19-E—BU SINES S PROPERTY
FOR S ALE
Gas Station
Successful partners wish to
retire. Will sell bldg. & inven-
tory cheap. 4 pumps, 12,000
gal. storage. Sells over 40,000
gals. per mo. Hot spot, easy
terms. 7 Mt: Wyoming. Ask
for MR. SHOOK.
GROSS REALTY
D1 2-1300
Large Store
on Livernois
Nr. 7 Mi. Over 6,000 sq. ft. of
busy work area. 60' front win-
dow display. Ideal for any
business. Price reduced. Easy
terms. Ask for MR. SHOOK.
GROSS REALTY
DI 2-1300
Doctor's Medical Bldg.
11 offices with large Recep-
tion Rrn., over 2250 ft. Gas
ht. and centr. air cond. Lots
of parking. Northwest area.
Ask for MR. SHOOK.
GROSS REALTY
DI 2-1300
Southfield to Get
New High-Rise
Condominium
40—EMPLOYMENT
Youth work with elementary and
teen-agers at Jewish Community
Center, Rochester, New York. Will
consider person trained in social
work, education, psychology and
Michigan's first high-rise condo-
the related professions. Send
resume' to: Selig Rubinrott, Assist- minium will soon be taking shape
ant Director, J. Y. M. & W A., 380 in Southfield. The condominium
Andrews Street, Rochester, New will be located on Providence Dr.
overlooking Northland Shopping
York, 14604.
Center.
Plans for the condominium were
announced by the builder-tievel-
oper, the Malcolm Leventen Co.
The proposed condominium will
Mortgage Preliminary Department
is seeking a clerk-typist, age 20-25,
be modeled after an exclusive
high school graduate, and can type
Italian hotel. It will conslit of a
50-60 wpm.
multi-million dollar complex of
Previous mortgage, real estate, title
three buildings, surrounded by a
company or finance work helpful.
12-foot decorative wall and gar-
Competitive salary and excellent
dens, complete with Italian marble
fringe benefits
sculptures, fountains and water-
Apply in the Personnel Office. 7th
falls.
floor, Monday through Friday, 9:00
am to 4:00 p.m.
The outer shell of the buildings
will be constructed of imported
AMERICAN SAVINGS
600 WOODWARD ;
Italian marble, glass and steel.
The building will contain swim-
ming pools, lounge areas and an
MR. & MRS. AMBITION
extensive he a t e d underground
Improve your status in life —
garage.
Age is no barrier. We will train
The buildings will contain 180
you .now for a coreer in Real
one-, two-, and three - bedroom
Estate. Evening training pro-
apartments, and 12 four-bedroom
gram will start shortly. We hove
penthouses. Each apartment will
3 openings available to corn-
have a balcony, and an individual
plete our Oak Pork soles staff.
garden.
The condominiums will
Enroll now! Call Mr. Gorperin,
range in cost from about $18,000
LI 8-1500 for opp't.
for a studio apartment to over
$100,000 for a penthouse.
Construction is scheduled to be-
,
gin in early fall, with completion
Coolidge S. o f111 Mi.
tentatively scheduled for Septem-
ber 1968.
CLERK
eimathetiabA
40 - A — EMPLOYMENT WANTED
YOUNG MAN — single — looking for
a position — background in office
management — light clerical duties.
543-4948.
LARKINS MOVING CO.
NEW YORK (JTA) — Axel
Springer, leading newspaper and
magazine magnate of West Ger-
many, who had contributed $900,-
000 for the construction an,' ad-
ministration of an art and acheol-
ogy library at the Israel Museum
in Jerusalem, arrived here for a
10-day visit. Among his appear-
ances was a reception in his honor
at the Leo Baeck Institute, named
after the late chief rabbi of Ger-
many under the Nazi regime. The
center is engaged in historical
research, the presentation a n d
publication of the history and lit-
erature of German-speaking Jewry,
and the collection of books and
manuscripts in this field.
Household and
Office Furniture
From Slavery to Freedom
48—COLLECTION SERVICE
ANYONE OWE YOU MONEY?
DENTISTS
You pay only for results. We
collect all types of debts, bock
rent — bod checks— retail —
personal.
1st. offeririg. 6 offices. Air
conditioned,• gas ht. on 7
Mile Rd. Ample parking. Ask
for Mr. Shook.
GROSS REALTY
DI 2-1300
26—LAKE PROPERTY FOR SALE
LAKE ST. CLAIR. Furnished year
around home. Has everything. Low
taxes. 818,400. American cash. 231 Lake
View Drive, Belle River, Ont.
30 - A — INSTRUCTIONS
BAR-MITZVA, Hebrew, „Bible, Yiddish,
English; experienced teacher, 342-9254.
PIANO LESSONS at my home on
Greenlawn. Experienced teacher. 341-
4348.
KE 7-5650
SO—BUSINESS CARDS
INTERIOR, exterior, painting. Clean
and neat. Also small carpentry work.
Free estimates. 542-3270 after 6.
• LICENSED MOVERS
PROFESSIONALS
894-4587
SPRAY-ROLLER painting. One-day
service. Daniel. 821-7542.
Wall Paper Is My Business
My Only Business
If you want professional results
Call John Lepine
836-4953
31—TRANSPORTATION
CARS TO BE DRIVEN
To Philadelphia, New York City,
Seattle, Florida, Utah, California,
Texas( Arizoha, etc. Also drivers
furnished to drive your car any-
where.
Insured Driveway System
9970 GRAND !Uwe
DETROIT, MICH. 48204
WE 1-0621
40—EMPLOYMENT
WANTED—Someone to Ilse in approx.
July 1 or 2 weeks for infant care, light
housekeeping and cooking. 1-682-7586.
COUNSELORS for summer day camp.
Car desirable but not necessary. 546-
7772.
Teller
1 PAINTING, paperhanging. interim
UN 4-0326, UN 2-3873 after 6:30.
refinisned and
Free estimates. UN 4-3547.
FURNITURE
repairea.
JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.
By Hour or Flat Rate
Local and Long Distance Packing, stor-
age, pianos, appliances, nousehold turn
, shings.
8829 Northend—Ferndal•
543 - 4832
All kinds of carpenter
work. We specialize in rec. rooms. BR
3-4826. LI 5-4035.
1. SCHWARTZ.
FOR BETTER wall washing, call James
Russel,. One day
526 Belmont.
service.
TO 64005.
MACLIN Janitorial Service. Basement
and recreation room floors scrubbed
and waxed. KE 2-1692.
TRAINEES
55 - A — MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
Are you looking for a permanent
Position? We have Immediate OPen-
Ings for qualified high school grads.
JEWISH pieces wanted: family wants
old traditional items. Write S. Hollub,
20 East 108 Terrace, Kansas City, Mis-
souri 64114.
You must be age 20 or over and
have had general clerical or teller
experience.
Apply at our Main Office, Down-
town, Personnel Dept., 7th Floor,
Monday-Friday.
R
13700 W. 9 Mile R oad. near Coolidge.
Oak Park, 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
AMERICAN SAVINGS
600 • WOODWARD
AT CONGRESS
Pro-Israel German Editor
Arrives in United States
Philadelphia Federation
Allocates $2,545,262
PHILADELPHIA (JTA) — The
Federation of Jewish Agencies an-
nounced allocation of a record-
breaking $2,545,262 for the support
of its local health and welfare
agencies for the 1967-68 fiscal
year starting June 1.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, May 5, 1067-37
The Rocking Chair Myth
BY DAVID SCHWARTZ
(Copyright, 1967, JTA, Inc.)
I am afraid David Ben-Gurion's
visit is going to make it harder
for the older people of the country.
After you are 65, you are sup-
posed to take that alarm clock and
pitch it out of the window. You
can sleep late now, and when you
awake, .you have your warm water
and toast and sit in the rocking
chair. There are some towns where
those over 65 get half fare on the
buses, so if you can manage to
get out of the rocking chair. you
may be able to take a little ride.
Anyway, you've got social security.
and you are a Senior Citizen.
Havdala Service
By RABBI SAMUEL J. FOX
(Copyright, 1967. JTA, Inc.)
, Hooray! Nothing is expected o
you.
Now along comes Ben-Gurion, a
man of 80 and he doesn't sound
like he is retiring at all. At the
Israel Bond meeting in Miami,
when the chairman mentioned the
possibility of his being tired, he
exclaimed, "Who is tired? Maybe
you are tired. I'm not.:'
And this man of 80, in the course
of a, couple of weeks, raises more
millions for the United Jewish
Appeal and sells more Israel bonds
than any man before has done.
And, to top it all, he gathered a
million dollars along with it for
his own little pet, his new college
in Sde Boker in the Negev, which
he is engaged in building.
No young man has or could
match that record.
Like Moses of old, he is a kind
of magician. He helps' transform
an old nation into a young nation,
and an old man into a young man.
Maybe the whole idea of peo-
ple over 65 sitting in rocking
chairs is just a myth invented
by some age-niks who, like the
beatniks, don't like work. Or,
maybe it is part of a cons-piracy
of the young to get the old peo-
ple out of the way because they
can't stand their competition.
Perhaps Congress should probe
the matter and maybe the At-
torney General should bring in
some indictments. Historically,
there always seems to have been
this clash of the ages. It is the
theme of several of Shakes-
peare's plays, notably King Lear.
Paula Ben-Gurion is right. "Any-
body can be Prime Minister, but
nobody else can be Ben-Gurion."
At the Miami meeting, someone
addressed him as "Mr. Prime Min-
ister."
, "I am not Prime Minister," snap-
ped Ben-Gurion.
"But," it was objected, "we have
the right to address you as Prime
Minister because you have held
that position."
"I was once a baby. too," said
Ben-Gurion, "but you don't address
me now as a baby."
He traveled around the country
answering a lot of questions and
calling on people to study the
Bible. In California, an Arab asked
him what he would say, when his
Maker mentions to him the plight
of Arab refugees. Ben-Gurion said
he would recall to God his vow
to Abraham about the land, that
Abraham lived there before the
Arabs. And also he might mention
the numerous other Arab coun-
tries that are open to Arabs.
People milled around him, anx-
ious to touch the hem of his gar-
ment. Maybe Israel can spare him
for a little while. Inihat case, he
might go -down to Thew York or
Florida or California and maybe
be elected Senator.
Basically, there are four parts
to the Saturday night Havdala
ceremony — the wine, the spices,
the light and the prayer. The
rabbis have defined the four in-
gredients and their succession as
representatives of the four senses
—the sense of taste, the sense of
smell, the sense of light and the
sense of intellect. It is these four
senses which enable man to dis-
tinguish between objects and ideas
in life. The most primitive and
direct sense is the sense of taste
(which may be said to include the
sense of touch) because, by using
this sense man actually comes in
physical contact with various ob-
jects and his taste (as well as
touch) is used to distinguish one
from another. Next in refinement
is the sense of smell. Using this
sense man does not come in direct
contact with the object• yet his
sense of smell enables him to
identify and differentiate between
objects. Even more refined is the
sense of vision through which man
can see the difference between ob-
jects. Most refined, of course. is
the sense of the intellect in which
man's understanding teaches him
the difference between both' tan-
gible as well as intangible ,pro-
perties.
The Havdala, being a ritual in
which man proclaims his under-
4anding of the difference between
the Sabbath and the rest of the
week, is thus enacted with the
senses of man by which he knows
the differences. The wine stimu-
lates his sense of taste (and
touch); the spices stimulate his
sense of smell; the light stimu-
lates his sense of vision; and the
prayer demonstrates his sense of
intellect. In the Havdala cere-
mony, one thus thanks the Al-
mighty for endowing man with
these senses by which he can dif-
ferentiate and conduct his life to
the best advantage. Some commen-
taries see this sequence as repre-
sentative of the sequence of f crea-
tion. The wine represents the
GainS Highest Rank
earth or matter; the spices repre-
Milton J. Foreman, a career of-
sent the spirit of the Almighty
which swept over the earth (and ficer in the United States Army
heaven); the light symbolizes the at the turn of the century, rose to
Almighty's decree "Let there he the highest rank ever achieved by
Light." The prayer represents the a Jew in the American Armed
soul which God gave unto man as forces when he retired with the
. rank of Lieutenant-General. •
the last step of creation.
"It is therefore incumbent upon
us to give thanks and praise . . .
to Him Who wrought all of these
miracles for our fathers and for
us: He led us forth from slavery to
freedom, and from darkness to
wondrous light, and from subjec-
tion to redemption." "From slav-
ery to freedom"—this represents
the exodus from Egypt: "from sor-
row to rejoicing" — at the Sea,
which was a time of great trouble:
"from mourning"—at Mount Sinai,
where it is said: "And the people
heard this disastrous declaration
and they mourned, and no man
donned his ornaments"; "to festi-
vity" — the day of Yom Kippur,
when Moses descended with the
Second Tablets, and it said that
there were no festivities for Israel
like unto those on the 15th of Av
and on the Day of Atonement:
"from darkness to wondrous light"
—from the dark and death-sha-
dowy wilderness to the Holy Land
of Israel which is a wondrous
light: "from subjection to redemp- i
tion"—from the subjection in the
days of the Judges to the redemp-
tion in the days of David and Solo-
By BENNETT CERF
mon, when they lived in safety and
it was complete redemption. —
The chum drawled in admiration,
From Louis Safian's paperback,
Hagrah (Elijah of Wilna) on the "2000 Insults for All Occasions":
"I got to hand it to you, Cal. Suc-
Hagada.
you a bit!"
BIG HEADS: His egotism is a cess ain't changed
• • •
plain case of mistaken identity.
OVERHEARD:
BORES: He's so dull he can't
On Civil Rights
Lady tourist in front of the Mona-
From "May I Have A Word With You!" even entertain a doubt.
by Rabbi Morris Adler.
HYPOCHONDRIACS: He found Lisa in the Louvre: "I like the one
Published by Crown
at
my Aunt Tillie's better."
"I am in this fight with you a feather in his bed last night. Now
Customer, indicating a set of the
because I know that since freedom he's sure he has chicken pox.
Encyclopedia
Brittanica to a book-
In Calvin Coolidge's youth, a
is indivisible, its curtailment any-
store clerk: "Can you tell me when
where curtails and threatens my chum tried to borrow five dollar this is coming out in paperback?"
from him—and got nowhere. When
freedom . .
Daughter to father, coming
"I am in this fight with you Coolidge was running for President from a three-week vacation: home
"Oh,
because as one who believes in in 1924, his old friend met him Daddy, you forgot to turn off
the
God, I can do no other .. 7 am again, and repeated his request for grass!".
in this fight because I _Cannot be a five-dollar loan. Coolidge refused C 1967, by Bennett Cert. Distributed- by
-
once-more.
Ring Features SYndleaP11 -
fully free until all are freeP-
.
Try and Stop Me
O