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July 31, 1998 - Image 42

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1998-07-31

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

The World

of Farmington Hills
Your Infiniti President's Award Circle Dealer

1998 INFINIT1130

Dual front & side airbags, automatic, leather, moonroof, air, ABS,
power windows, locks, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette/CD, alloy wheels,
dual pwr. seats, remote entry, security system, 190 hp V6, home-link,
Bose sound syst. w/CD.

$2,500 CCR

TOTAL DUE AT INCEPTION $3523

All-mode full time 4WD, V6, ABS, 16" alloys, roof rack, pwr. moon-
roof, seats, winds., locks, leather, cruise, tilt, roof console, compass,
defrost, air, outside temp. display, home-link, remote sec. syst.,
Bose sound syst. w/CD, dual airbags.
aX
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LEASE FOR

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TOTAL DUE AT INCEPTION $3668

1998 INFINITI 045

Dual front & side airbags, V8, leather, automatic, sunroof, pwr. win-
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$3,000 CCR

4-YEAR, 60,000 MILE WARRANTY • FREE SERVICE LOANER * FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY

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7/31
1998

42

CASUAL" FURNITURE AT COMPLETELY

Detroit Jewish News

RELAXED PRICES

Reform and Conservative movements
say they haven't seen any of the money
UJA is reaping with their help. .
At issue is how much money has
been raised — and how little the move-
ments have received.
UJA leaders say they have raised $21
million to benefit the three movements
in Israel, but almost none of it has been
collected from donors. Of that total,
$16 million is in firm commitments, (—\
said Moscovitz. The other $5 million is
still being negoti-
ated with various
donors.
In a recent issue
of The Jerusalem
Report, the newly
appointed UJA
national chairman,
Carole Solomon,
wrote in a letter
that "within the
Rabbi Eric Yoffie:
$750 million we
President of the
raise annually for
Union of
worldwide
American Hebrew
humanitarian
Congregations.
work, we fund
more than $21
million worth of projects affiliated with
the Reform, Conservative and Modern —\
Orthodox movements in Israel."
The head of the Reform movement
takes issue with that claim.
Rabbi Eric Yoffie, president of the
Union of American Hebrew
Congregations, said his movement has-
n't "seen a nickel, not one nickel" from
the campaign.
"We've told them 100 times that it's
very hard to develop a relationship of
trust when they say that they give us
$21 million of support" but none of the
movements have yet to see any of it.
Moscovitz suggested that the frustra-
tion from the movements stems from a
lack of knowledge.
"Perhaps the movements, not accus-
tomed to raising this kind of money,
just don't know how these things
work," he said.
Money pledged at the start of a year
doesn't usually begin to come in until
the following December, Moscovitz
said, and many large gifts promised —
from tens of thousands to millions of
dollars — are paid out over as many as
four or five years.
At the same time, the Reform move-
ment has launched a new effort to raise
funds for its own institutions in Israel,
which Yoffie announced in a letter to
the denomination's rabbis last month.
The new Reform initiative, not the
first by the movement, is being viewed
with caution by those involved with the
supplemental campaign, said Moscovitz.

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