LEASE PULL AHEAD IS BACK! COME TO AUDETTE CADILLAC TO GET OUT OF YOUR GMAC LEASE EARLY! $29 50% DOWN PAYMENT MATCH UP TO $2000** not endorsed any specific language. A leading Reform group praised the Massachusetts decision. So did the Anti- Defamation League, which has been working closely with gay rights groups on new hate crime legislation. "The issue is discrimination and preju- dice," said Abraham Foxman, ADEs national &rector. "It's an issue of fairness; whether or not one likes the lifestyle or agrees with it is irrelevant." Religious marriage is an issue for reli- gious authorities, he said, but "not recog- nizing this as a marriage in the secular world — for death benefits, life benefits and the like — is discrimination." Outside the Jewish community, the rhetoric was more strident, pointing to what is certain to be a take-no-prisoners debate that may dominate the upcoming election year. Gary Bauer, a former GOP presidential contender and religious ri ght spokesman, called for Massachusetts citi- zens to rise up. Conservative groups are pressing the GOP Congressional leadership to make passage of a "defense of marriage" consti- tutional amendment their top priority for 2004. Syria Sanctions With a long-delayed Syria sanctions bill on its way to the White House, pro- Israel groups are hoping to up the pres- sure on President George W. Bush to actually implement the legislation and take steps to make it more effective. But in the Middle East, Syrian President Bashar Assad is already work- ing to blunt the impact of what even supporters concede will be mostly sym- bolic sanctions. And the Europeans, eager to make some money off the con- troversy, are giving the young dictator a hand. The new law, which the administra- tion initially opposed, threatens a variety of sanctions if Syria doesn't stop its sup- port for terrorism, its weapons of mass destruction program and unless it starts pi lling out of Lebanon. But it also includes broad presidential waiver authority — generous in the House-passed bill, even more expansive in the final version, thanks to an amendment by Sen. Richard Lugar, R- ind. And in the end, Assad there's precious little to sanction, said Shoshana Bryen, special projects director for the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. "To the extent we have cut off various economic avenues with Syria, who cares?" she said. Weapons and "dual use" exports to Syria are already prohibited, she said; the Syrian national airline does not fly to this country, negating another of the potential sanctions. And the Europeans, she said, are "already out there, signing new economic agreements with the Syrians." To make the Syria sanctions act work, she said, the president will have to avoid the temptation of a waiver, and he will have to press the Europeans hard not to undercut the limited sanctions. "The way to make this effective is to sanction the European companies that do business with the Syrian government by not permitting them to business with the U.S. government," she said. But Bryen said that even with the big loopholes, the Syria sanctions act was a worthwhile exercise. "It's a positive for the Congress to be on record recognizing the damage Syria does in the world," she said. "The section of the legislation which is a description of Syrian misdeeds is outstanding. But the sanctions we have to apply are very limited." Holocaust Meeting Representatives of 15 countries will be in Washington next week for the annual meeting of the International Task Force for Holocaust Education, Remembrance and Research, under the auspices of the State Department and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. The meeting is especially important this year because mounting worldwide bias against Israel has prevented the Jewish state from taking its usual role in promoting Holocaust education and remembrance. "Yad Vashem can't handle the interna- tional issues because of Israel's terrible sit- uation in Europe," said a longtime Holocaust activist. "It's been robbed — unfairly — of the moral capital to han- dle these issues, so the burden is falling on the Holocaust Museum here." And_ the current leadership of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, the presi- dentially appointed panel that oversees the museum, has been shifting its focus from international affairs to Holocaust education in this country. "So this is an enormously valuable conference because it will focus more attention on the worldwide problem, and the important role the museum can play," the observer said. The international task force promotes and helps fund projects in a number of countries, according to museum officials, who cited Lithuania as an example of a country that has significantly improved Holocaust education and remembrance HOLOCAUST MEETING on page 24 * /Mo. 36 Mos. 2004 CTS 398 */Mo. Lease 36 Mos. 2004 DEVILLE FALL EDITION UDETTE BREAK THROUGH 7100 Orchard Lake Road, W. Bloomfield www.audettecadillac.com Mon. & Thurs. till 9; Tues., Wed., Fri. till 6 1-888-920-5417 *12K miles/yr. lease, plus tax, title, plate; all rebates to dealer. Must qualify for employee pricing and GMAC credit. Must qualify for owner Conquest on CTS. $2781 total due for CTS; $3361 total due for DeVille. **Must be GM Employee or Family Member 11/28 2003 23