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December 08, 1995 - Image 204

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-12-08

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

JEEP EAGLE
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$349 Per Month

Lease based on approved credit 12,000 miles per year with no penalty. 15( per mile over 12,000 miles. Lessee responsible for excess wear and tear. Total payments, lake monthly payments, multiply number of payments. 1st month's payment
and security deposit in advance. No option to purchase at termination. Security de. isit 'mils 1st monthly payment, plus tax, title fee in advance + 1st month's payment. Require $1,500 down. This offer sulied to chance without notice.

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32581 Northwestern Highway, Farmington Hills

THURSDAY, DECEMBER

7 - SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10

:REG

128

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to discuss with Ms. Jeffrey and
Mr. Foxman "the difficult and of-
ten unfair treatment appointees
receive in the political process."
He also suggested the possi-
bility of appointing her to anoth-
er official position in the House
of Representatives. The position
of House historian has since been
abolished.
Although Ms. Jeffrey said full
exoneration would involve her re-
instatement as House historian,
she hopes that the meeting will
allow her to set the record
straight about the facts sur-
rounding her dismissal.
In a recent showing of what
she characterized as her longtime
support for Jews and Israel, Jef-
frey and her husband signed a
book of mourning at the Israeli
Consulate in Atlanta after the as-
sassination of Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin.
Recognized by the consul gen-
eral, Ms. Jeffrey and her husband
were escorted to the front of the
line — ahead of such notables as
Rep. John Linder, R-Ga. They
wrote, "Our condolences to the
Rabin family and to Israel. We
are praying for the unity and se-
curity of Israel."

New Chief Officer
For The UJA

MAXIE COLLISION INC.

FOUR DAY SALE

HISTORIAN page 126

New York (JTA) — The United
Jewish Appeal is implementing
a change at the top.
Rabbi Brian Lurie, the UJA's
chief executive officer and execu-
tive vice president, has announced
the appointment of Bernie
Moscovitz to handle the day-to-day
management of the UJA as chief
operating officer and vice president
for the next nine months.
The move is "a management
addition that will strengthen the
agency," Rabbi Lurie said in a
phone interview.
Mr. Moscovitz had been the
national marketing director.
Rabbi Lurie said he would stay
on at the UJA until September
1996, fulfilling the five-year term
that he promised when he signed
on as executive vice president.
He said he would continue to
focus on issues relating to the
changing Jewish Agency for Is-
rael and the restructuring plan
to merge Diaspora Jewry's cen-
tral fund-raising structures.
The new entity being worked
out is expected to consolidate the
UJA, the Council of Jewish Fed-
erations and the United Israel
Appeal, which funnels campaign
money to the Jewish Agency.
Mr. Moscovitz, in turn, will
oversee the remainder of the 1996
annual campaign and the begin-
ning of the 1997 campaign.
Rabbi Lurie said he plans to
return to the San Francisco area,
where his family is living, when
he leaves the UJA, but he is not
sure what he will do.

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