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November 02, 1973 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-11-02

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

Nixon Using M.E. to Head Off
Jackson-Mills/Vanik Proposal

By JOSEPH POLAKOFF
Washington Bureau Chief
WASHINGTON (JTA) —
The Nixon administration is
now using the Middle East
situation as its principal rea-
son in asking Congress to
deliay action on the Trade
Reform Act of 1973 and to
drop provisions affecting
Soviet emigration policy.
A confused picture of ad-
ministration intent appeared
Tuesday after Peter M. Flani-
gan, executive director of the
President's Council on Inter-
national Economic Policy,
appeared before the interna-
tional Economic Policy, of
the Senate Banking Commit-
tee to support an increase of
$10,000,000,000 in the U.S. Ex-
port-Import Bank's credit
capability.
Flanigan told the senators
that the administration wants
Congress to drop the Jack-
son-Mills/Vanik ban on equal
tariff treatment (most-fav-
ored-nation status) and

credits to the Soviet Union
until it loosens its emigration
restrictions be c a u s e such
legislation might imp e d e
"sensitive negotiations" with
the Soviet Union over the
Middle East.
Later, however, his aides
were reported as saying that
w h at the administration
really wants is delay in Con-
gress on the trade bill be-
cause Soviet-American de-
tente would be clobbered as
a result of Soviet encourage-
ment of the Arab attack
on Oct. 8. The administra-
tion strategy is, having had
its way in the House it could
move in the Senate-House
conference early in the new
year, to kill the Jackson
Amendment, too, by a com-
promise proposal.
Senator Jackson comment-
ed to The Jewish News Wed-
nesday, on new pressures
from the White House, say-
ing that sentiments and
chances for his amendment
now are "stronger than

We Believe It's Time For

NEW IDEAS

on the

OAK PARK

City Council

'BROSENBLUMis

Responsive

A
Homeowner

Aware

Innovative

T

ROSENBLUM

To Oak Park City Council

VOTE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6

Endorsed by: ( partial list)

Isaac and Beverly Benaim
Ronald and Ronnie Berman
Mary and Bill Beres
Ban and Blanche Brant
Miss Andrea Berman
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Berman
Dr. and Mrs. David Berris
Jerry and Joanne Bloomberg
Mr. and Mrs. Hy Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Don Black
Mr. and Mrs. Art Breitman
Irene and Howard Burg
Douglas Bengals
Natalie and Iry Baker
Marilyn and Fred Brainin
Sarah and Joe Bricker
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Chess
Henry and Pearl Coffman
Sue Colbert
Marilyn and Don Cohen
Steve Cohen
Gertrude Cross
Aida and Phil Cutler
Hefty and Zachary Davies
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Dworkin
Carol and Stuart Ettinger
Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Eisenman
Lila and Sandy Eisenberg
Sandy and Stu Fishman
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Finkelstein
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Fink
Elaine and Max Fertel
Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Felhandler
Noreen and Mel Freeman
Mr. and Mrs. Gil Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. Elie Frances
Mr. Joseph Fritsch
Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Gerenraich
Mr. Gerald Goldberg
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ginsburg
Estelle and George Gelberman
Erica and Moishe Grossbard
Penny and Seymour Greenstein
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gutterman
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. Blake Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Gross
Marlene and Harold Goldman
Olivia and Leonard Hammer
Toby and Michael Hyman
Sylvia and Sam Herkowitx
Mr. and Mrs. Syd Harris

Lucille and Marcel Halberstadt
Harry and Shirley Jubas
Al and Linda Katxen
Mr. and Mrs. William Kish
Yvonne and Edward Korkoian
Phil and Barbara Kraft
Phyllis and Tommy Koenigsburg
Fran and Jerry Kollenberg
Judy and Nate Kolender
Bernice and Jerome Kellman
Gary and Carol Kushner
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Liederman
Mark and Elaine Lavetter
Elaine and Bob Lowenthal
Mr. and Mrs. Abbe Levi
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Levi .
Mr. and Mrs. Sherwin Molonon
Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence Morton
Marge MacGregor
Barbara and Sol Mandelbaum
Mr. and Mrs. Hy Margolis
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Maslowe
Beverly and Gerald Natinsky
Jim and Shirley Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Novick
Nate and Marilyn Peiss
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Platt
Mrs. Naomi Roberg
Mr. and Mrs. James Ristich
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Rosenfeld
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rubinstein
Mrs. Julius Rothenberg
Jerry and Barbara Singer
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Silk
Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Sabbota
Mrs. Zelda Shay
Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Segal
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Singal
Barbara and Shel Sherman
Peggy and Shel Sandler
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Starkman
Judy and Bill Stern
David and Shelley Surowitx
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Traurig
Vic and Ronne Widenbaum
Dr. and Mrs. Sheldon Wieder
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Washburn
Marvin and Eleanor Weinstein
Nancy and Dick Weiner
Carole and Dick Walker
Jack and Shifra Zwick
Jerry and Rochelle Zabel
Joyce Zack

1

42—Friday, November 2, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Business Briefs

SOUTHFIELD ATHLETIC
CLUB will host an evening of
hypnosis 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
by James Hoke, director of
the Clinical Hypnosis Center,
Inc. in Southfield. The pro-
gram is open to the public.
There is an admission
charge. Audience volunteers
will be requested for stage
demonstrations. For reserva-
tions, call Jeffrey Schultz,
355-0080.
*
Mira Linder, the newly
el e c t e d president of the
Michigan Chapter of Cidesco
(International Committee of
Aesthetics and Cosmetology)
announced plans to move
AESTHETICS OF MIRA
LINDER, presently located
at 26711 Southfield, Lathrup
Village, to new, larger quar-
ters, at 29563 Northwestern
Southfield. The new location,
scheduled to open Dec. 1, will
provide complete beauty care
for both men and women.
The men's department will
be open 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.
Besides f a c i a l treatments
Mrs. Linder will also offer
messages, and make-up ser-
vices.

* * *

Orchard Mall Has
Show for Women

"It's a Woman's World,"
a special art show and sale,
will be presented through
Saturday at the Orchard
Mall in West Bloomfield.
Sponsored by the Creative
Council, an organization of
women artists, the show will
feature art work in all media,
demonstrations and work-
shops by member artists,
evening entertainment and a
fashion show.
Art and craft works of
leaded glass, metal, weaving,
macrame, enameling, pot-
tery, water color, oil and
acrylic will be on display.
There will be demonstra-
tions in loom weaving, form-
ing clay on a wheel, paint-
ing, macrame and spinning
on a spinning wheel. There
also will be workshops for
learing a variety of crafts.
A schedule of events is
posted in the mall.

broker of the ARTHUR N.
KING REALTY CO. He
manages the firm's Seven
Mile Rd. branch.
• . •
'Among the second-place
winners in the fifth annual
WEIGHT WATCHERS Recipe
Contest were Naomi Roberg
and Marilyn Dubrinsky, both
of Oak Park. They won in
the meat, fish and poultry
and dairy categories, respec-
tively. Mrs. Roberg's recipe
was Liver Supreme and Mrs.
Dubrinsky's Citrus Pan
Cakes.

Urge College Credits
for Student Workers

NEW YORK (JTA)—Rab-
bi Bernard Weinberger,
president of Jewish Orthodox
Youth (JOY), issued a call
that, in view of the Mideast
crisis, "all college students
who volunteer to do humani-
tarian work in Israel be
granted credit for such serv-
ice and time." JOY operates
a guidance and counselling
service for students as a
Talent Search project of the
United States Department of
Health, Education and Wel-
fare. Citing the large umber
of students who have left
colleges throughout the city
to volunteer their services on
behalf of Israel, Rabbi Wein-
berger expressed concern
over the academic communi-
ty's failure to initiate provi-
sions for students responding
to such humanitarian crises.

Moscow Jews Jailed in Effort
to Petition for Sylva Zalmanson

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Eighteen Moscow Jews were
arrested Oct. 25 while at-
tempting to deliver a petition
on behalf of Sylva Zalman-
son Kuznetsov on her 29th
birthday to the presidium of
the Supreme Soviet, the Stu-
dent Struggle for Soviet
Jewry (SSSJ) has learned.
Among those arrested were
well-known activists Vladimir
Slepak, Victor Polsky, Pavel
Abramovich a n d Mikhail
Agursky.
After the arrest of the 18,
another 23 Jews sent a tele-
gram of protest to the Su-
preme Soviet.
Mrs. Kuznetsov had de-
clared that she would go on
a hunger strike on her birth-
day.
Dangerously ill since her
arrest and trial in 1970, she
has served three years of a
10-year sentence.
Her husband, Edouard Kuz-
netsov, also in prison in the
Soviet Union, has announced
that he is on a hunger strike,

as are her brothers Vulf and _
Israel Zalmanson, Iosif Men-
delevich, David Chernoglaz,
and Semion Grilius.
Richard Maass, chairmar
of the National conference on
Soviet Jewry, noted that
Sylva will be the focus of
nationwide attention on Dec,
10, which is the "Women
United for Israel and Soviet
Jews" event.
Meanwhile, 100 Moscow
Jews approached the Soviet
Red Cross to donate bloc:.
for the Israeli army. When
they were told the USSR wa-
not sending blood to any of
the combatants, the Tews
ere
pointed out that ther
signs at Moscow Unir,,A-sit: -
asking for blood for the Atab
cause.
It was learned that the
case of the Tibilisi activist
brothers, Isai and Grigory
Goldstein, both physicists,
may be reopened by Soviet
authorities.

Classifieds Get Quick Resu1

****************,
HELP DETROIT!
Elect

JACK
KELLEY

Detroit
Common Council

Israel Election Dec. 1

Endorsed by Union, Homeowners.
Police, Firefighters, Business and
Professional Organizations, and
Democratic& Republican Districts.

4-444-44

****

KEEP SOUTHFIELD'S GOOD GOVERNMENT

COUNCILMAN

RE-ELECT WALLACE Jr.

PHILIP B. PETERSON NE11. E.

COUNCILMAN

* *

New Country Club

Woodrow W. Woody, own-
er of Woody Pontiac, had a
fervent ambition—a determi-
nation to build one of the
finest country clubs in Ameri-
ca . . . A $5,000,000 invest-
ment resulted in the comple-
tion of Woody's dream come
true.
The huge ultra-modern new
Hillcrest Country Club is on
Groesbeck Hwy. in Mount
Clemens and has modern
banquet and health facilities.
There are eight separate
banquet rooms, catering for
75 to 1,000 and four kitchens
for parties of all occasions.
A health club includes an
Olympic size swimming pool,
whirlpool, bicycles, weight
exercise supervision, sauna,
famed Swedish massages,
etc. Also on the grounds are
three tennis courts and an
18-hole golf course.
Woody offers two types of
membership, a Class A,
which includes all the health
facilities, social functions and
golfing; Class B including all
the above without golfing.
A fully paved and highly
illuminated parking lot holds
over 1,000 cars.
* * *
THOMAS A. FLEISCHER
has been appointed assistant
vice president and associate

Personally Known and Highly Recommended by:

Mr. Fred Apel
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Barbas
Mr. and Mrs. Max Baron
Mr. and Mrs. Abe Cohen
Mr. and Mrs. Harris Crane
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Durbin
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Farber
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Feldman
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Fenton
Dr. and Mrs. M. B. Finklestein
Mr. Ray Goldbaum
Mettie Baron Golub
Bernard and Helen Gottfried
Mr. and Mrs. David Greenwald
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Grant
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gurwin
William and Helen Hertz
Dr. and Mrs. Leon Hershfuss
Dr. and Mrs. Louis Heyman
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hechtman

.

BALLOT # 20

Israel's national election
has been set for Dec. 31.
The elections were to have
been held on Oct. 30 and
were postponed when the
Yom Kippur War broke out.

Dr. and Mrs. Robert Katz
Harold and Jackie Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kohl
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Korman
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kramer
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Langwald
Mr. and Mrs. Manny Laski
Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Wayne
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Weinstein
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Weinstein
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Weinstein
Dr. Howard Weissman
Mr. and Mrs. Max York
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wolfson
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Laski
Albert and Delphine Lee
Myrle Leland
Mr. and Mrs. Bart Lewis'
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mandell
Norman Michlin
Mr. and Mrs. Moe Miller

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mitott
Mr. and Mrs. Mayer Morganroth
Dr. Jack Pearl
Dr. and Mrs. Alvin Pensler
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Raclin
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Rissman
Dr. Michael Rolnick
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Ravin
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Schiff
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schreier
Dr. and Mrs. Martin Selik
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert B. Silverman
Dr. and Mrs. Allen Soble
Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Solomon
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Sosin
Mr. and Mrs. Max Sosin
Werner Stark
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Stuart
Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Barry Stuhlberg
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tann

They Have Earned Our Respect and Confidence

RETAIN EXPERIENCED LEADERS
Vote November 6
Tuesday
Vote November 6

PETERSON

Pd. Pol. Adv.

WALLACE

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