THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 54-Friday, June 8, 1973 JO-A-INSTRUCTIONS 50-BUSINESS CARDS SUMMER remedial math tutor- ing, all grades, M.A., B.S. de- grees, certified experienced teacher. 545-3898, call evenings. PAINTING - PAPERHANGING TUTORING by a professional educator. Call 968-0266. QUALITY WORK 50-BUSINESS CARDS JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO. Local and Long Distance STOR- AGE. Packing, pianos, appliances, household furnishings, office furniture. 7040 Puritan-Detroit 861-6441 REASONABLE PRICE 40-EMPLOYMENT MALE AND/OR FEMALE 547-7569 METRO WINDOW CLEANING MOTHERLESS home, 2 boys, 10 & 7. Live in. Perm. position for right person. References. 353-1065. FIRST CLASS painting and dec- orating, wood finishing and an- tiquing. Reasonable. 5474438. --- WALLPAPERING & painting. All vinyls $5.00 per roll. Free esti- mates. 545-7956. Experts on aluminum storm windows. Wall washing, free estimates. HOUSEKEEPER, live in, help mother w/home & children. No sabbath calls. 544-1247. PAINT UP for Spring. Interior exterior. Wallpapering & an- tiquing. 544-1646. LARKINS MOVING CO. 1EE ROOM for companion to share home w/elderly lady. 7 Mile-Schaefer area. 474-1137 after 7 p.m. LEWIS PAINTING Household and Office Furniture looking for female companion. Free room & board. Help with cooking & cleaning. Wages. 546-7808 EXP. ONLY mature_ Telephone solicitors, reasonable persons to work from our Southfield office. Sal- ary plus generous commissions. 353-9174 EXP. REAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE WANTED Higher commissions. Paid bon- us plan end of yr. Join us for a better future. All contacts strictly confidential. Write P.O. Box 11, Lathrup Village, Mich. 48076. the people with quality and estimates. Free experience. 398-3965. call: From 9-5 Evenings call: 534-8609. neat and A-1 PAPERHANGER, responsible. 542-4995. PROFESSIONAL PAINTING With a golden touch. CUSTOM WALLPAPERING. Free esti- mates, fully insured. CALL Dave Benkoff Al Benkoff 352-3281 543-6842 PROFESSIONAL PAINTING With a customized look. Quality paper hanging by request. FREE ESTIMATES AND PAPER CONSULTATION Insurance Estimates Given Call Licensed R.E. Salespeople. A CHRIS BIRCHALL few career openings available 543-8692 with 9th largest ind. Corp. in U.S., International Telephone and Telegraph's Comm. Deve. - C:3rp. We are builders of Palm Coast, Fla. Average earnings 1st year $20,000 to $35,000. Call 559-7550 Herschel Le- vine, Mgr. or write 23077 Greenfield, Suite 463, South- field, Michigan. 40-A-EMPLOY MENT WANTED PRACTICAL nurse for private duty or home care. 576-1506. EXPERIENCED day care for elderly. Reasonable. Oak Park- Southfield. 544-4655. 45-BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES cash in on my work In 4 months I took this business from nothing to over $300 net per week, part time. Now personal considerations force me to sell my profitable fran- chise in the hottest pub- lication in the USA-TV Facts. Complete turn-key operations, no knowledge of publishing needed. Exc opportunity for recent col- lege grad or anyone with good sales personality, energy, desire to succeed, $7,000 down, terms on bal- ance. phone 545-1121 50-BUSINESS CARDS Carpet Cleaning Window & wall washing. 30 years exp. commercial and 1,!sidential. Guaranteed, bond- ed, and insured. 543-1353 COMPLETE remodeling, altera- tions, repair, kitchens, den, basement, fam. rm., reasonable. 538-6894 ELECTRIC REPAIRS. Reasonable. 644-0409. 557-7228. 894-4587 or 361-5222 WALLPAPER SALE We carry the very finest in quality wallcoverings of 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 53-A-ENTERTAINMENT SINGING guitarist. Also plays violin. 398-2462. 55 - MISCELLANEOUS 7 PIECE silver tea set. Melon Pattern. Like new, must be seen to be appreciated. KE 7-6972. WANTED used books, paper back & hard covers. Sheet music for Bran- PLUMBING repairs including dis- deis University Book Sale. Tax posals and sump pumps. No deductible. Free pick up. DI service charge. 398-1754. 1-2461. Pointing, roofing, other home repoirs. 837-5797 PANELING, partitions, floors, ceilings tiled. Also small jobs. Reasonable. Ron, 968-4576. DRESSMAKING Alterations. 20 years experience, daytime. WO 1-2083, after 5, 541-7009. CARPENTRY work. inside & out- side. I. Schwartz. 545-7712 or VE 8-5073. 'LOWEST PRICES ALL WORK GUARANTEED EXPERT HOME IMPROVEMENT AND GARAGE BUILDERS FREE ESTIMATES TAYLOR GARAGES 5540 E. 8 Mile Rd. Call 7 Days A Week 538-2025 If No Answer 366-1100 If We Can't Do It- It Can't Be Done PASSPORT PHOTOS 2fors395 Papertique 28635 Southfield 357-3266 Overnite Service INVITATIONS 20%.. OFF. have them published abroad. vised as a cure for a dying The caution which caused father; and when the father Harvitz to evade Levitansky dies while the teacher tries the taxi driver was useless. to recover the $986 he paid Either Levitansky or his for the crown, he even earns brother-in-law kept showing the branding as a murderer up, and Harvitz takes the for lack of faith. "The Letter" is a brief ae- manuscripts along with him Local and Long Distance Also Storage FURNITURE refinished and re- paired. Free estimates. 474-8953. MEET AN HONEST MAN Bernard Malamud creates many moods in his new volume of short stories. There are touches of realism in his dramatic Russian epi- sode. The lady who likes to write notes and nearly seduces her husband's former 541 -0278 GRANDMA sitter during after- noon hours. LI 7-1106. Elderly Woman Malamud Fascinates Again With Impressive Series of Short Stories, 'Rembrandt's Hat' 59-A-PIANOS FOR SALE CHICKERING console French Provincial. Exc. cond. $1,050 or best offer. Also end tables, cocktail table, lamp. 358-2334. 70 - A - SUMMER TRAVEL IN W & E Europe & Non-Arab Mideast. June 15-Aug. 30, can take addl. bus or condl. task. RHG 622 Miller, Ann Arbor, 48103. 761-5302. 85 - PERSONAL ANYONE witnessing a young boy being struck by a car while walking his bicycle across 9 Mile Rd. at the corner of Twin- ing, between Southfield and Ever- green, on Tuesday, May 29th, please call 356-7986. 87 PETS WILL SELL or consider renting beautiful 5 year Palomino mare. Must be experienced rider. 549- 3175. 91-COUNTRY CLUB MEMBERSHIP FOR SALE SHENANDOAH pool membership, on Walnut Lake Rd., W. Bloom- field. 682-9605. SHENANDOAH swim club mem- bership. $375, call 425-8035 after 4 p.m. Memorial Rite Set for Sexton Cooper A special unveiling cere- mony in memory of Beth Achim Sexton Morris Cooper will be conducted 3:30 p.m. June 17 at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rev. Cooper, who died a year ago, served Downtown Synagogue, Cong. Ahavas Achim and later at Beth Achim. The community is invited to attend the services. BERNARD MALAMUD pupil emerges as a character out of psychopathy. There is mystery in the delusion that a man can save his father's life by utilizing faith healing. An incident in a mental in- stitution adds to the variety of the themes in "Rem- brandt's Hat," the new Mala- mud book published by Farrar Straus and Giroux. The title story is the third in the book, and while sev- eral of the other narratives could have served as the chief attraction, the author used good judgment in as- signing the superiority. In "Rembrandt's Hat" we have pathos, humor, a measure of drama. There is a meas- ure of artists' jealousies in a tale in which a sculptor and a teacher find their friendship damaged because a pun, when the artist's hat was likened to Rembrandt's, is interpreted as a slur. It takes time and the misun- derstanding is corrected. In the process, there is the mingling of human factors, of suspicions, of regrets over the temporary animosity. count of an occurrence in an on his return trip. The summation of the Levi- asylum for the mentally ill. tansky stories climaxes the "Notes From a Lady at a tale that carries with it the Dinner Party" is the story lesson of the present struggle of a professor's wife who in Russia.- It is the story of keeps writing notes to a a writer who must hide the guest at their home, secretly manuscripts in a drawer, but constantly, during the unless they can be published dinner party; makes a date abroad. There is much to meet the young architect humor mixed with the path- who was her husband's stu- etic in "Man in the Drawer" dent at a motel that night, that has so much current and winds up with another value as an expose of the note cancelling the tryst be- Russian system. cause she is six months, The first story in the book, pregnant. "Talking Horse," "In Re- "The Silver Crown," is about the delusion over faith heal- tirement," and "My Son the ing. It relates how a smart Murderer" add zest to a retired rabbi fooled a mod- series of eight stories in the ern school teacher into pay- newest of Bernard Mala- ing for a crown he was ad- mud's splendid narratives. In "Rembrandt's Hat" there is the superb Malamud skill of depicting character. istics while establishing the human relationships that ele- vate a story's plot into high dramatic factors. Especially timely is the longest story in the book - the 63-page "Man in the Drawer." All of the miseries that are encountered by freedom - seeking Russian writers is embedded in this plot. It is the story of an American tourist in Russia whose taxi driver emerges as an author who is pre- vented from publishing his works by the restrictive forces of the Soviet system. It so happened that the tourist, H. Harvitz, had al- ready gotten into difficulty with the Russian border of- ficials because he carried with him a poetry anthology for high school students, en- titled "Visible Secrets." He was immediately suspected of espionage and the books were confiscated and were kept, each volume separately labeled, to be returned to him when he was to leave the USSR. It was under such circum- stances that Harvitz came in contact with the Russian author, also a Jew, who wanted him to smuggle his stories out of Russia and to Soviet Jew, Who Tasted Freedom for Year , Dies in Detroit at 52 Abragam Lakhmanovitch, starting to learn English, and a Soviet Jew who with his the family had made friends family were the first emi- here. They came from Vinogra- grants to Detroit to be re- united with relatives under dov in the Carpathian district the attorney general's parole of the USSR, which was ced- authority in December 1971, ed from Czechoslovakia after died Sunday night at age 52. the war. When World War II Mr. Lakhmanovitch, who broke out, Mr. Lakhmano- had been ailing for the past vitch was taken as a slave several months, died in the laborer. His cousin, Joseph Jewish Home for the Aged. Klein, with whom he grew He his wife. Roukhlia and up, was interned in a con- son Zelik were living at 25301 centration camp. The latter, S. Montmartre, Oak Park. A who was orphaned, was daughter, Blima Berkovitch, brought by Hias to the U.S. and grandchild, are still in 23 years ago. After the war, Mr. Lakh- the Soviet Union. When the Lakhmanovitch manovitch settled in Vino- family arrived in Detroit, a gradov, where he married number of community lead- and reared a son and daugh- ers welcomed them at Metro- ter. He worked as a flour politan Airport. Their coming miller. Reflecting the various represented a more lenient occupations under which he policy on the part of the U.S. had lived, Mr. Lakhmano- government to admit Soviet witch had some knowledge of Jews under the family re- Russian, German, Hungarian and Czechoslovakian, as well unification plan. The Lakhmanovitches have as Yiddish. Hias faced great difficul- cousins living here, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Klein, who ties in getting the family out helped bring the family to of Russia because they the U.S. The Jewish Reset- couldn't meet the require- tlement Service, local affili- ment of having a blood rela- ate of the United Hias Ser- tive here. Moscow finally vice, assisted in the initial agreed, however, and the stages of their resettlement family got visas to France here. Zelik, 23, who knew and from there to the U.S. English when he came, has Services were held Monday been working for a downtown at Hebrew Memorial Chapel. clothing firm. Mr. Lakhman- ovitch was working for a The Family of the Late metals company until he fell I ill several months ago. A cousin described their adjustment as a difficult one, but Zelik in particular was happy with his new life. Even Mrs. Lakhmanovitch was Senate Foreign Relations Committee OKs Envoy Keating NEW YORK (JTA)-The nomination of Kenneth Keat- ing, former Republican sena- tor from New York, to be ambassador to Israel, was approved by the Senate for- eign Relations Committee Monday without a hearing, the New York Times said Tuesday. The Times noted that Keating is so well known to his former col- leagues that no hearing was apparently necessary. The full Senate is expected to give final approval later this week. ROSE ZUPNITSKE Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the many kind expres- sions of sympathy ex- tended by relatives and friends during the fam- ily's recent bereave- ment. The Family of the Late SAMUEL G. BANK Acknowledges with grateful appreciation the contributions made in his memory to the Samuel G. Bank Bnai Brith Memorial Forest.