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January 19, 1996 - Image 54

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-01-19

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

66

It gets up and boogies when it 99
needs to get up and boogie.

You may not sit at home thinking
about RPIVIs, fuel injection and
torque-heavy tuning. And that's fine,
because a bunch of Saturn engineers
already did. Good thing, too. It
means that Saturns can really get up
and go. Especially the ones with the
available dual-overhead-cam engine.
Great for those hairpin turns on
your favorite stretch of road. And
even better when you find yourself
in the passing lane. Next to an eighteen-wheeler. Whose
driver seems to be having a bad day. Hope to see you soon.

ALL NEW
1996 SATURN SL

.

$ I 9932/mo., tax included

$1,050 down and upfront fees. $462.32 for first month's payment and sec. dep. Total $1,512.32
plus license and title. Total of monthly payments is $7,175.52. Purchase option price at lease end
is $6,561. 36 month lease w/ 15,000 miles/yr.

SATURN OF SOUTHFIELD
29929 Telegraph Rd.
(810) 354-6001

A DIFFERENT KIND

SATURN OF FARMINGTON HILLS
24730 Haggerty Rd.
(810) 473-7220

of COMPANY. A DIFFERENT KIND of CAR.

Dr. Donald L. Kay, F.A.C.01

is pleased to announce the opening of

his new practice limited to

Weight Management

Diet and Pharmacologic Appetite Suppression
on an individual basis with an Internal
Medicine Specialist with 35 years experience

Cr)

LLJ

Cr)

Office Hours By Appointment Only

(810) 932-2911

26699 West Twelve Mile. Rd., Suite 201, Southfield

CC
}--

LLJ

u

54

Get Results...
Advertise in our new Entertainment Section!

E jaa§iiNEws (810) 354-6060

Jewish Groups
Happy —For Now

Jewish groups got their hearts'
desire when President Bill Clin-
ton vetoed a welfare reform pack-
age that, Jewish leaders contend,
would throw millions of women
and children into poverty.
In his veto message, Mr. Clin-
ton agreed that the current sys-
tem is flawed, but insisted that
the Republicans' "Personal Re-
sponsibility and Work Opportu-
nity Act of 1995 ... does too little
to move people from welfare to
work. It is burdened with deep
budget cuts and structural
changes that fall short of real re-
form.'
The Republican plan proposed
some $60 billion in cuts over the
next seven years, and an end to
the guarantee of federal help for
needy children.
The presidential action blocks
controversial provisions that
would allow religious institutions

to provide direct social services
using money funneled to states
in the form of block grants — a
serious breach of the church-state
wall, Jewish leaders argue.
"We have been .!oncerned
about the impact on immigrants,
and the fact that the legislation
does not contribute to self-suffi-
ciency," said Richard Foltin, leg-
islative director of the American
Jewish Committee, which had
pressed for a presidential veto.
"It's not at all clear if there will
be a welfare bill in this Congress."
But even if the veto results in
a postponement of welfare reform
legislation until next year, he
said, the dangerous church-state
language is sure to return.
"This issue will resurface every
time there is new social service
legislation," he said. "It's a threat
we're going to continue to see in
different variations."

Bosnia
Briefing

The American Jewish Congress
— a group that has consistently
supported strong American in-
tervention in the former Yu-
- goslavia — received an update
directly from the administration's
top Bosnia negotiator.
In a conference call to the
group's leaders, Richard Hol-
brooke made a strong case for ac-
tive intervention in areas where
American national interests
could be at stake, including
Bosnia and the Middle East.
"He indicated that we must
send American troops wherever
it is necessary to preserve our in-
fluence in world affairs," said Phil
Baum, the AJ Congress execu-

five director. "He was quite pos-
itive about that; by implication,
he would support sending troops
to help bring about a Syrian-
Israeli treaty."
The AJ Congress delegation
expressed concern that the set-
tlement worked out in Ohio late
last year might prevent war
crimes trials against Serb offi-
cials responsible for mass killings
of civilians; Mr. Holbrooke said
that he believed that trials would
still take place, and that the in-
clusion of the idea of punishing
war criminals in the Dayton
accords was a significant advance
in international diplomacy.



Publicity
Deadlines

The normal deadline for local news and publicity items
is noon Thursday, eight days prior to issue date. The
deadline for birth announcements is 10 a.m. Monday,
four days prior to issue date; out-of-town obituaries,
10 a.m. Tuesday, three days prior to issue date.

All material must be typewritten, double-spaced, on
81 /2 x 11 paper and include the name and daytime tele-
phone number of sender.

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