
corners of American society
in hailing President Clin-
ton's signing of the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act
this week at the White
House.
At a festive ceremony on
the lawn of the Old Ex-
ecutive Office Building on
Tuesday, Clinton signed the
bill making it harder for the
government to infringe upon
the free exercise of religion.
"We all have a shared
desire here to protect
perhaps the most precious of
all American liberties, re-
ligious freedom," Mr. Clin-
ton said, flanked by Vice
President Al Gore.
The new law honors "the
principle that our laws and
institutions should not
impede or hinder, but rather
should protect and preserve
fundamental religious liber-
ties," Mr. Clinton told the
crowd, which included re-
ligious leaders and members
of Congress.
"This is a proud and
auspicious day for freedom of
religion and freedom of cons-
cience in this country," said
Rabbi Moshe Sherer, presi-
dent of the fervently or-
thodox Agudath Israel of
America.
A broad coalition of 68 re-
ligious and civil liberties
groups worked for more than
three years in a massive
effort to push the bill
through Congress and onto
the president's desk for his
signature.
Major Jewish organiza-
tions joined the effort, which
was unprecedented in its
membership of groups repre-
senting various faiths and
beliefs.
Mr. Clinton thanked the
organization, called the Co-
alition for the Free Exercise
of Religion, for the "central
role" it played in drafting
and passing the legislation.
The coalition is proof that
"the power of God is such
_that even in the legislative
'process miracles can
happen," Mr. Clinton said,
drawing laughter from the
crowd.
Due in large part to the co-
alition's efforts, the bill was
approved unanimously in
the House of Represent-
atives in May, and passed by
a 97-3 margin in the Senate
in October.
The act in effect reversed a
1990 Supreme Court ruling
that made it easier for states
to pass laws banning certain
religious practices.
The case, Oregon
Employment Division vs.
Smith, forbade the use of the
hallucinogen peyote in Na-
tive American religious
practices.
Jewish groups joined the
religious community in
deploring the decision as a
serious infringement of their
First Amendment rights.
Since the Smith decision,
for example, Orthodox Jews
have been required in some
instances to submit to
autopsies against their re-
ligious convictions.
The Jewish community
reacted ecstatically to the
bill's signing.
Rabbi David Saperstein,
director of the Religious Ac-
Henry Siegman:
Director of AJ Congress.
tion Center of Reform
Judaism, called it "the most
important religious freedom
bill of our lifetimes."
"By creating a statutory
right to free exercise of re-
ligion, the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act
restores free exercise to its
rightful place as first among
all other First Amendment
rights," Rabbi Saperstein, a
leader in the movement for
the bill's passage, said at a
press conference after the
ceremony.
Henry Siegman, executive
director of the American
Jewish Congress, told
reporters that the act was
"the single most important
piece of legislation since the
adoption of civil rights."
The bill's sponsors were
Rep. Charles Schumer,
D-N.Y., and Sen. Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass.