THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 50-Friday, April 27, 1973 50-BUSINESS CARDS 40-EMPLOYMENT LARKINS MOVING CO. EXPERIENCED Household and Office Furniture Sales & loan person to work in pawn shop. Full time, good salary, paid vacation, call: 968-0006 Local and Long Distance Also Storage Evenings 7:30 to 10:30 894-4587 or 361-5222 SMALL SOUTHWESTERN ON- TARIO, CANADA COMMU- NITY OF 40 JEWISH FAM- ILIES REQUIRES QUALIFIED RABBI & TEACHER. POSI- TION IS AVAILABLE IMMED- IATELY. WRITE: WALLPAPER SALE We carry the very finest in quality wallcoverings at dis- count prices. Over 50,000 pat- terns to choose from, profes- sional paperhanging, painters available. Hours 10-5, eve- nings by appt. Box 1081 The Jewish News 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd. Suite 865 Southfield, Michigan 48075 HELP WANTED. Jewelry sales. No exp. necessary, full time, 341-1330. Mr. Howard Tapper. EXPERIENCED inside sales, gen- eral office, some bookkeeping, 231 W. Nine Mile, Ferndale. HOUSEKEEPER General, good cook, live-in, single home, no children, pvt. room, both and TV, good wages, references. NATIONAL WALLCOVERINGS 3950 W. 12 Mile Rd. Berkley, Mich. 545-9896 CARPENTRY work. inside & out- side. I. Schwartz. 545-7712 or VE 8-5073. NEED somebody that knows gro- ceries & counter work for in- dependent grocer, Monday thru Thursday. WO 1-7257. WANTED a night companion. 45-50. References required. 5 nights a week. 368-0999. 40-A-EMPLOYMENT WANTED 50 - BUSINESS CARDS ELECTRIC REPAIRS. Reasonable. 644-0409. 557-7228. INTERIOR & exterior painting, reasonable rates. 541-4258. WALLPAPERING & painting. All vinyls $5.00 per roll. Free esti- mates. 545-7956. Electrical Specialities Oak Park, Mi. Light fixtures, burg. alarms, door chimes, automobile alarms, soles & installation. Call for oppt. 968-0128 DRESSMAKING & alterations, 20 yrs. exp., daytime. WO 1-2083 af- ter 5, 541-7009. 7040 Puritan-Detroit WEBB'S Landscaping. 624-1783. Clean up, expert grass cutting at reasonable rates. PROFESSIONAL PAINTING With a golden touch. CUSTOM WALLPAPERING. Free esti- mates, fully insured. CALL Dove Benkoff Al Benkoff 352-3281 543-6842 PROFESSIONAL PAINTING With a customized look. Quality paper hanging by request. PANELING, partitions, floors. ceilings tiled. Also small Jobs. Reasonable. Ron, 968-4576. 50-BUSINESS CARDS COMPLETE remodeling, altera- tions, repair; kitchens, den, basement, fam. rm., reasonable. 538-6894. JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO. CONCRETE driveways, patios, brick and block work. 342-3585. EXPERIENCED day care for el- derly. Oak Park-Southfield. 544- 4655. NEW YORK (JTA)-Con- struction of private homes and apartments must be cut back for a while so that con- struction of government hous- ing for immigrants and young married couples can proceed more efficiently and at a faster rate, said Jack Local and Long Distance STOW AGE. Packing, pianos, appliances, household furnishings, office furniture. 861-6441 368-0392 Private Building Cutback Is Asked Immigrant, Family Housino.e Urged Ured FREE ESTIMATES AND PAPER CONSULTATION Insurance Estimates Given Call WINTER SAVINGS NOW Siding. Trim. Gutters. Awnings. Porch Enclosures. Storm Doors and Windows. Sliding Glass Doors. Shutters. Railing. For Free Estimate Call 357-0550 HOLIDAY ALUMINUM CO. CHRIS BIRCHALL FURNITURE refinished and re- paired. Free estimates. 474-8953. Frigidaire, GE, Admiral-Gibson, etc. 7 day, 24 hour service. Service calls $6.00. PAINT UP for Spring. Interior- exterior. Wallpapering & an- tiquing. 544-1646. G & M UPHOLSTERY, lowest prices ever. Workmanship guar. for free estimates, call 689-3051. A-1 PAPERHANGER, responsible. 542-4995. neat and CLINTON CONTRACTING For modernization on com- mercial & general contracting. Low bids guar. Coll Mr. Porvin. 852-5800 FIRST CLASS painting and dec- orating, wood finishing and an- tiquing. Reasonable. 547-1438. PAINTING - PAPERHANGING QUALITY WORK 543-8692 REASONABLE PRICE DOMESTIC REFRIGERATION 547-7569 ANY TYPE electrical work by licensed electrician. Reasonable prices. Free estimates. 398-8570. 835-7854 ALL plastering guaranteed. Re- pairs. City and Suburbs. Free estimates. 341-8929. Experts on aluminum storm windows. Wall washing, free estimates. CLINTON CONTRACTING 541-0278 For modernization on com- mercial & general contracting. Assembly of store fixtures. Low bids guar. Call Mr. Porvin. FREDDY Sheyer. His orchestra. 398-2462. METRO WINDOW CLEANING 'LOWEST PRICES ALL WORK GUARANTEED EXPERT HOME IMPROVEMENT AND GARAGE BUILDERS FREE ESTIMATES TAYLOR GARAGES 5540 E. 8 Mile Rd. 852-9260 PASSPORT PHOTOS 2 fon" Papertique 538-2025 28635 Southfield 357-3266 Overnite Service 366.1100 INVITATIONS Call 7 Days A Week If No Answer If We Can't Do It- It Can't Be Done 20% OFF 53 - A - ENTERTAINMENT 55 - MISCELLANEOUS WE BUY old T.V.'S, working or not. Call anytime, 891-0551. 57-FOR SALE-HOUSEHOLD GOODS & FURNISHINGS An uncommon house sale HOUSEHOLD GOODS INC. Furniture choice antiques ski equipment, new electric stove, twin beds, useful items for everyone. 708 Larchela, Birmingham April 27, 28 & 29 10:00 to 6:00 . SCANDINAVIAN . Order fine contemporary furni- ture from Denmark, Sweden at savings of 25%. Somebody who cares. Finding a competent private duty nurse who's competent isn't difficult. Finding a competent nurse who cares can be very difficult. Call for a Medical Personnel Pool RN, LPN, Aide or Companion. We'll send a nurse with top professional qualifications you and your patient will like to be around. 24 HR. SERVICE MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL 354-4290 MR. KOLOFF 557.4748 87 - PETS FOR ADOPTION. Purebred Skye terrier, spayed female, 3 years, house broken, no small children. 547-4353. BICHON FRISE Small, all white, odorless, non shedding, AKC, registered, show material, call after 4 p.m. 675-5886 $175 & up D. Weiler, chairman of the Technological Advisory Com- mittee on Housing to the Is- raeli Ministry of Housing and the Jewish Agency. "There is no housing short- age, there is only a housing crisis," he said. Weiler was responding to a recent report from Israel that Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir had said the housing shortage in Israel was a myth. Danny Halpern, Sapir's chief assistant, said, "We have looked at the figures and we estimate that there are 80,000 apartments and other . kinds of dwellings be- ing built in Israel. According to what we've found, we've got more than we need." Subsequently, in an an- alysis of Israel's current housing problems, David Landau, JTA Jerusalem Bu- reau Chief, in the JTA Bulle- tin of April 11 reported Sapir had asked for a cutback in the construction of private homes and apartments and reported Halpern as saying there would be no cutback in government-built housing for immigrants and needy Is- raelis. Weiler stressed that his committee had recommended a cutback almost a year ago in the private sector to stem inflation and to facilitate government construction. The present housing crisis, he explained, stemmed in part from a dearth of ma- terials and labor. Materials and labor ur- gently needed in the govern- ment sector, he said, were being "shunted away" for use in the private sector, thus slowing down govern- ment construction and cre- ating a "black market" for labor. Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, Sapir promised that the gov- ernment would provide im- proved housing for 11,000 slum dwelling families, about a third of whom live in Tel Aviv. He said the treasury has already allocated the neces- sary financial means to the housing ministry and that the improved housing would be available within two years. Sapir, speaking while tour- ing one of Tel Aviv's slum quarters, said that the fami- lies eligible for the improved housing would be those pres- ently living four or more persons to a room. He said the government planned to evacuate these families and give them more spacious quarters. I. M. Biderman, JNF Youth Head NEW YORK (JTA) - Dr. Israel M. Biderman, director of the Youth and Education Department of the Jewish National Fund of America, died April 19 at the age of 60. Born in Wloclawek, Poland, Dr. Biderman was a prom- inent writer and author on Jewish historical subjects and since childhood, was as- sociated with the Zionist retary of the Kehilot-Union of Jewish Religious Congre- gations of Poland. Dr. Biderman arrived in the U. S. in 1950, and served as consultant to the Jewish Education Committee in New York. In 1958 he joined the Jewish National Fund. He earned his doctorate in philosophy at New York Uni- versity. He was the president of the New York Region of the Farband - LZO; administra- tive committee member of the American section of the World Jewish Congress. of the World Congress of Jewish Culture and of the World Councils of Brith Ivrit Ola- mit and Ichud Olami. At the last Zionist Con- gress, he was elected deputy member of the World Zionist Actions Committee. Florence Esero*, School Teacher DR. ISRAEL SIDEMAN movement. He spent the years of World War II in Russia. After the war he was engaged in rebuilding Jewish cultural and educational in- stitutions in Poland. He served as general sec- George Lichtheim, Scholar on Marx LONDON (JTA) - George Lichtheim, a journalist, es- sayist and scholar who was an acknowledged authority on Karl Marx and dialectical materialism, died Tuesday at the age of 60. Born in Berlin, he was the son of Richard Lichtheim, who was one of the most prominent Zionist leaders in Germany before the Hitler era and later a member of the Zionist Executive in Jeru- salem. Mr. Lichtheim served for several years as London cor- respondent for the Palestine Post, later to Jerusalem Post, and covered the Nuremburg war crimes trials for that paper. He subsequently dropped daily journalism and concen- trated on books and essays. Although not a follower of Marxism, he was a sepcial- ist on the subject. His best known books are "A Short History of Socialism," "Marx- ism," and "The Concept of Ideology." Florence Eserow, a Detroit school teacher for 30 years, died Monday at 'age 58. Mrs. Eserow, a native of Flint, taught kindergarten at Pasteur Elementary School in Detroit. She was a mem- ber of Temple Israel and 'be- longed to Bnai Brith. She lived at 23577 Riverside, Southfield. Surviving are her husband, Jack; a son, Kenneth; a daughter, Mrs. Donald (Ei- leen) Klein; two brothers, William of Tucson and Ben- jamin; two sisters, Mrs. Isadore (Sarah) Beren and Mrs. Max (Reva) Wexler, both of Flint; and three grandchildren. Ruth L. Serling, 68, of Drug Company Ruth L. Serling, co-found- er of the Serling Drug Co., died April 24 at age 68. Mrs. Serling, 14540 Bal- four, Oak Park, was born in Russia. She was a mem- ber of Hadassah, Pisgah chapter of Bnai Brith, City of Hope, Women's American ORT, Sinai Hospital Women's Guild and Oak Park chap- ter of Order of the Eastern Star. She leaves her husband, Reuben; two sons, Leon anu Jack; three brothers, two sisters and seven grand- children. Neo-Fascist Riots Lead to Arrest in Italy ROME (JTA) - Police it Florence arrested a prime suspect in the killing of a policeman during neo-fascist riots in Milan last week as Rome police were investi- gating the burning of the home of a low-ranking neo- fascist official in which twu of his children were killed and a third seriously injured. Police here are f g to determine whether the was a political motive behind the apparent arson attack on the flat of 45-year-old Mario Mattei, a street cleaner who is secretary of the local branch of the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI). Police are investigating a possible link between the arson and the Milan riots during which hundreds of neo-fascist youths roamed the streets shouting anti- Communist and anti-Jewish slogans. But they are puzzled that a politically motivated attack was directed at such a low-ranking MSI fune Hotel Training Plan to Cost $500,000 Charles Jacobs, 51; Active in Pontiac JERUSALEM (JTA)-The tourism ministry has an- nounced it plans to spend IL 2,000,000 ($500,000) to train hotel personnel. Tourist Minister Moshe Kol said that an increasing num- ber of immigrant profession- als were entering the tour- ism business. Kol awarded diplomas to 50 newly trained hotel man- agers, including 12 from East Jerusalem, and urged them to go to Eilat which has a serious personnel shortage in this field. He said a mobile instruc- tion team would be assigned to train Eilat hotel workers and that the Tadmor Cen- tral Hotel School plans to open a branch at the Red Sea port. Charles Jacobs, past presi- dent of Cong. Bnai Israel in Pontiac and of Pontiac Lodge of Bnai Brith, died Sunday at age 51. He was the own- er of Cut Rate Auto Parts in Warren since 1949. Born in Massachusetts, Mr. Jacobs was a member of the Jewish War Veterans and Amvets, as well as the Elks. He was a chairman of the Oakland County Israel Bond drive and lived at 1059 Can- terbury, Pontiac. Surviving are his wife, Goldie; two sons, Allan and Jerome; a brother, Philip; three sisters, Mrs. Isadore (Ida) Dorenfeld and Mrs. Martin (Ruth) Segal, both of Cambridge, Mass., and Mrs. Morris (Bertha) Bet- stein; and his mother, Mrs. tionary as Mattei. Jacob (Jennie) Jacobs.