46—Friday, September 3, 1971 40—EMPLOYMENT MALE AND/OR FEMALE THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Dayan and Arabs Fraternize SO--BUSINESS . CARDS Philanthropist, Artist NEW YORK — Julian Clarence Levi, architect, water-colorist, phi- lanthropist and Columbia Univer- sity's oldest living alumnus, died Aug. 24. He was 96. Born in New York. Mr. Levi had spent his last 44 years in a noted art-filled apartment oppos- ite Carnegie Hall. Mr. Levi attended Columbia's school of architecture for two years, before studying in Paris. From 1907-1962, he was a mem- ber of Taylor and Levi architects here. During the Depression, Mr. Levi was chief organizer of the Architects Emergency Commit- tee. He represented the U.S. at Metro Window Cleaning WORK IN PAWN SHOP Person needed, part-time after school okay. 1400 MICHIGAN WO 2-8698 HOUSEKEEPER needed for 1 full day plus Wed. 2:30-8:30. Own transportation. 398-8749. Experienced Only Need Apply Ladies coats, dresses, sportswear. Excellent fringe benefits. Four Season Suburban Northland Center 354-3336 WANTED—Companion for elderly lady. Light services. Live-in. 352-3353. Companion desired for wi- dowed lady. Days only. Car essential. Call WO 1-0707 Experts on aluminum storm win- dows, aluminum and woodwork washing. Eaves cleaned. Tree trim- ming. Free estimates. 541-0278 20 years experience PAINTING guaranteed. TY 7-2501. LUXURIOUS large sectional sofa, drapes, wood grain dinette set with 5 pedestal chairs. Like new. Call 353-2339. CARPENTER. Experienced. Repairs and remodeling. Commercial and res- idential. 531-3633. RON L. ADAMS—painting, interior-ex- terior, also wallpapering. Call anytime, 532-6831. JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO. Local and Long Distance STOR AGE. Packing, pianos, appliances, household furnishings, office furniture. 8829 Northend—Ferndale 543-4832 PAIWIIING, exterior, interior. Free esti- mate. 968-5639, 357-4585. HERALD ROOFING CO. Local Independent Roofer Free Estimate. Hot Tar or Reeidentiol Shioglee 534-5100 or Res. 676-5070 Advertising Sales Person- nel, Opportunity Unlim- ited on Earnings, Commis- sions. Full or part-time positions. Call Danny Raskin 534-2600 PROFESSIONAL WALLPAPERING Custom exterior and interior pointing. Large selection of wall coverings and discount prices. Free estimates. 557-5945 or after 6, 545-7956 The Good House Painting Co. is offering end of summer spe- cial rates. Enjoy the elegant feeling of clean living by hav- ing your home freshly decorat- ed. For a free estimate call 968-75$3 ELECTRIC repairs. Prompt. Reason- able. 557-7228. 55—MISCELLANEOUS AMF SLATE pool table. Pro size, 4 cues, balls. Will move. $190. 646-5514. 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED RETIRED gentleman seeks part-time position. Any type work. 543-5899. 45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES SHELL OIL CO. has selected locations. Moderate investment required. Paid train- ing with financial assistance. Call days, 444-5000 Evenings 455-1638 or 293-5034 50—BUSINESS CARDS COMPLETE remodeling — additions, kitchens, dens, basements, family rooms. Free estimates. 5584894. COMPLETE interior, exterior paint- ing and decorating. New and old wood refinished, antiquing. Reasonable. 547- 1438. CARPENTRY WORK. Interior. exterior. Specializing in rec. rooms. 273-4826, LI 5-4035. LARKINS MOVING CO. Household and Office Furniture Local and Long-Distance Also storage. 1194-4587 55-A—MISCELLANEOUS WANTED TWO COLLEGE GIRLS desire to pur- chase high fashion cloths, from private party. Will pay for quality—size 5 to 9. 565-6908. 56—ANTIQUES SOMERSET MALL ANTIQUE SHOW S. SALE SEPT. 13-18 Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thurs. 8 Fri. 9:30-9:00 Free Admission—Parking 16 Mile at Coolidge, Troy FURNITURE refinished and repaired. Free estimates. 474-8953. FOR B•rEffit wall washing, call James Russell. One day service. TO 6.4005, 526 Belmont. A-1 Painting & Decorating Fully licensed and insured. In- terior and exterior. No job too big or too small. Reasonable. 398-9477 PLUMBING. Expert home repair spec- ialist, garbage disposals repaired and serviced. Call UN 4-6926. Passport-Photos 2 8 6 3 1 Southfield S of 12 Wk. 352-4116 Eucalyptus Trees to Yield Timber Planted by JNF in the Hula Valley KLRYAT SHEMONA, Israel — A total of 750 acres in the Hula Valley are to be planted with euca- lyptus trees by the Jewish Nation- al Fund. The area is part of the former Hula swamps which were drained and dried by the Fund in the 1950s. Extensive research has shown that the acres in ques- tion are unsuitable for agriculture Warsaw Novel Dramatizes East, Ni4est Intrigues Out of the ashes of the calami- tous experiences of the last world conflict have emerged dramatic tales reviewing the agonies of man- kind. Among the noteworthy novels that not only mirror the events of the past but also expose the machinations of the present time is "The Warsaw Document" by Adam Hall, published by Double- day. This novel gives an account of the intrigues that have led to pres- ent-day Polish occurrences. The novel gives an account of the for- aging "for scraps among the dust- bins of a sick society." The East-West conflict finds an echo here. The East Berlin influ- ence and efforts at invading the areas that form the background for this story is felt here. Sociologists will find much of interest here, and historians will be enlightened by backgrounds of occurrences that involve the anti- Soviet underground, investigations of it by a young agent, the revela- tions and the multiple actions. "The Warsaw Document" is filled with action. Its intrigues pro- vide much drama and a plot that holds the reader's attention. Polish Jews Mark Date of Bialystok Ghetto Revolt FIGHT CANCER The foundation of all founda- tions, the pillar supporting all wis- doms, is the recognition of the reality of God.---(Moses Maimoni- des. The Reality of God American Cancer Society In 1929, Mr. Levi visited Jeru- salem to assist with plans for He- brew University. Recently, he had given Columbia University the Laura C. Boulton Collection of Traditional and Liturgical Music, made through a $150,000 fund in memory of his late wife. Mr. Levi had been a water- but offer promise of a high yield color painter since his teens and participated in numerous one-man of timber. At present, routine thinning and shows. other maintenance operations in JNF forests yield approximately 40,000 tons of timber products a year for local industry, netting a savings of about $1,000,000 in for- eign currency for the country. This amount will substantially in- crease during the coming years as more forests mature and further plantings, such as the Hula experi- ment, are initiated on marginal lands. Israel Defense Minister Moshe Dayan has many Arab friends and he speaks their language. This photo shows him fraternizing with Arabs in a resort near Netanya in Israel. Want to lose weight but hate fish? Coll 576-2895. Fish pro- tein is highly recommended for burning fat, but we'd rather have you lose weight more slowly with a nutritionally bal- anced diet so you con enjoy eating while you lose. Only Diet Watchers has these methods. Don't fight the fish. Call now. This will be your first step in losing weight once end for all. Phone 576-2895. 2 for $ 3.95 Back Door Galleries many architectural conferences. LONDON (JTA)—The 28th an- niversary of the three-day revolt in the Polish ghetto of Bialysak (Aug. 16 to Aug. 19, 1943) was marked with a pilgrimage of local Jews and some Jews from other towns to the memorial on the site of the ghetto. The Bialystok memorial is a modest stone with the inscription "for your freedom and ours." Alter the liquidation of the Bialy- stok ghetto, 60,000 Jews were taken to Auschwitz, Treblinka and Maidanek. There were less than 100 survivors of this group after the end of the war. 85—PERSONAL J. C. Levi, Architect, Ted Lewis Dies Gerda Klein's Story Issued as Paperback "All But My Life" by Gerda Weissmann Klein, the true story of a young Jewish girl's struggle to survive in war-time Poland and Germany, will- be reprinted in paperback by Hill & Wang on Sept. 16. Parts of the book have ap- peared in "I Have Seen War" and in "Perspectives in Literature," a high school textbook. Gerda Weissmann Klein was born in 1924 in Bielitz, Poland, where she spent a happy life with her parents and brother until the German occupation in 1939. Soon after, her family was separated from her, and she never saw her parents or brother again. Deported to a transit camp, and later to labor and concentration camps, Gerda formed close ties with several companions. In Jan- uary 1945, she was one of 4,000 slave girls forced on a 1,000-mile winter march from Silesia to Czechoslovakia. Ski boots and a fierce determination to rejoin her family helped save her life. But her friends perished. She was one of less than 200 to survive when Czechoslovakia was liberated, May 6, 1945, by a contingent of the 2nd Inf. Regiment, 5th U.S. Inf. Division, under the command of Lt. Kurt Klein. A year after the liberation, Gerda Weissmann married Lt. Klein. French Politician Praises Israel Aircraft Industry TEL AVIV (JTA) — Michel Poniatovsky, the first major member of France's Gaullist bloc to visit Israel since the Six-Day War, visited', this country's air- craft industries and said: "I read and heard of your development, but I did not know till now what a high standard you have reached." Poniatovsky, who arrived at the end of last week, is secretary gen- eral of the Independent Republi- can Party, a junior partner in the French coalition, and has been critical of the party's and the gov- ernment's Middle East policies. TED LEWIS Born Theodore Leopold Fried- man, June 6, 1891, in Circleville, 0., Ted Lewis, of the old- battered top hat and "Is everybody happy?" fame, died at his New York apart- ment, last week. Max Candiotty Institute to Supplement Weizmann REHOVOT, Israel—Israel Dep- uty Prime Minister and Minister of Education and Culture Yigal Alton predicted at the cornerstone- laying ceremony for the Weiz- mann Institute's new Max Candi- otty Institute for Science Teaching, that it would play a major role in "the great revolution in school curricula through which the coun- try is now passing." Allon was the main speaker at the ceremony. Among those at- tending were Weizmann Institute President Prof. Albert B. Sabin, Candiotty, president of Daylin, Inc.; Amnon Barness, chairman of the board of Daylin and pres' dent of the Fund for Higher Edu- cation (in Israel) who initiated the project; and Dave Finkle, Nor- man Albert and other ranking Daylin executives. Deputy Minister of Education Avner Shaki, Hebrew University President Avraham Harman and Tel Aviv University President Dr. George Wise also attended. Prof. Sabin declared that the expansion of the work of the Weiz- mann Institute's Department of Science Teaching—to be made pos- sible by the new facilities in the Candiotty Institute for Science Teaching — will be of enormous importance not only for Israel but for many other countries through- out the world. It was pointed out that the Weizmann Institute, devoted pri- marily to research, was the first institution in Israel to erect a building devoted entirely to science teaching.