This Week $100 MILLION from page 19 NEW 2004 REND 1 GNIS$19/261 0% APR FINANCING AVAILABLE s LEASE 01— mo. Total Due $2,179.01 or less!! 2004 GRAND A S 2 SEDA Auto, air, leather trim, chrome tech 16-inch cast alum. wheels, am/fm stereo/CD, Monsoon 8-speaker stereo, power sunroof, bucket seats, rear defroster. Prices are plus tax, title, destination, rebates to dealer. All leases are plus tax, 24-36 mos., on approved credit, lessee responsible for excess wear and tear, 12,000 miles per year, .20 cents/mile for over mileage. all ads are GMS pricing-rates may apply. leases assume 6MAC lease loyalty. No payment for 90 days on retail purchases only. Sale ends 12/1/03. BUICK The Spirit of American Style FUEL FOR THE SOUL Significant Challenge The audience, which buzzed with elec- trified chatter after the speech, seemed to feel the same way. Many rushed the stage to shake Steinhardt's hand. Passing out flyers outside the audito- rium, Jewish students stated that they would raise $500,000 for Steinhardt's new fund. Federation leaders largely praised the initiative but noted that the challenge is significant. They rejected the idea that the appeal might undermine their own fund-raising efforts. Robert Schrayer, vice chairman of the United Jewish Communities, the federation umbrella organization, sounded a note of optimism. WE ARE PROFESSIONAL GRADE!' 14505 Michigan Ave. • Dearborn 3 miles E. of Southfield Aptly for young Jews. We will lose the power of the Jewish people — educators, philanthropists, federations, the State of Israel — acting in unison to secure the Jewish future. He said each federation should view Birthright Israel as not merely a national initiative, but also a local Jewish identity-building program. The federated network raised more than $300 million for Israel's emer- gency needs last year, but has raised only "a small fraction of that amount" for Birthright, he said. Steinhardt said his agenda would focus on the "centrality of the State of Israel for the Jewish soul," the "pre- eminence of Jewish peoplehood as a unifying ideal," the principle of chari- ty and the "imperative of a Jewish education." "Our survival depends on the next generation being educated," Steinhardt said. OPEN SATURDAY 10 3 - Harlene Appelman: Inspired by speech "Can he do it? Yeah, I think there's a large amount of money available in the American Jewish community for a cause like this," Schrayer said. John Ruskay, executive vice presi- dent and CEO of the-UJA-Federation of New York, praised the effort but took a wait-and-see approach. "We need to have more details" on what such a plan would entail before commenting on its chances for suc- cess, Ruskay said. As far as Steinhardt is concerned, the project is an imperative. The Jewish future of our children is at stake, he said. "We owe our chil- dren nothing less." L] IN Editor Robert A. Sklar and JN Staff Writer Sharon Zuckerman contributed to this report. NEW 2004 NISSAN SENTRA 1.8S • Voucher For Jewish Learning NOW $.1 if 58p allege Grad < Specia l! • 1 1 /28 2003 20 *Plus tax, title, lic., dest. All rebates to dealer. Sale ends 12/6/03 15101 Michigan Ave.. Dearborn (2 miles E. of Southfield Fwy ) * 313446-0049 768 Michael Steinhardt also envisioned the creation of a Newborn Gift of the Jewish People, a voucher given to all Jewish families upon the birth or adoption of a child to be used for early childhood education and later toward a Birthright Israel trip. The idea would boost commu- nity networking because entire Jewish communities would have to upgrade outreach to identify new- born Jewish children. "Today, only 15 to 20 percent of American Jews have any federation involvement," Steinhardt said. "The Newborn Gift has the capac- ity to increase substantially the numbers of families which the Federations reach." He added, "The Newborn Gift becomes a very real symbol of our love for Klat Yisrael, our joy in being Jewish. Parents who might not have considered raising their child in a Jewish way may becat- alyzed to explore their identity."