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March 16, 2006 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2006-03-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

E

GM Employees

2006

27 Month Smartlease

Cadillac

$249°°

$2, 906 Due at Signing

Non-GM Employees

27 Month Smartlease

$2 9 9b o

Stock 189080 2.8L,. V-6. Automatic, Traction Control
rinke.cadillac.com/cadillac_as_specials.aspx

$2, 930 Due at Signing

24 mo. one time vn 74
lease payment of .'"ly I ID I

BREAK:

GM Employees

27 Month Smartlease

$35900
$2, 999 Due at Signing

24 mo. one time
lease payment of

$10,975

2006

Cadillac
STS

Non-GM Employees

27 Month Smartlease

$429")
$2, 999 Due at Signing

24 mo. one time
lease payment of

$12 811

Stock 186615. All Wheel Drive.

Visit our web site: www.rinkecadillac.com for all of our specials

RINKE CADILLAC

Expect More. We Deliver!

1-696 & VAN DYKE • (586)758-1800

If traveling west on 1-696, exit Hoover,follow Service Drive to Rinke Cadillac. If travelling east on I-696,
exit Van Dyke: take the second bridge past Van Dyke over expressway to Rinke Cadillac.

Payments based on 27-month GMAC Smartlease. One time payments based on 24 months.
Plus tax, title and registration. 10,000 miles per year. 25 cents per mile over. Subject to approved credit.

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12

March 16 2006

Global Recognition
Spencer M. Partrich set out to save a
photographic collection that docu-
ments a turning point in the Middle
East ("Moments In Time Jan. 27,
2005, page 25). His endeavors are
beginning to spread global admira-
tion for a photojournalist who worked
without much attention or the acclaim
he is now achieving, nearly 20 years
after his death.
A selection of more than 100 res-
cued works entitled "The Forgotten
Photographs: The Work of Paul
Goldman from 1943-1961, from the
Collection of Spencer M. Partrich"
opened in London last week. The
exhibit debuted in Tel Aviv, more than
a year ago, followed by the U.S. pre-
miere in West Bloomfield and show
dates in Palm Beach and New York
City
"We felt fortunate to have rescued
the negatives:' Partrich said, "and
wanted to learn as much as we could
about the man behind the shutter. We
had a sense from the start that this
was something significant to pre-
serve
For more information, visit www.
paulgoldmanphotographs.com .

Sentence Stayed
The sentence of London Mayor Ken
Livingstone for his February 2005
remarks to a Jewish newspaper
reporter was suspended by Great.
Britain's High Court pending appeal
("From Censure to Seeds," March
2, 2006, page 5). Livingstone was to
start a four-week paid suspension
from office on March 1 for compar-
ing Oliver Finegold of the Evening
Standard to a Nazi concentration
camp guard. The suspension order
was stayed the day before it took
effect.
Referring to the appointed,
three-member Adjudication Panel
for England that handed down his
sentence, Livingstone said: "Three
members of a body that no one has
ever elected should not be allowed
to overturn the votes of millions of
Londoners."
The Board of Deputies of British
Jews filed a complaint against the
mayor with the Standards Board in
December. In February 2006, the
Adjudication Panel for England, a
subpanel of the Standards Board,
determined that the mayor's code of
conduct had been breached and that
Livingstone had brought his office
into disrepute when he acted in an
"unnecessarily insensitive" manner.

Jericho Jail Raided
Jerusalem/JTA — Israeli commandos
stormed a West Bank prison, seeking
to detain a terrorist whom Palestinian
officials had pledged to release. At
least two Palestinians were killed in
shootouts during Tuesday's raid on
the Jericho prison. The raid was aimed
at transferring PFLP leader Ahmed
Sa'adat and five of his comrades into
Israeli custody.
Sa'adat's terrorist cell carried out
the 200. 1 assassination of Israeli
Tourism Minister Rehavam Ze'evi.
They have been jailed in Jericho
under U.S. and U.K. supervision, but
Palestinian Authority and Hamas
officials-recently said they•planned to
release Sa'adat. The foreign guards left
Jericho earlier Tuesday after receiv-
ing warnings that they could come
under attack from Palestinians intent
on releasing the prisoners, and secu-
rity sources said the Israeli raid was
intended to prevent a jailbreak.
Sa'adat told Al Jazeera in a jailhouse
telephone interview that he would
fight to the death rather than sur-
render to Israel. Angry Palestinians
briefly kidnapped an American teach-
er in the West Bank city of Jenin, while
other Palestinians torched American-
and British-owned buildings in the
Gaza Strip. The United States called
for both sides to show restraint.

Slaughterhouse Violations
New York/JTA — A kosher slaughter-
house in Iowa violated animal cruelty
laws, according to an internal report
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Government inspectors also were
faulted for sleeping on the job as well
as playing video games, making faulty
inspections, taking gifts of meat and
failing to rectify sanitation issues at
the AgriProcessors plant, the New York
Times reported.
The plant raised the hackles of
animal rights activists in 2004 when
a videotape by People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals showed work-
ers pulling out animals' tracheas after
their throats had been cut, leaving
them staggering around as they tried
to bellow in pain. The plant later
changed its practices. The Agriculture
Department suspended one of its
inspectors for two weeks and issued
warning letters to two others, a
spokesman told the Times, but Iowa
officials did not find prosecutable
offenses.

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