THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

40 — BUSINESS CARDS

40 — BUSINESS CARDS

PLUMBING REPAIRS

Disposals, Faucets & Bathroom
Alterations & Violations

No Service Charge

398-1754

•

Wet, damp, leaky basements
made dry. Guaranteed 18
years. Experienced — lowest
price.
FRANK'S WATERPROOFING

559-7398

JULIUS ROSS

MOVING CO., INC.

aik

m work, household moving,
s, packing, piano and appli-
es. Local and State of Michigan.

357-2674

FURNITURE REPAIR
& REFINISHING

Stripping—Any Type
Caneing.
Rushing.

BOOKKEEPER

K. KENT.

474-8953

HOME & ESTATE
LIQUIDATORS

Let professionals handle
your Household & Estate Sales-

***APPRAISALS***
357-2218

PLASTERING &
STUCCO WORK

Any Size
Fast Service
Clean & Reasonable
422-3764 (days)
937-8374 (eves)

SAVE
DOLLARS!!!

DEAL DIRECT

Roofing, aluminum siding, aluminum
gutters & trim, general repairs.
Guarantee material & workmanship.
Free Estimates.

546-0050

Call-A-Maid

557-2008
DOMESTIC MAID SERVICE

• Efficient • Transportation Incl.
• For Home or Office

PROFESSIONAL DECORATING
By
ALAN KUMPULA

Fine painting & papering, specializ-
ing in foils & decorator papers. All
work carefully planned with the per-
sonal friendly touch.

544-9583

Afraid of the high
cost of TV repair?
Call RON SCHULTZ -
Free in home estimate.
Over 10 yrs. experience.

543-0314

E. LARKINS
MOVERS

Referral service,
personalized since 1946

822-3417

David's Plastering
& Dry Wall

Texturing of Walls. Repairs.

557-1338

LICENSED
ELECTRICIAN,
.557-8981 or 557-5775.
CARPENTRY work, inside & out-
side. I. Schwartz. 545-7712.
ROOFING, SIDING, GUTTERS &
trim. License, insured. Free esti-
mates. 525-9160.
DRESSMAKING and alterations.
20 years experience. Reasonable.
968-8490.
WILL ADDRESS invitations of all
kinds. Call Judy. 399-3412.
Women's & men's alterations. Ex-
pertly made. Specialty coats.
557-8644.
CUSTOM made dresses, remodeling
and alterations by experienced
dressmaker. LI 7-5113.

Experienced in taxes. For re-
of tail and service concerns.

Free Estimates

547-7569

CHAIR CANING — all kinds.
348-9090. Nat Sunshine.
FURNITURE Reupholstering —
refinishing & repairs. 851-2550.
ELECTRIC REPAIRS. Prompt ser-
vice. Reasonable. 557-7228.
PLUMBING REPAIRS, Drains,
sewer cleaning. 24 hr. service.

546-1735

• 51

—

MISCELLANEOUS

We pay cash for old comic books, 45
• records, baseball cards. 898-3942,
365-8223.

•

Zalman Korman (M)
Kenwood, Oak Park

53

—

ENTERTAINMENT

Have the most talked about
party of the year with

CHERRY! Discotheque

Like a permanent Disco,
but Portable!

355-3549

Bulwark

Faith in God is the
strongest bulwark of a free
society.
—Ahha Hillel Silver

Respect thy physician
before thou hast need to
consult him.
—The Talmud

Jewish Program
Lauded in Brazil

No Sabbath Calls

RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA)
— The Legislative Assembly
Horizontal & Vertical.
of Rio de Janeiro. State has
Call for discount prices after adopted a motion congratu-
5 pm & weekends.
lating the Jewish daily radio
559-7155 or
program in Rio de Janeiro,
"A Voz Israelita," which cel-
357-3108
ebrated its 20th anniver-
THE BLINDFOLD
sary.
F. W. STEWART
The program was founded
MOVING CO.
by its producer, David Mar-
"THE MOVING MEN"
kus, and is broadcast by
Mrs. Rita Markus-Grunan.
Professional courteous serv-
Proposing the motion,
ice. Insured low rates. Excel-
representative Dr. Mauricio
lent references.
Pinkusfeld pointed out that
588-2418
_
"A Voz Israelita" has pre-
sented 6,600 broadcasts,
mare than 20,000 Hebrew
COMPLETE ROOFING
and Yiddish songs and
hundreds of interviews with
Repair & Aluminum Siding
Jewish and non-Jewish per-
sonalities from Brazil, Is-
883-3939 after 7 pm
rael and other countries.
David
Markus is the Brazil-
FURNITURE REPAIR
ian correspondent for the
Any Wood or
Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

BLINDS

Upholstery Problem
MEL MARKOWITZ

642-5682
Call anytime

Israel Trains Dogs
to Detect Explosives

METRO WINDOW
CLEANING AND
HOME CARE

Experts on aluminum storms,
carpet, floor, furniture clean-
ing. Wall washing, painting,
interior-exterior.

541-0278

Fur coat repairs
alterations

By Expert Furrier

353-4826

T.V. REPAIRS

A-1 CUSTOM
PAPERHANGING
& PAINTING

Fully licensed & Insured.
Interior-Exterior.
Free Estimates. 24 hr. Service.

398-9477

45 — LOST AND FOUND

Man's diamond stick pin. Lost Adas
Shalom. Nov. 25 eve. Sentimental
value. Reward. LI 4-0225.
Bracelet, diamond, found week of
Nov. 10. Somerset Mall. 939-5883.

Jewish Women's Rights Urged

Traditionally, the Jewish
woman has held second-
class status in the eyes of
her male co-religionists.
Rabbi Sally Preisand speaks
out for many Jewish women
against that situation in
"Judaism and the New
Woman."
Published by Behrman
House, Rabbi Priesand
traces Jewish womanhood
from biblical times when
Jewish women were re-
garded as property to today
when women's liberation is
causing Jewish women to
reassess their roles in the
Jewish community.
Although she scores the
traditional status of the
Jewish woman in the reli-
gious community, Rabbi
Priesand remarks that the
world has become a better
place in which to live be-
cause of it.
In her chapter entitled
"Economic and Cultural
Contributions," Rabbi
17iesand has found that by
being forced out of major
roles in the congregation
and into auxiliaries and
sisterhoods, women have
formed many welfare and
service programs. For ex-
ample, the National Fed-
eration of Temple Sister-
hoods helped create the
Jewish Braille Institute
which aids Jewish and
non-Jewish blind persons.
The major women's or-
ganizations, ORT, National
Council of Jewish Women,
Hadassah and Pioneer
Women have all cham-
pioned for social welfare
legislation, Zionist princi-
ples, obliteration of anti-
Semitism and aid to the
needy. Rabbi Priesand says
of these contributions of
women:

"Jewish women are to be
congratulated for the tre-
mendous contributions they
have made through their
organizational affiliations.
We have-improved the qual-
ity of life for all humanity.
Now the time has come for
us to demand equality in all
phases of communal work
so that we may truly share
our knowledge and experi-
ence."
A chapter is devoted to
Jewish heroines, some well
publicized and others not.
Following her discussions of
these heroines, including
Ernestine Rose, Bertha
Pappenheim, Hannah Se-
nesh and Golda Meir, she
states:
"Too many textbooks
put women 'in their place'
and never allow them to
seek fulfillment outside
the home. But women also
possess basic human qual-
ities such as the desire for
power, ambition, strength,
and independence; and
unless we teach about her-
oines as well as heroes, we
stifle our daughters' cu-
riosity and suppress their
imagination.
"They can become aware

A member of a special
research staff in the de-
partment of psychology at
Bar-Ilan University in Is-
rael is training a dog to
distinguish between dif-
ferent types of explosives.
The university is in the
process of training dogs to
"sniff out" booby-trapped
letters in a special pro-
gram being carried out in
cooperation with the Is-
raeli Security Authorities
and the Post Office.

of life's possibilities by
knowing that women have
made significant contribu-
tions in every field of hu-
man endeavor. If we make a
conscious-effort to provide a
variety of role models, then
they will know that they do
not have to conceal other de-
sires and dreams for the
sake of marriage and a fam-
ily and they will be encour-
aged to express themselves
in ways that truly suit their
personalities."
As Bess Myerson says
in her introduction to
"Judaism and the New
Woman," Rabbi Priesand
"gives eloquent voice to all
women everywhere, of any
religious or cultural heri-
tage, who resist an imposed
status of second-class citi-
zen or second-class worship-
per. Men may also:profit
from what she has to say —
except, of course, those with
a terminal case of hard of
hearing."
Rabbi Priesand's book is a
valuable contribution to the
feminist literature library
accumulating nationally
and provides a more than
ample presentation of the
Jewish woman's contribu-
tion to her religion.
—H.P.

NY Journalist
Cited by ZOA

NEW YORK — The Zion-
ist Organization of America
honored Irving ("Pat") Spie-
gel on his 50th anniversary
with the New York Times,
citing "his devoted service to
the Jewish community."
Spiegel, whose byline has
become synonymous with
the reporting of events and
developments on the Jewish
scene for some four decades,
was called by ZOA Presi-
dent Dr. Joseph P. Stern-
stein, "not only a journalist,
but a friend who has shared
the joys of the Jewish com-
munity as well as its sor-
rows."

THE
JEWISH NEWS

as a gift

4.1 Million Jews
Expected in Israel

Low cost—Color and black & white;
by experienced technician.
Call MARK MICHALSON
357-1831
if no answer call 557-2163

December 5, 1975 53

JERUSALEM — (ZINS)
— A study published in the
New Israel Year Book pro-
jects that in the year 1993
the Jewish population in
Israel will be 4.1 million.
It is based on the assump-
tion that there would be an
annual increase of 25,000
people through aliya.
The general population in
Israel in the year 1993
would include 1.1 million
non-Jews including those in
East Jerusalem. This repre-.
sents 20 percent of the total
population.

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