12—Friday, June 21, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Joseph Democrat for Public trust in our elected represen- tatives is essential. A candidate for public office can help create that trust by being candid and, therefore, believable. Candor and job effectiveness re- quire a realistic statement of what a Congressman can do and what he cannot do. To try to change the world is to end up changing nothing. As a Congressman, I see three major opportunities. First, I would be an "ombudsman," a representative of my constituents confronted with the vast federal bureaucracy. Second, I would concentrate on a few legislative areas. To play a deci- sive roll in obtaining passage of creative legislation by a majority of 435 Congressmen, 100 Senators and the President requires years of care- ful preparation and persuasion. Third, I would seek to vote soundly on the hundreds of questions upon which Congressmen vote every year. Some of the major areas of concern in the years ahead are: NATIONAL SECURITY All other issues will pale into insig- nificance if we fail to avert world- wide war. We must explore, tirelessly, every opportunity for a balanced reduction of arms and arms controls. In the Middle East, we must provide Israel with the arms her people need to survive against the much larger mass of Soviet arms and Soviet- trained troops still dedicated to the practical annihilation of her people. The United States should continue its uniquely constructive role of moving Israel and her neighbors to the conditions of a just and stable peace. In the less developed areas of the world, we need to accelerate our ef- forts to help reverse the process by which the economic gap between the less developed nations and the rest of us is growing instead of narrowing. INFLATION No post-World War II Administra- tion — Republican or Democratic — service and construction industry manpower training programs. " FOURTEEN .MILE R1Y. FRANKLIN BEVERLY HILLS LATHRUP VILLAGE FARMINGTON TWP. FARMINGTON SOUTHFIELD EIGHT MILE RD. CC CC 1.1.1 17th CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT N. WEST DETROIT REDFORD TWP. W. WARREN RD. has been able to avoid some inflation. The Nixon Administration has mis- takenly dropped some programs of the last Administration tending to reduce inflation, e.g., job training programs pinpbinted to increase the labor supply in the labor-short and highly inflationary service and con- struction industries. Instead of employing such specific programs, this Administration has tried to depress the demand for goods and services generally by, for example, generating repressively high interest rates — themselves a contributing factor to inflating costs of doing business. Instead of using such economic scatter-guns, we should aim more narrowly at the most inflationary areas of the economy through such specific measures as lower interest rates on new construction loans and WELFARE Many people on Welfare (for ex- ample, the handicapped and the aged) are not able to work. But we must encourage those people on welfare who are able to work, to either work or suffer economic con- sequences. Incentives to work must be inserted into our welfare system if the system is to earn the support of a majority of the American electorate. President Nixon has made an important contri- bution to resolving this problem by proposing a work-incentive Family Assistance Program currently pend- ing before the Congress. CAMPAIGN FINANCING REFORM We have learned very little from our "Watergate" experience if we think it is the product of one man or group of men. It is the imperative obliga- tion of the Congress to enact cam- paign financing laws requiring the disclosure of every contributor and every contribution and effective and enforceable limitations on the amounts of contributions and total expenditures in a campaign. • "The culture in which we have been nurtured has assumed that the corn- forts, the securities, the satisfactions and achievements of life could be expanded and multiplied without limit, and that nations and individu- als could hope for more and more power and privilege." "Now we have come, as a whole nation, before some hard realities of life which all nations have faced • be- fore us. ' Very few Americans are willing to admit that all these expe- riences are due primarily to a corn- bination of historical circumstances which no statesman could have created or deflected. '" "One of the most important lessons for our whole nation is therefore to learn how to live within the limits of our epoch's possibilities . . .The more we can do this with patience and se- curity, the more we will be able to act with resolution." (Reinhold Niebuhr) Joseph Levin for Congress Committee, 1000 Detroit Bank & Trust Bldg., Detroit, Michigan 48226, 962-5909