MICHIGAN'S #1 LEXUS DEALER *Large Selection * Free Pick Up & Delivery * Free Lexus Loan Cars Cuts Portend A Sorry State 1997 LS 400 $684°° t JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT 36 Month Lease 4y The All New 1997 ES 300 LX Ready 450 for 4x4 Base Price $2 Immediate Delivery! 9500 Less Than '96 Models. We're Coming to Southfield! Summer of '97 36 mo. closed-end lease based on approved credit. 12,000 miles w/15e per mi. over, S450 acq. fee, 1st mo. pymt., S3,000 down, tax, plates & title due at inception. MSRP S58,477, S500 refundable sec. deposit. Lessee resp. for excess wear & tear. Purchase option at lease end 532,747.12. (810) 726-7900 OUT OF TOWN CALLS ACCEPTED 1-800-486-5253 A DIVISION OF THE MEADE GROUP M-59 (Hall Road) at Schoenherr across from Lakeside Mall I p w w .I.M .N RIFM* 10 , For insurance call SY WARSHAWSKY, C.L.U. 7071 Orchard Lake Road Suite 110 In the J&S Office Bldg. W. Bloomfield, MI 48322 (810) 626-2652 ‘ [ STAT E FARM Office Phone tib) ‘ WAD) L4 I SURANCE N See me for car, home, life and health insurance Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there. C/) w [... T HE MOST EXCITING w KNITTING & NEEDLEPOINT CD cc LIJ LLJ Advertise in our new Entertainment Section! Call The Sales Department (810) 354-7123 Dd. 209 88 THE JEWISH NEWS Accents In Needlepoint Contemporary Designs 042 626-3 Rociieiie iinbees Knit, Knit, Knit 8 5 5-2 1 14 In Orchard Mall West Bloomfield • 29260 FRANKLIN ROAD AT THE CLAYMOOR SOUTHFIELD, MI 48034 810 I 358.3191 ■ Doing more with less is a handy slogan for politicians on the stump, but it often reflects wish- ful thinking and political artifice more than responsible leader- ship. Increasingly, the frenzy of budget cutting in the Republican- led Congress and the Democrat- ic administration is leaving agencies unable to carry out crit- ical missions. Nowhere is that more evident than at the State Department, which already has curtailed diplomatic activity around the world. And with more cuts likely, some Jewish leaders worry that it will be harder for Washington to play an active leadership role on the international stage in the years ahead. The continuing squeeze on State also will in- crease the pressure on Israel's $3 billion-plus in aid — a growing proportion of a shrinking pie that also could be threatened by re- cent developments in the region. Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., two of the most thoughtful and respected congressional voices on foreign policy, recently issued a bipartisan appeal to the Clinton administration to "reverse the decade-long erosion inlinterna- tional affairs spending." The letter was prompted by re- ports that the Office of Manage- ment and Budget was planning to propose for next year's budget the same level of funding as the current fiscal year — which al- most guarantees a significant cut, since the Republican Congress is sure to take the administration's figures and start hacking away. Reportedly, the administration and the budget agency have agreed on a higher request, thanks to a personal appeal to the president by outgoing Secre- tary of State Warren Christo- pher. But the broader issue stands; Mr. Lieberman and Mr. Lugar are concerned about a steady ero- sion in U.S. foreign affairs fund- ing that already has forced the State Department to close em- bassies and consulates and slash personnel. "If we continue to emasculate our foreign affairs budget because of budgetary pressures or the be- lief that our stakes in the world are significantly less than in the past, we will almost surely pay a price in terms of our security and prosperity," wrote the senators. The ongoing slide in funding comes at a time when the de- mands of foreign policy are be- coming more extensive and far more complex.