RINKE CADILLAC 86 Years And Still Delivering WASHINGTON THROUGH BREAK GM Pull-Ahead Program Is Back! Call for details! 3-YEAR GM EMPLOYEE SMARTLEASE 2004 CTS $2 MO. 52,970 due at signing' 9 *No with security deposit required. Stk. # 123370 3-YEAR NON-GM EMPLOYEE SMARTLEASE 369. MO. with 52,951 due at signing 2004 Sedan Deville security deposit required. $399 ,V1 3-YEAR GM EMPLOYEE SMARTLEASE Fall Marketing Edition 2 .53,078 due at signing' *No security deposit required. Stk. # 135913 $479 hl 3-YEAR NON-GM EMPLOYEE SMARTLEASE t C i il i3,133 due at signing *No security deposit required. 3-YEAR GM EMPLOYEE SMARTLEASE $396 2004 SRX. Stk. # 117972 , '2i2,991 due at signing. ,,,,,n *No security deposit required. $479 IV 3 - YEAR NON - GM EMPLOYEE SMARTLEASE *It3,148 due at signing *No security deposit required. *GMAC Smartlease 36 months. Plate or transfer fee due on delivery. State Tax Additional. Mileage limitation of 12,000 per year. 20c per mile excess. Lessee has option to purchase at lease end for pre-determined amount. To get total payments, multiply by the number of months. Must be eligible for Conquest on CTS and GM employee must be eligible for the GM emplyee down payment assistance program. Programs good thru 11/30/03. RINKE CADILLAC 7 .: 9/etejzai dcwee 7/4/r /7 1-696 AT VAN DYKE0 (586) 758-1800 If traveling west on 1-696, exit Hoover, follow Service Drive to RINKE. If traveling east on 1-696, exit Van Dyke; take the second bridge past Van Dyke over expressway to RINKE. Open Monday 8-9 p.m., Tuesday 8-6 p.m., Wednesday 8-6 p.m., Thursday 8-9 p.m., Friday 8-6 p.m. h. A • 101'"I'M Introduced to the world of ORT by their daughters, Andi Wolfe and Patti Aaron, Dan and Betty Kahn immediately recognized ORT's value not only to Israel, but also other countries that have few sources of support for technical and vocational education. "Teaching for independence" is what the Kahns believe is at the core of ORT's global importance. fi,{ 0406,0** 2003 20 on page 19 a g M,M1 -4 1,40 ,;,v 4Ac na k, ifitittliK3"4.% The Kahns became Baroness de Gunzbourg Society members to affirm their commitment to ORT students' future. "While discussing our estate plan, we realized that ORT has grown dramatically more important to us as we came to understand the remarkable contribution ORT (Organization for Educational Resources and Technological Training) is making in 60 countries and to thousands of lives every year. "We can't think of a better way to help others build upon our good fortune and leave a legacy of love, giving and caring to our family and community". another, instead of looking more broadly at the interests and obliga- tions of the U.N." Often, he said, "countries with good relations with the U.S. vote for these resolutions because they didn't realize anybody was watching." Using prominent lawmakers to deliver the message, he said, may change that perception. The message is "they should not cross the U.S. at the U.N. just to advance their own parochial interests," he said. The AJC/congressional effort is tar- geting Latin American countries in particular. Schifter said other lawmak- ers have signaled an interest in partici- pating, including Sen. Jon Corzine, D-N.J., and Sen. Norm Coleman, R- Minn. "These countries vote for these things automatically, because they think there's no cost," said an official with another Jewish organization. "What these legislators are doing is saying, 'Hey, we're watching you, and you could pay a price if you go along with these things." Jewish Agenda With the congressional session in its last frantic days, pro-Israel groups are working to make sure some of their pet proposals do not get lost in the shuffle. This week, a House-Senate confer- ence committee was slated to take up a foreign operations bill that includes — in the Senate version — a little provision addressing growing anti- Semitism around the world. The _ amendment, by Sen. George Voin- ovich, R-Ohio, would require the State Department to include informa- tion about anti-Semitism in its Annual Report on International Religious Freedom. A broad coalition of Jewish groups, including the Anti-Defamation League, the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, NCSJ, the Orthodox Union and B'nai B'rith this week wrote to the conferees, urging them to retain the Senate language. "Spotlighting the problem of anti- Semitism in a U.S. government report would take our own government's monitoring to a new level, and send important signals to others about how seriously our government is taking the issue," said Stacy Burdett, assistant director of the Washington office of the ADL. ❑