I DETROIT I LEASE • LEASE • LEASE Tough Choices '92 Seville Continued from Page 1 $59697* 30 month Lease Stk. #D0666. Security Package, Leather, DayfNight Mirror, Special Seating Package, ISB Option Group. . tittAsotimavass ' $ 5 8176 * * 36 month Lease Stk. #680 '92 Eldorado $58992* 30 Month Lease Stk. #D0453. This Baby's Load- ed: Astro Roof, Sport Interior, Security Package, Leather. $547 2 1* 36 Month Lease Stk. #D0677 HUGE SAVINGS ON THE FEW '91's LEFT IN STOCK! '30 mo. closed end lease. 15.000 miles per year. 10c per mile over. First payment. security deposit and 4.ci use tax due at inception. MSRP of Seville is S37.300. MSRP of Eldorado is S36.417. To get total payments. multiply by 30. Customer can. but has no obligation to purchase vehicle at lease end. •••• 36 mo. closed end lease. 15.000 miles per year. 10F per mile over. First payment. security deposit and 4.6 use tax clue at inception. MSRP of Seville is 536.996. MSRP of Eldorado is S34.491. 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' 611 - Office 222 - 24 hr. Road Service SAVINGS UP TO 40% ON PRESENT BILL IN THE ORCHARD MALL WEST BLOOMFIELD aOKEN WINDSHIELD PAINFUL BUNIONS 1-800-312-1523 or 683-5994 Domestic Cors Only S25.00 Cash Refund For Referrals $30°0°, When you pay with cash or off your deductible with cash Call for Appointment 355-1200 PURITAN AUTO GLASS SERVICE CENTER The Puriton Auto Service Mall • 21545 Telegraph Rd. (Just 1 /2 Mile South of Nine Mile), Southfield Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Soturdoy 8 a.m.-Noon Some community activists say that the Federation should back up its rhetoric with cold cash. agencies like the Jewish Community Center and the Fresh Air Society to emergency services offered by JFS and Jewish Voca- tional Service. The crunch is likely to af- fect funding for national agencies like the American Jewish Congress, Jewish Telegraphic Agency and the Anti-Defamation League. "They're going to get squeezed out, in my view," said Mr. Aronson. "Not all the way, but there might be some big cuts." Mr. Schlussel said that prioritizing has traditionally helped agencies bear the cuts, since self-selection will inevitably furrow out some financial weeds. "In terms of our pool of money and resources, the national agencies are prob- ably the most vulnerable place for retrenchment," he said. "We will restore them as the situation war- rants." El Continued from Page 1 your cellular phone is being repaired. 511 Evicting CC11013( C1.15101110, welcomed that serve the recession's hardest hit. "Their size prohibits them from responding as quickly as I, or they, would like," said Gary Dembs, president of Yad Ezra, a kosher food pantry that helped 400 families last month. "We've already proven the need is there. Now the time has come to respond," he said. Already, the Federation has made some tough choices. As the recession set in last year, the executive board shifted money from communal and cultural Feet Up We purchase used phones. I Free loaner phone when Troy Horton From Corporate to Personal Accounts sig Full Line of Cellular Phones "'""z"Wholesaler of Amerlleeh Cellular serv'ces Present directors on proposed alloca- tions. "The reality is that those individuals who contribute the most to the Campaign are far more sensitive be- cause of history to Israel and its needs," Dr. Giles said. "Just because we are highlighting domestic needs, it does not mean we are be- ing dishonest by maintain- ing the same formula." Israel is currently under the strain of settling 2,000° Soviet Jews a week. That is the equivalent to the United States settling the popula- tion of France within its borders. "We can't forget that the needs in Israel are more critical than ever," said Mark Schlussel, president of the Federation. "It must be a primary consideration." Domestic concerns have played a large role in the Federation Campaign, however. Lawrence Jackier and Norman Pappas, Cam- paign co-chairmen, both have stressed the impact of the recession on Jewish families in the area. Plus, federal and state as- sistance programs have been cut recently, leaving agen- cies like Jewish Family Ser- vice (JFS) scrapping to find funds elsewhere. Alan Goodman, director of JFS, said additional funds from Federation have kept the agency afloat for now, but that "the chances of get- ting something new funded is zero to less than zero." "In terms of dealing with the poor, the Federation ex- tended themselves as far as they could," he said. "But things are changing con- stantly, and we need to keep up with those changes." Some community activists are frustrated that Federa- tion leaders have not seen fit to shift funds to agencies Comfort, Quality Fit and Service for 75 years HackSnoes 26221 Southfield Road (between 10 and 11 Mile Roads) (313) 557-4230 Youth Organization in Washington, D.C. His wife, Ofra, superintendent of the Agency for Jewish Edu- cation (AJE), will soon join him. And Alan Funk recent- ly resigned at the Jewish Home for Aged. With all of those changes, Dr. Morton Plotnick at the Jewish Community Center (16 years) and Ruth Marcus at Hebrew Free Loan (five years) are the veteran ex- ecutive directors of Detroit's Jewish agencies. Other are Alan Goodman at Jewish Family Service and the Resettlement Ser- vice (2 1/2 years) and David Gad-Harf at Jewish Com- munity Council (3 1/2 years). While the changes are a concern for Federation Ex- ecutive Vice President Robert Aronson, who has been in his position for two years, it is also an oppor- tunity. "We'll miss the vet- erans, but there is some- thing exciting about building a new team," Mr. Aronson says. "All three agencies (Fresh Air, AJE and Home for Aged) are functioning well, but we have to attract the quality people that Detroit