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April 19, 1991 - Image 35

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-04-19

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

WHATEVER THE OTHER DEALERS CHARGE ...

MEL PARR WILL SELL POP LESS!

"THANK YOU FOR YOUR BUSINESS!"

Jewish groups may have
played a major role in last
week's stunning rejection of
the nomination of Judge
Kenneth Ryskamp to the
11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Florida.
A critical turning point
came several days earlier,
when Sen. Bob Graham (D-
Fla.) indicated that he would
not support the nomination.

Jewish groups which had
opposed the nomination be-
cause of Judge Ryskamp's
civil rights record, and his
longstanding membership in
a country club that re-

portedly discriminated
against Jews and blacks,
had made Mr. Graham a
special focus of their anti-
Ryskamp lobbying.
Several Jewish organiza-
tions testified in opposition
to the nomination during re-
cent hearings of the
Judiciary Committee. But it
was the grass-roots effort by
a broad coalition of groups,
along with Mr. Ryskamp's
own damaging testimony,
that turned the tide in the
Judiciary Committee. And
Jewish groups played a
significant role in that coali-
tion.

Baltimorean Helps Push
Against 'Peyote' Ruling

When the -Religious
Freedom Restoration Act is
introduced in Congress, the
legislation will be backed up
by a classic grass-roots cam-
paign in Jewish com-
munities around the coun-
try.
In Baltimore, Aron
Raskas, a member of the
Law and Legislation Com-
mission of the Union of Or-
thodox Jewish Congrega-
tions, has been leading the
charge for the bill, which
seeks to overturn a Supreme
Court decision in the so-
called "peyote" case.
"I don't think people rec-
ognize the implications of
this decision," Mr. Raskas
said. "If people really
understood the implications

of this decision, they would
make a massive effort to
make sure the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act is
passed. This decision is just
the thin end of a wedge
that's capable of proscribing
a variety of religious prac-
tices."

Activists in Baltimore and
most other cities are
meeting with newspaper
editorial boards, community
leaders and members of
Congress in an effort to give
the measure a good start in
Congress.

Mr. Raskas is also part of a
group planning a May 13
program in Baltimore to line
the community up behind
the bill.

Tax Tsores Afflicts
Jewish Organizations

Few things in life are as
complicated or as unplea-
sant as the U.S. tax code — a
fact that can have very real
consequences for Jewish
organizations.

A provision in the tax
reform act of 1986 ruled that
gifts of appreciated property
— everything from stocks
and bonds to jewelry and ex-
pensive art — are no longer
fully deductible.

This had an obvious im-
pact on art galleries, but it
also hurt Jewish organiza-
tions, which depend on big
donations for their survival
— including the occasional
Chagal.

Last year, Sen. Daniel

Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.)
slipped language into the
budget reconciliation pro-
cess that restored full deduc-
tibility for some things —
like works of art. The result
was a very good year for a
number of museums around
the country, as well as some
Jewish organizations.
But now, groups like the
Council of Jewish Federa-
tions are supporting a bill by
Rep. Thomas Downey
(D-N.Y.) that would make
gifts of appreciated property
— including stocks, bonds
and real estate, as well as
art and jewelry — fully
deductible, without restor-
ing the gigantic tax
loopholes of the pre-1986 tax
code. ❑

WE'RE #1

Y- cA2)
L

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OUR BUSINESS
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LAST YEAR!

FORD

24750 Greenfield Rd.
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GREE NFIELD

Jewish Groups Helped
Defeat Judge Ryskamp

0 4.

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Mel Farr Toyota

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All vehicles plus tax, Title, Lic. & Destination. All leases 15,000 mile/yr. limit. CLOSED END LEASE. 11' PER MILE EXCESS. TO GET TOTAL AMT. OF
PYMTS. MULTIPLY PYMT. BY # MONTHS. WITH APPROVED CREDIT. PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED SALE ENDS 6 PM FRIDAY APRIL 26, 1991. PHOTOS MAY NOT
REPRESENT ACTUAL VEHICLES ON SALE AT ADVERTISED PRICES. FORD MOTOR CO. ranked Mel Farr Ford #1 during 2nd half of 1990.
All prices subject to change based on company incentive plans.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

35

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