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November 17, 1995 - Image 122

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-11-17

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

AR 7.16 4

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Here's another reason our silk
flowers, trees and plants are
better than any you've ever seen:

Temple Israel's
Singles Extension Group

invites Jewish Singles
50 and over to a

DECEMBER SOCIAL
* DANCE *

Sunday, December 3rd - 7:30 p.m.
at
TEMPLE ISRAEL-HERMAN HALL

Bagels • Light Refreshments • Dessert

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BARBARA GINSBURG
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Our materials, design and price have always made our silk flowers,
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Jerusalem (JTA) — After a se-
ries of tense meetings, the Jew-
ish Agency for Israel Board of
Governors approved a frame-
work for slashing $500 million
from the Agency's budget during
the next five years.
The dramatic plan is designed
to revamp the ailing social ser-
vice and education organization
and save it from a collision course
with projected deficits of $689
million by the year 2000.
The first cuts of $110 million
— $43 million from the Aliyah
and Absorption budget — will be
implemented during the next
two years.
Diaspora representatives at
the meeting pledged to raise an
additional $230 million in the
next five years.
The Agency is the primary re-
cipient of United Jewish Appeal
funds targeted for overseas that
are raised by local federations.
The most acrimonious issue
still to be resolved, according to
Agency sources, is the future of
the agency's commitment to its
Youth Aliyah Villages.
Although the Youth Aliyah
Villages are traditionally one of
the Agency's highest-funded ed-
ucation and social welfare pro-
grams, some believe that the
government should assume most
of the responsibility for them be-
cause most who attend them are
veteran Israelis, not new immi-
grants.

Yemeni Meets
Jewish Leaders

Music by Wally Duda

Members: $9.00

Agency Plan
Cuts Deficit

MME

MI= 1

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■ IN NMI NM= RN= MEIN

The Bright Idea:

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THE JEWISH NEWS

IIIRR1

Washington (JTA) — A top offi-
cial of the Republic of Yemen held
an unprecedented meeting with
the Conference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish Organi-
zations in New York.
Abdulkarim Al-Eryani,
Yemen's deputy prime minister
and foreign minister, described
his meeting with Jewish leaders
and Yemenite American Jews
as "turning a page in our rela-
tions."
He said he would support a
move by the Arab League to end
the economic boycott of Israel and
that Yemen will establish full
diplomatic relations with Israel
upon completion of the peace
process.
Mr. Al-Eryani also expressed
his support for efforts to preserve
Jewish historical sites in Yemen
and his nation's Jewish culture.
"I would be sad if 5,000 years of
Jewish history disappeared from
Yemen," he said.
Jewish leaders praised Mr. Al-
Eryani for the important role he
has played in enabling Yemenite
Jews to travel abroad.

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