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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

January 17, 1969 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-01-17

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40—EMPLOYMENT '

46—Friday, January 17, 1969

Must be presently licensed. Learn the
Real Estate business from a MAN'S
point of view. This is your opportunity
to join Oakland County's largest buying
office if you're not satisfied with your
present earnings, you will be interested
in what we have to offer.

LI 8-1900

STENOGRAPHER—
DICTAPHONE OPERATOR

Experienced for social service ag-
ency. Excellent salary and fringe
benefits. Conveniently located North-
west area. References required.

DI 1-5959

WORK IN PAWN SHOP

CLERKS

Teen-ager—after school okay
or person, part-time. No ex-
perience needed.

General Office

EXPERIENCED SALESPERSON

This Association has opening in
its Mortgage Division, Downtown
Detroit Office, which will be sub-
sequently relocated to 10 Mile
Road and Northwestern, South-
field, Michigan in approximately
one year. Must type 50 w.p.m. ac-
curately.
Good starting salary with excel-
lent fringe benefits.
We invite your inquiry—Personnel,
7th floor, 965-5820, Ext. 371, 9:30
A.M. to 4:30 P.M.

to assist manager for cutlery
and gift shop. Hours flexible.
Salary plus commission.

AMERICAN SAVINGS
600 Woodward

1400 Michigan
WO. 2-8698

OFFICE MANAGER

Controller, complete charge,
wholesale distributor. Mr.
Palmer, Household Products
Co.. 4771 Dubois.

832-0500

585-5655

Music Festival's 25th Year

WANTED — Part-time counter help
for delicatessen. 7 Mile - Outer Drive
area. 345.3989 between 7 a.m.-8 p.m.

GENERAL office workers, 5 days, $90.
Northwest Detroit. Meral Wholesale Person needed to work in pawn shop.
Grocery Co. 8031 Lyndon. UN 4-6622.
No experience necessary. WO 2.8698.

Real Estate People

Penn Realty

MALE AND/OR FEMALE

40—EMPLOYMENT
MALE AND/OR FEMALE

40—EMPLOYMENT
MALE AND/OR FEMALE

at Congress
An equal opportunity employer

LOOKING FOR AN
INTERESTING JOB?

Many positions now available

APPLY OR CALL

.

Between 8:30 A.M. and 5 P.M.
Monday thru Friday

Michigan Bell
Telephone Co.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

VETERANS

Use your "On the job training" allowances from VA
thru employment with our company as

• Installers
• Splicers
• Electrical Technicians

JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.

Local and Long Distance STORAGE.
Packing, pianos, appliances, household
furnishings.
8829 Northend—Ferndale

ELECTRIC REPAIRS. All types — resi-
dential, commercial. EL 6-7228.

A-I PAPERHANGING and painting. Im-
mediate service. UN 4-0326.

LARKINS MOVING CO.

Household and Office Furniture

Local and Inter-state
Also storage.

894-4587

EXPERT PAPERHANGING
PAINTING

An Equal Opportunity Employer

FEBRUARY 1—APRIL 2, 1969

INTERIOR ONLY.
REFERENCES

CHAS. CADOTTE 874-3281

PAINTING and decorating. All work
guaranteed. References. TY 7-2501.

FURNITURE refinished and repaired.
Free estimates. UN 4-3547.

55-C—COATS FOR SALE

ELEGANT
MINK JACKET

Size 11-12
Like New

542-2104 after 6 P.M.

87—PETS

MINIATURE poodles — registered AKC.
Black and Silver, 1 femade and 3 males.
Call after 4. KE 7-1936.

Russell Greenan Novel
`It Happened in Boston?'

Russell H. Greenan draws upon
the Bible, mythology, art, science,
humor and adventure to make his
novel, "It Happened in Boston?" a
superb work of fiction.
The novel, published by Random
House, introduces its heroes into a
sphere of modern problems and
alerts the reader to issues that
create an avalanche of events
marking life's problems and chal-
lenges.

"It Happened in Boston?" is
replete with action, contains suffi-
cient humor to keep the reader
deeply concerned and vitally inter-
ested. It's a novel that won't be
easy to put down before the tale is
read from beginning to end.

23500 Michigan Avenue, Dearborn (Hr. Westborn)
19992 Kelly Road, Detroit (Hr. Eastland)
105 E. Bethune, Corner John R

Michigan Bell
Telephone Co.

1911..1969

543-4832

My Neighbors

Southfield at 91/2 Mile Road

AMERICA

FOR BETTER wall washing, can James
Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005.
526 Belmont.

Room S 101, Northwest Office Center, Southfield

Downtown

OF

JEWISH MUSIC
IN

Painting. Interior-exterior. Free esti-
mates. Reasonable. LI 7-5639, ICE 8-1047.

Room No. 201, Leland House, 400 Bagley, Detroit

For information call 393.3202 or apply in person 8:30 a.m.-5:30
p.m. for interview at:

CENTURY

DECORATING-PAINTING — Neat and
clean. Also small carpentry work. 542-
3270.

It is said that if you wash a cat
it will never again wash itself.
This may or may not be true:
what is certain is that if you
teach a man anything he will never
learn it; and if you cure him of a
disease he will be unable to cure
himself the next time it attacks
him. —George Bernard Shaw

Receive full pay while training for a challenging career with
excellent fringe benefits and good opportunities to advance.

A QUARTER

50—BUSINESS CARDS

ROOM 201, LELAND HOUSE

400 Bagley, Detroit, Phone 393-2815
105 E. BETHUNE (Corner of John R)
Phone 875-2080
ROOM S-101
Northwest Office Center, Southfield
(Southfield at 91/2 Mile)
Phone 357-4473
13635 GREINER, DETROIT
Phone 371-9952
23500 MICHIGAN AVENUE, DEARBORN
Phone 565-5740
225 S. TROY, ROYAL OAK
Phone 543-9910
100 S. GRATIOT, MT. CLEMENS
Phone 468-9957

CELERRATI

"You name it...we'll pro.
test

1.134tanzli

n,J

th,

et0440

Heralding the 25th annual observance of the Jewish Music Festi-
val to be marked throughout the country from Feb. 1 to April 2, under
auspices of the National Jewish Welfare Board's Jewish Minh!
Council, this poster highlights the theme of the Silver Jubilee event.

Benedictions

Benedictions are worded in the
present tense ("Who bringest forth
bread from the earth," "Who re-
deemest Israel").
From a practical viewpoint this
is grammatically correct even
when referring to the past. Rab-
binic commentaries, however, in-
dicate that there is a great lesson
to be learned from this preferred
usage of tense. It shows that the
world is in a constant and con-
tinuing process of creation. It fur-
ther shows that the Almighty has
not simply given something to man
and then lost interest in him.
Rather, he is constantly concerned
with man's sustenance. Further-
more, it should be noted that while
to man's limited intellect time is
divided into past, present and fu-
ture, to the Almighty these three
are all one, He "is, was and will
be" all at the same time.
There are no special benedic-
tion recited before performing
an act of charity such as there is
before performing other religious
acts.
A number of reasons are ad-
vanced. Some claim that in order
for a benediction to be recited be-
fore the performance of a religious
act, there must be a spirit of glad-
ness before the performance of
the act. Apparently, some people
give charity without the proper
spirit. Thus, there is no benedic-
tion. Others claim that the rea-
son for the omission of the bene-
diction is that an act of charity
depends upon more than one per-
son (the giver and the receiver).
In such a case, the giver is never
sure that his gift will be accepted.
Should it not be accepted, the
blessing may be recited in vain.
Still others claim that the bene-
diction is omitted because when it
comes to charity, there should be
no delay between one's will and
one's action even to the extent of
pronouncing a benediction lest the
delay may, in some cases, make
the gift arrive too late, and this
gift may be one of a critical na-
ture, sometimes being a matter
of life and death.
There is no benediction re-
cited when observing the Com-
mandment of honoring one's
father and mother.
Some claim, as in the act of
charity, the parent may in some

By RABBI SAMUEL J.

FOX

(Copyright 1969, JTA, Inc.)

cases refuse the honor and thus
the benediction would be in vain.
However, there is another consid-
eration which would apply both
to a benediction for charity and
for honoring one's parents. This
is the fact that certain Command-
ments can be completely fulfilled
with one act (putting on the Tefi-
lin, holding the Lulab, etc.). Other
Commandments cannot be fulfilled
by one simple act. Their obligation
is a continuous one. Having given
charity once does not excuse a
man the next time it is asked for
or needed, even in the same day.
Likewise, performing - an act of
honoring one's parent does not ex-
cuse one from the obligation of
honoring the parent the very next
time the opportunity arises, even
if it should arise in the next few
minutes. One is therefore never
sure that he has ever been in a
position to complete his obligation.
He thus can never tell whether or
not he is going to perform a com-
plete Commandment. Thus, a ben-
ediction would be out of order.

2.8 Million Population
in Israel, Census Finds

JERUSALEM (ZINS)—A recent
census has disclosed that 2,841,000
people inhabited Israel at the end
of 1968, and 2,435,000 among them
were Jews. These figures include
the inhabitants of East Jerusalem.
The general increase of the
population in 1968 was 63,000 (2.4
per cent). The natural increase of
the Jewish population was ap-
proximately 50,000 (2.1 per cent).
The natural increase of the non-
Jewish population reached 12,500
(3.9 per cent).

Morton Sobell Freed

NEW YORK — After a prison
term of 17 years and 9 months,
Morton Sobell has been released
from the Lewisburg, Pa., peniten-
tiary. Sobell was sentenced to 30
years for a wartime espionage
conspiracy to deliver vital nation-
al secrets to the Soviet Union.
Sobell was a eo-defendant with
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, exe-
cuted atom spies. He maintained
his innocence, and his wife car-
ried on an unceasing fight for
his release.

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