100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

December 20, 1985 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-12-20

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

'f3

I. 3.)!

3

• ;

8 Friday, December 20, 1985

i

ligg GIS OM gla • MI as

a

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

OE OM MO allIrragoommigoisgymmaamon.

I

I

reg. $1.09

I

89*

1

now

I

limit 3
Exp. 12-31-85

I

LOCAL NEWS

WALDRAK
PHARMACY

I

I

ION NO 11110 NO In an illa nil all taa Oa __

WS 4111 VIM ONO 70 MO 11

Ph
Family Run Pharmacy

KLEENEX TISSUE

175 count
2 ply

OW OWae flg2

I

on your next
prescription or

• FREE. DELIVERY
SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT

Feinstein Will Leave
Federation Next Year

refill from any
pharmacy

KEN JACOBS, R.Ph.

Wayne L. Feinstein, executive
vice president of the Jewish
Welfare Federation of Detroit,
has been appointed chief execu-
tive of the Los Angeles Federa-
tion and will take office late
next summer.
Feinstein's appointment as
executive vice president of the
Greater Los Angeles Jewish
Federation Council was an-
nounced to the Board of Gover-
nors of Detroit's Federation at
its December meeting Wednes-
day.
Joel D. Tauber, president of
Federation, said a search com-
mittee will be appointed im-
mediately to select a successor
to Feinstein and to allow for an
orderly transition.
Feinstein had been considered
for the Los Angeles position
ever since LA Federation Execu-
tive Vice President Ted Kanner
announced his plans to retire
many months ago. The Los
Angeles Jewish community has
a population of some 550,000.
Feinstein, who came to De-
troit from the national Council
of Jewish Federations in New
York three years ago, has fo-
cused much of his attention on
long-range planning.
Under his leadership, Federa-
tion has begun a number of im-
portant programs in the areas of
financial resource development,
extension of outreach services to
the total community and de-
velopment of leadership. "De-
troit's communal agenda for the
coming months is very full," he

MI IN MI MO an OM ilia all lab gal MI 6191

I

I

I

i
i

I

I ,

HUGGIES DIAPERS

$1.00 off

Large Size

Limit 3 - exp. 12-31-85

a• oo

1 1

i

Regular Price $9.49

5548 Drake Rd.
West Bloomfield

1

I

I
I

I

HI-DRI
towels

(corner of Walnut Lake &
I mile north of j.C.C.)

-

661-0774

reg 63' now

Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sunday 11 rt.ln.
p m.

OM a MI all OM Ma MO MI CM IMIp ■ •••!9MNI.RPII!*40.

_‘••••Ww-71..Mwr_m!sle..7.1

4 9 c

limit exp. 12-31-85

!is F -•

410.3

ailAgotim

wig mug agog ga.

Lassa

YOU'LL FIND MORE
PARTS IN THE BRACELET
OF THIS AWARD-WINNING
THALASSA THAN YOU WILL IN THE
ENGINE*OF A ROLLS-ROYCE

is
v VA _.2„„yer
/6

THREE VARIATIONS ON AN AWARD-WINNING THEME.

t4le

1)1(311,rjr.ep,

JULES R. SCHUBOT
jewellers

3001 West Big Beaver Road

'There are 600 major internal moving parts in the engine of the Rolls Royce Silver Cloud
. The names "Rolls.2oyce" and "Silver Cloud" are registered trademarks

Troy, Michigan 48084

(313) 649-1122

C,19K ,

I ),

said. "We will be carrying for-
ward some veiy important proj-
ects, including completion of the
1986 Campaign."
Feinstein is a graduate of the
Hebrew Union College-Jewish
Institute of Religion in Los
Angeles, where he received a
master of arts degree in Jewish
communal service. He was assis-
tant executive director of the
Jewish Welfare Federation of
San Francisco before joining the
Council of Jewish Federations
with Campaign and long-range
planning responsibilities. A na-
tive of Columbus, Ohio, Feins-
tein and his wife Leslee have
two children.

Labor-Likud Strife May
Kill Progress On Taba

You're looking at the bracelet of
what is perhaps the most beautiful watch in
the world: the award-winning Thalassa. It takes 656 parts
to craft each exquisite gold and steel Thalassa bracelet. With fewer
parts, perhaps Thalassa might still have won the coveted Laurel d'Or in Monte
Carlo as Watch of the Year. And no one would have noticed. But we'd know. 1 Afar .&N
And you'd know. And that makes all the difference in the world. of

4 K & Stainless Steel (Also ',BY. Stainless Steel j

Wayne Feinstein

'•

Jerusalem (JTA) — More coal-
ition tension — this time over
foreign policy — is being pre-
dicted in political circles here
following the successful conclu-
sion of three days of talks be-
tween Israel and Egypt on Taba.
The talks, in Hezliya, wound
up last Thursday afternoon with
both sides reporting progress.
Details were not immediately
available. But there was talk of
"tying loose ends" and it seemed
clear that the issue would come
up before the inner cabinet,
where coalition tensions could
easily explode.
Plainly the negotiators —
senior civil servants from the
foreign ministry and the defense
ministry — have reached the
outlines of an accord with Egypt
on a procedure, while not entail-
ing an immediate submission of
Taba to arbitration.
The Likud, under Deputy
Premier and Foreign Minister
Yitzhak Shamir, has always
demanded that conciliation be
tried first — before the sides
submit the issue to binding in-
ternational arbitration.
Premier Shimon Peres and his
Labor Party have been prepared
to accept Egypt's position that
arbitration be invoked without
any effort at conciliation.
In other news concerning
possible peace talks, a group of

Palestinians who said they
wanted to persuade Yasir Arafat
to accept United Nations Secu-
rity Council Resolutions 242 and
338 were refused permission by
the West Bank military gov-
ernment to go to Jordan to meet
the Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization chief.
Several Knesset members
were critical of the refusal,
among them Abba Eban, chair-
man of the Foreign Affairs and
Security Committee. One of the
group, Hanna Seniora, editor of
the East Jerusalem Arabic
newspaper Al Fajr, charged that
the Israeli authorities "do not
want us to make progress
toward peace."

-

Ostrich Farm

Jerusalem — The Ostrich
Farm at Kibbutz Haon, located
on the northeastern shore of
Lake Kinneret, has been
opened. A visitor can see var-
ious stages of life of the ostrich,
from its incubation to the fully
grown adult bird. A film on the
life of the ostrich is also avail-
able to the visitor.
Guided tours in English are
available upon request.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan