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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

June 01, 1973 - Image 45

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-06-01

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

40—EMPLOYMENT
MALE AND/OR FEMALE

DRIVERS & HELPERS

to move household furniture.

Apply 7040 Puritan. 1 blk. W.

of Livernois betw. 9 & 5 p.m.

M-F.

50—BUSINESS CARDS

PROFESSIONAL.
PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES AND
PAPER CONSULTATION

Call

Mangmt. trainee opening for
aggressive talented person. We
will train fully. Attractive
starting salary call Mr. Goetz
at

884-9122 bet 1 & 4 p.m. only
or 886-6528

REAL ESTATE SALES

28200 Southfield

SMALL SOUTHWESTERN ON'
TAR 10, CANADA COMMU.
NITY OF 35 JEWISH FAM.
(LIES REQUIRES QUALIFIED
RABBI & TEACHER. POSI-
TION IS AVAILABLE IMMED-
IATELY. WRITE:

Box 1081
The Jewish News
17515 W. 9 Mile Rd.
Suite 865

Southfield, Michigan 48075

FULL-TIME ambitious clean cut
hard working high school grad.
good future. Call Larry 543-5700.

AGGRESIVE PERSON

to work in an electronic ware-
house. Duties will include:
shipping, receiving, & pulling
orders, good chance for pro-
motion. Call Mr. Faber

399-5920

COMPANION for elderly woman.
5 days. Live in apt. cleaning
and cooking. 626-3056.

SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHERS

Birmingham Temple

Grades, 5, 6, & nursery. If you
are interested and are a quali-
fied teacher, please contact
Mrs. Schneyer.

354-1080

JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.

Local and Long Distance STOR-
AGE. Packing, pianos, appliances,
household furnishings, office
furniture.

Kosins Clothes, a pres-
tige men's clothing store,
has a opening for a sales
person in our habadash-
ery dept. Person we're
looking for must have an
experienced background
in men's fashions, men's
furnishings in the coun-
ry. This position offers
competitive
salary,
and an excellent pro-
gram of co. paid fringe
benefits.
Call
Harry
Kosins

WO 1-8751 for an appt.

With a golden touch. CUSTOM
WALLPAPERING. Free esti-
mates, fully insured. CALL

Dave Benkoff
Al Benkoff

352-3281
543-6842

ELECTRIC REPAIRS. Reasonable.
644-0409. 557-7228.

FURNITURE refinished and re-
paired. Free estimates. 474-8953.

FIRST CLASS painting and dec-
orating, wood finishing and an-
tiquing. Reasonable. 547-1438.

645-0618

Carpet Cleaning

Window & wall washing. 30
years exp. commercial and
residential. Guaranteed, bond-
ed, and insured.

543-1353

861-6441

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.

NATIONAL WALLCOVERINGS
3950 W. 12 Mile Rd.
Berkley, Mich.
545-9896

DRESSMAKING Alterations. 20
years experience, daytime. WO
1-2083, after 5 541-7009.

ELECTRIC REPAIRS. Reasonable
644-0409, 557-7228.

PAINTER, exterior, interior, free
estimates, reasonable, 968-5639,
357-4585.

MR. BENTLEY

Interior & exterior painting.
Reasonable rates.

541-4258

PLUMBING repairs including dis-
posals and sump pumps. No
service charge. 398-1754.

PAINTING —
PAPERHANGING

QUALITY WORK

REASONABLE PRICE

547-7569

PAINT UP for Spring. Interior-
exterior. Wallpapering & an-
tiquing. 544-1646.

LEWIS PAINTING

the people with quality and
estimates.
398-3965.
Evenings call: 534-8609.

DINING rm. set, china cabinet, experience.
Free
table, 4 chairs, Italian, regular
From 9-5 call:
$700, sacrifice $195.

NEAT &
HONEST MAN

Pointing, roofing, other home

repairs,

837-5797

CARPENTRY work, inside & out-
side. I. Schwartz. 545-7712 or VE
8-5073.

LARKINS MOVING CO.

Household and Office
Furniture

894-4587 or 361-5222

A-1 PAPERHANGER, neat and
responsible. 542-4995.

`LOWEST PRICES

ALL WORK GUARANTEED
EXPERT HOME
IMPROVEMENT AND
GARAGE BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES

WALLPAPERING & painting. All
vinyls $5.00 per roll. Free esti-
mates. 545-7956.

COMPLETE remodeling, altera-
tions, repair, kitchens, den,
basement, fam. rm., reasonable.
538-6894.

53-A—ENTERTAINMENT

SINGING guitarist. Also plays
violin. 398-2462.

55-A—MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED

WE BUY old TVs, working or
not. Call Saturdays only 891-5395

56—ANTIQUES

LIVONIA MALL
8th Annual Summer
Antique Walk
June 4-10

9:30 A.M.-9 P.M. Daily
Noon-5 P.M. Sunday

5540 E. 8 Mile Rd.

Take a nostalgic stroll through
our
old-fashioned
Antique
Walk. See items from the past
brought to you by a select num-
ber of dealers from Michigan
and outstate. See many un-
usual collectors items. Browse
in comfortable 72° tempreture.

538-2025

Free Antique Appraisals

366-1100

7 Mile at Middlebelt

TAYLOR GARAGES

Call 7 Days A Week

If No Answer

If We Can't Do H-
it Can't Be Done

50—BUSINESS CARDS

PROFESSIONAL
PAINTING

Call 533-0081 or

7040 Puritan—Detroit

Local and Long Distance
Also Storage

Furnishings
Salesperson

Home, office or store repair
and remodeling. Experienced,
low prices, prompt service,
free estimates,

543-8692

A prestige career opportunity in
"'EAL ESTATE. We have several
METRO
- ?.nings for good salespeople.
ine sales experience preferred
WINDOW CLEANING
out are willing to train. This is
a full time position for the hard-
working career minded individ- Experts on aluminum storm
ual. If selected you will be- windows, Wall washing, free
come a professional Real Estate estimates.
Sales Associate with an out-
standing earning potential.
541-0278

Realtors

HANDYMAN

CHRIS BIRCHALL

.

Call Ron Galperin
559-8181
THE DURBIN COMPANY

50—BUSINESS CARDS

With a customized look. Quality
paper hanging by request.

Insurance Estimates Given

ARE WE LOOKING FOR YOU?

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, June 1, 1973-45

PASSPORT PHOTOS

2 fon"

Papertique

- 28635 Southfield
357-3266
Overnite Service

INVITATIONS

20% OFF

Free Parking—Free Admission

LIVONIA MALL

57—FOR SALE—HOUSEHOLD
. GOODS & FURNISHINGS

FURNITURE for sale, bedrm.
set, dinette set, liv. rm. chairs,
lamps. 20007 Prest. 342-3395.

Jewish Nationalism

A people cannot ignore its
year-old legacy which
contains the roots of its
nature and fate and, so to
speak, begin all over again.
Had we followed this course,
we would have become a
new people without any his-
torical significance for our-
selves or for mankind. —
Nahum Goldmann.

2,000

Watergate Scandal Spurs Demand
for Probe of 'Moral Erosion' in U.S.

The implications of Water-
gate and its underlying
causes are the newest con-
cern of Jewish civil rights
and religious organizations.
The national board of trus-
tees of the Union of Ameri-
can Hebrew Congregations,
at its semi-annual meeting,
endorsed a proposal that im-
mediate consultations be
sought with other religious
and civic agencies to estab-
lish a blue ribbon panel to
probe beyond the legal and
political crisis of Watergate
and "to make recommenda-
tions for restoring ethical
standards in our society."
They also called for "a
joining of this nation's re-
ligious forces and citizens to
work as a team in restoring
national and ethical values
both in our system and
among individuals."
UAHC Board Chairman
Harry K. Gutmann of Scars-
dale indicated that "prelim-
inary soundings" with some
individuals and members of
other religious and civic
agencies had already been
held. He stated that further
consultations would be con
ducted and an initial explor
atory meeting planned for
within the next three to four
weeks.

The action by the UAHC's
trustees came after a strong
plea made by the organiza-
tion's president Rabbi Mau-
rice N. Eisendrath, who told
the Jewish leaders "Water-
gate did not happen in a
vacuum. It has something to
do with the deep moral dis-
order and malaise that goes
to such questions as the val-
ues we Americans place on
money, competition, success,
national superiority, the gods
we worship, as well as the
psychological and human ef-
fects upon our national char-
acter, as well as the impact
of TV, Vietnam, assassina-
tions, racial conflicts and a
decade of the dominance of
presidential power."
Rabbi Eisendrath denoun-
ced all of the Watergate con-
spirators and labeled Presi-
dent Nixon "the principal of
this school for scandal." He
did not accuse the President
of having any direct knowl-
edge of the Watergate inci-
dent, although he thought
the nation's Chief Executive
to be "surprisingly cavalier
about those nasty little things
called facts."
He said that blame for
the ethical disaster of Water-
gate must also be assigned
to the "shameful silence" of
Christian and Jewish relig-
ious groups, the "craven"
Congress and a "slumbering,
narcoticized American peo-
ple."
"The erosion of ethical
and moral values in our na-
tion, dramatized by the
Watergate scandal, and how
these conditions affect relig-
ion in general and the Jew-
ish community in particular,"
will be deliberated on as part
of the 84th annual conven-
tion of the Central Confer-
ence of American Rabbis
June 18-21 at the Sheraton-
Biltmore Hotel, Atlanta.
Watergate itself will be
raised only through resolu-
tions and discussions since
the CCAR program was plan-
ned months prior to the out-
break of the scandal. How-

ever, "the larger problem of
America's false values, both
as a nation and as a people,
which has produced a down-
grading of religion, has been
the concern for some time of
this nation's major faith
groups, including the CCAR,"
according to the CCAR re-
lease announcing the meet-
ing.
"This religious apathy has
been evident in the syna-
gogues and has produced
numerous problems relating
both to the functions and
program of a congregation
and the relationship between
laymen and rabbis."
The American Jewish Com.
mittee, concluding its 67th
annual meeting at the Wal-
dorf-Astoria Hotel, charged
that the evidence already un-
covered in the Watergate
scandal "indicates that the
political system has been
comprised perhaps as never
before in our history."
In a resolution adopted at
the closing session of the
meeting, the ,AJC urged not
only that existing laws be
strictly enforced and that all
those charged with breaking
the law be duly prosecuted,
but that a new finance law
be enacted, with tougher pro-
visions both the collection
and use of campaign funds.

* *

*

Civil Liberties
Forum Set Here

Members of organizations
affiliated with the Jewish
Community Council have
been invited to a forum on
civil liberties 8 p.m. 'Thurs-
day at Temple Emanu-El.
"Spillover From Water-
gate: Implications for Law
and Order" will examine
civil liberties issues which
have received renewed pub-
lic interest. These issues in-
clude wiretapping, invasion
of privacy, executive priv-

ileges, shield laws and dis-
closure laws.
These problems will be ex-
plored by attorneys Ivan
Barris, Leonard Gilman and
Rolland O'Hare. Panel mod-
erator will be Judge Michael
L. Stacey.
The 'programs was arranged
by the civil liberties sub-
committee of the Council's
community relations com-
mittee. Co-chairmen are Mrs.
Matilda Rubin and David
Wolock. John H. Shepherd
is chairman of the communi-
ty relations committee.
Prime Minister's Denies
Golda Ordered Cabinet
Placed Under Surveillance
JERUSALEM (JTA) —
The prime minister's office
denied that Premier Golda
Meir had ordered the secur-
ity services to put members
of her cabinet under surveil-
lance in 1970 to track down
alleged leaks of classified in-
formation to the press.
The statement referred to
a report in Haaretz. It termed
the newspaper report as un-
founded.
The statement said that in
1969 material damaging to
the st•te's security was
leaked to the press and that
Mrs. Meir, acting on a cab-
inet decision of March 19,
1969, ordered all persons
who had access to the re-
stricted information ques-
tioned about it.
They included the entire
cabinet. The questioning was
done openly, and no minister
was placed under surveil-
lance, the statement said.
Mrs. Meir said that only
one minister objected to the
questioning but did not iden-
tify him. According to the
Haaretz story, Gahal leader
Menahem Begin, a member
of the coalition government
at the time, raised the issue
at a cabinet meeting and suc-
ceeded in getting Mrs. Meir
to rescind her alleged sur-
veillance order.

To: The Jewish News

17515 W. 9 Mile Rd.

Suite 865

Southfield, Mich. 48075

Jusr

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