• LONDON FOG® TOWNE® • FORECASTER • PERRY ELLIS • JONES N.Y. • CO 0 • Cf) C/) A KINTOS • 0 r— r— rn 70 • I MV • LLJ • I 0 0 Only! • ow, Discount Prices on Rs and Outerwear! rn MEN'S RAINWEAR it/5o# • MEN'S JACKETS • ISTMEINOW IN1 Fre 0 • Ekv MMOIMINS LC) • ARVE B NARD • a~p ,dt NIMV a new one is that the constituent organizations want new ground rules. There will not be the same ability of one organization to veto" a decision, he said. One oft he most controversial elements of the Synagogue Coun- cil's procedures — and some say, the element that paralyzed it — was the right of any one of its con- stituents to veto a proposal. In addition, one of the council's ground rules has been that the council cannot address anything theological in nature, an issue of concern for the Orthodox. The non-Orthodox members say that the veto was most often used by the Orthodox. Schonfeld says that in his 32 years of par- ticipating in the Synagogue Council, it was used mostly by the Reform and Conservative members, and "maybe once" by the Orthodox. According to Rabbi Mordechai Liebling, executive vice president of the Federation of Reconstruc- tionist Congregations and Havurot, the movement applied twice for membership to the Syn- agogue Council, and was twice vetoed by its Orthodox members. "The Synagogue Council was an artificial organization because the Orthodox maintained a stran- glehold over it, not allowing any substantive discussion and pre- venting any real interfaith dia- logue," said Rabbi Liebling. "The Synagogue Council was an empty shell functioning as a symbol of Jewish unity that re- ally didn't exist," he said. "We would be happy to be part of any liberal synagogue coalition." One Orthodox Synagogue Council rep- resentative wished the new or- ganization luck, but did not indicate an interest in partici- pating. "If they succeed, fine," said Rabbi Schonfeld. The Synagogue Council has long been plagued by financial troubles. Each of its constituent agen- cies is supposed to contribute sev- eral thousands of dollars a year in dues, with some other funding coming from Jewish federations and private contributions. The Synagogue Council's 1994 budget was about $200,000, said Rabbi Lookstein, which is con- siderably lower than its operat- ing budget of recent years, when it hovered at about $400,000 per year. Rabbi Lookstein said that the Synagogue Council has debts of about $100,000, in part owed to the Jewish fraternal organization B'nai Zion, which has rented the SCA space in its brownstone on Manhattan's East Side. Other sources, including Rab- bi Schgnfeld, estimate the debts to be closer to $200,000, includ- ing severance pay and "private obligations to individuals" who loaned the foundering organiza- tion money, he said. r— CO r- • z Cr) LLI O New Location! West Bloomfield • Orchard Mall (South Entrance), Orchard Lake at Maple (15 Mile) • (810) 855 9955 • - Monday-Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-7, Sunday 12-6 Oak Park • Lincoln Center, Greenfield at 10 1/2 Mile • (810) 968 2060 • Monday-Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6 Troy • Troy Commons (next to Jacobson's), E. Big Beaver (16 Mile) at Rochester • (810) 528 9966 • - - Monday-Friday 10-7, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 12-5 • PERRY ELLIS • FORECASTER • LONDON FOG® TOWNE® • STEVE BY SEARLE • 31