THE DETROIT. JEWISH NEWS 14 - Friday, August :15, 1980 irg7 766 ZETATEI 7MECT'BITATuriiiiirs7 3 I Aides Say Jimmy Carter Will Get Most of Jewish Vote 1" BLINDS-VERTICALS-WOVEN WOODS STOP WORRYING We have the professional "know How" and will give you expert advice on the. most modern concepts in window coverings plus i. 1 UNBEATABLE PRICES For Complete Service Call: LETIGAILIPUNJERM1 5.5.E8 .2i) g.; 5 IMITED f SUPER ais BELT SALE BUCKLIE ISRAELI IMPORTED BUCKLES . . . $9 each HAND MADE — SOLID BRASS 35 Designs — Holy Land History M-GO-BLUE BUCKLES $5.00 each Now Available – German Silver Buckles MOST PEARL SCISSORS "THE BUCKLE LADY" BUCKLES $4 EACH 3 FOR $11 OVER "1,200" DIFFERENT STYLES LARGEST BUCKLE DISPLAY IN MICHIGAN 2240 COOLIDGE *allay thru Saturday 104 — Free Parting AMR 5 BLKS. N. OF 11-MILE BERKLEY, MI 48072 545-6885 NEW YORK (JTA) — Two leading Jews in the Carter Administration said that they believed that de- spite President Carter's present difficulties in the Jewish community he will receive the vote of the majority of Jews in the No- vember election. Secretary of Commerce Philip Klutznick and Alfred Moses, a special assistant to Carter and liaison with the Jewish community, spoke at a press conference for the Jewish media t the Carter-Mondale headquar- ters for the Democratic Na- tional Convention. Klutznick, who is on leave as president of the World Jewish Congress, said that after President Carter is renominated Wednesday night the Ad- ministration "hopes to re- move some of the misap- prehensions that seem" to have developed about the President within the Jewish community. Althought Klutznick did not say how this would be done, Moses said that a committee to deal with Jewish voters would be set up soon. He also said that Carter plans to host Jewish leaders at the White House Aug. 26 and 28 and to make a major address to the biennial conven- tion of Bnai Brith Inter- national in Washington in September. When asked about the fear in the Jewish commu- nity that if re-elected, Car- ter as a second-term President would feel free to pressure Israel and support the Palestinians, both men rejected this. Klutznick noted that the Jewish community has "mistrusted Presidents since Truman." Moses added that Jews can re- member the arms embargo put on Israel by Truman, Eisenhower's threats dur- ing the 1956 Suez War, the fact that very little arms were sold Israel during the Kennedy Administration, President Johnson's slow- ness to act when the Strait of Tiran was closed in 1967 and his slowness to support Israel in the Six-Day War, the dragging of feet" by the Nixon Administration to rearm Israel during the Yom Kippur War and President Ford's "reassess- ment" in 1975. "None of this happened under the Carter Adminis- tration," Moses declared. "This Administration and this Congress" have pro- vided the military needs so that Israel can now defend itself against any combina- tion of enemies over the next five years, he stressed. He said that although the proposed Democratic Party platform contains a provision calling for moving the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, the Carter Administration will fol- low the Camp David agreement calling for no unilateral moves on Jerusalem but a negotiated agreement be- tween the parties in- volved. When asked why Or- thodox Jews should support the Democratic platform since the Republicans op- pose abortions and the Equal Rights Amendment and support aid to parochial schools, Moses urged, "look at the whole range of issues that concern us as Jews" when judging the two par- ties. He said if this is done, Orthodox Jews will see that the Democrats provide more programs that concern the quality of their life. It is good discretion not to make too much of any man at the first.