his Week 2003 Nissan Sentra GXE Everywhere Auto, power windows, locks, & mirrors, AM/FM/CD, keyless entry. Chabad hosting 39 mo. lease • SIGN & DRIVE! $0 MONEY DUE seders worldwide. Stk. #711108 /mo. 248.223.8288 A Mon. & Thurs. 8:30 - 9:15 Tues., Wed., Fri 8:30 - 6:15 24625 W. 12 Mile • Southfield www.tamaroff.com A MEIN.. OF THE *Lease price plus tax, title & plate. Must be eligible for Nissan owner Loyalty for lease price shown above. All rebates to dealer. Must take delivery out of stock. Sale ends 04/21/03. Excludes Murano & 350Z. 'TAMAR° F F AUTOMOTIVE FAMILY • • - Oil Change ..sprin gtinie 11Pop The Hood Special I Special $89" $2395 e egraph . All Credit Cards Accepted HOURS: Mon. & Thurs. 7 am-7 pm Tues., Wed. & Fri. 7 am-6 pm • Saturday 10 am-3 pm I Service includes lube, oil & filter, up to 5 qts. of oil. Diesels are extra. Other exclusions may apply. _600 $1795 2 121 • Perform Coolant Flush I I • • • • Inspect Electrical Systems • Inspect All Fluid Levels ■ ■ Must present coupon _ 1 •111.0 • e • ISULINIECE A _ ay this festival of Freedom inspire a time of shalom. "And I will bring you out... and I will deliver you... a'nd I will redeem you... and I will take you to Me as a people." —Shemot 6:6-7 Hadassah is the largest women's, largest Zionist, and largest Jewish organization in the United States and has been helping Israel since 1912. To JOIN call 800.664.JOIN www.hadassah.org or e-mail: memberinfo@hadassah.org or your local chapter: 248.683.5030 4/18 2003 16 ■ $ 74T I & Conditions Expires 4/30/03 I 'Must present coupon • ■ © 2003 Hadassah. The Women's Zionist Organization of America, Inc. Hadassah is a registered trademark of Hadassah. The Women's Zionist Organization of America, Inc. ■ 15 I 00 Inspect Battery & Alternator +tax ■ Inspect Belts & Hoses ■ Expires 4/30/03 . 704970 mong the 2,000 commu- nal Passover seders spon- sored by Chabad- Lubavitch organizations this year — from Peru to Zimbabwe — were several in the Detroit area, including an April 17 seder at the Shul-Chabad Lubavitch in West Bloomfield. "Our seder was planned for our families who may not have held their own seders," Rabbi Kasriel Shemtov said. But what we found was that many who signed up would have conducted their own seders, but wanted the opportunity to partici- pate in a real, traditional seder, with all the insight and the learning expe- riences that come with it." Some 450 rabbinical students joined rabbis throughout the world in seders as large as the 1,200-partic- ipant event held in Nepal. Chabad seders were run for both American and Israeli military service personnel and on campuses through- out the country, including the University of Michigan Chabad House in Ann Arbor and the Chabad House of Western Michigan in Grand Rapids. "This is a time when university students are not home and Chabad's ability to create a warm, home-like atmosphere where students feel corn- fortable joining a seder is invalu- able," said Rabbi Menachem Schmidt, a member of Chabad's National Campus Commission. "Many would not have attended a seder if not for the seder at Chabad," said Rabbi Alter Goldstein of the 100 students attending each of the two seders sponsored by U-M Chabad House this year. Four years ago, Rabbi Goldstein and his wife Chanchi joined the rabbi's parents, Rabbi Aharon and Esther Goldstein of the Ann Arbor Chabad House, in a now 28-year-old tradition of hold- ing communal seders. With the Goldsteins at the seder, and with some members of the Ann Arbor community joining in, Rabbi Alter Goldstein said, "it makes it more a family feeling." ❑ — She'll Liebman Doifinan, staff' writer