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Dear Zelda
Thank you very much for your interview. I think Aleh Negev deserves all the support it can get as the only place of it's kind.
I appreciate the chance i was given to tell my personal story on your show.
On your next visit to Israel we would be honored to show you the preoject.
I attach a picture of my son Shai- and thank you on behalf of all the other children at Aleh Negev. (editor's note: you can view the photos here)
Sincerely,
Iris Kowen More Testimonials... |
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Jeff Jacoby
Website: The Boston Globe
Jeff Jacoby became an op-ed columnist for The Boston Globe in February 1994. Seeking a conservative voice to balance its famously liberal roster of commentators, the Globe hired him away from the Boston Herald, where he had been chief editorial writer since 1987.
The Boston Phoenix has dubbed his twice-weekly essays a "a must-read," describing Jacoby as "the region's preeminent spokesman for Conservative Nation."
A native of Cleveland, Jacoby graduated with honors from George Washington University in 1979 and from Boston University Law School in 1983. He practiced law for a short time at the firm of Baker & Hostetler, but returned to Boston to become deputy manager of Ray Shamie's 1984 campaign for the US Senate. From 1985 to 1987, Jacoby was an assistant to Dr. John Silber, who at the time was president of Boston University.
In addition to his print work, Jacoby has been a political commentator for WBUR-FM, Boston's National Public Radio affiliate. For several years he hosted "Talk of New England," a weekly television program, and has often appeared as a panelist on WCVB-TV's "Five on Five." He is an overseer of the Huntington Theatre Company, the largest resident theatre in Boston, and is on the board of The Concord Review, a quarterly journal of essays on history by secondary students worldwide.
In 1999, Jacoby became the first recipient of the Breindel Award for Excellence in Opinion Journalism, a $10,000 journalism prize.
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