10 Friday, October 3, 1980 40-BUSINESS CARDS PAINTER NEEDS WORK Will compromise on price. Call 543-1964 after 6 p.m. EMERGENCY CALL THE FURNITURE DOCTOR • • • • • Any Furniture Repair Re-upholstering Refinishing Chair Caning Our Speciality is is repairing, reglueing & re-upholstering dining room chairs CALL MARV KAY THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40-BUSINESS CARDS POWER RAKE FOR A BETTER LAWN CALL LEVE'S 585-1167 WILLIAMS FLOOR CLEANING Quality work - Reliable service Homes - Office - Stores Very reasonable prices. FOR SALE 883-1965 Large Calder. Miro, Vasarely. Signed and numbered graphics. 25%-40% below gallery prices. Private collector. All type locks and service. Home - office - commercial. fessional awards and is listed in "Who's Who of American Women." There is a charge, and guests are invited. The luncheon will be the oc- casion to celebrate 75 years of sisterhood affili- ation with the synagogue, announces President Marjory Saulson. For reservations by Wed- nesday, call the synagogue, 357-5544. Babysitters and an oral interpreter will be available upon request. STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION 358-3193 55-ART FOR SALE RUBEN YASHINSKY Phyllis Eliasberg, con- sumer reporter on Channel 7, will address the Cong. Shaarey Zedek Sisterhood noon Oct. 13 at the synagogue. LAWN SERVICE 24 hours 53-ENTERTAINMENT 851-2550 VERSATILE sophisticated party PROFESSIONAL music. 272-7586. BAR-MITZVA PHOTOGRAPHY PROFESSIONAL LOCKSMITH Consumer Advocate Eliasberg Rutgers Prof Dr. Cahnman NEW YORK (JTA) - Dr. of Chicago. to Address SZ Sisterhood During World War II, he Werner Cahnman, profes- 644-0966 521-3813 (Engagements) Custom made cabinets, Mr. and Mrs. Sherwin W. tables, wall units, bed- Corlin of Southfield an- room sets, wood or plastic nounce the engagement of their daughter, Terri Sue laminate. Corlin, to Howard Neal Dembs, son of Mr. and Mrs. 362-4454 Phillip Dembs, also of Southfield. A January wed- FREE ESTIMATES Design, planting, shrub & tree ding is planned. * * pruning & removal, mainte- nance, power raking. Licensed. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ab- ramovitz of Southfield an- BANTA LANDSCAPING CO. nounce the engagement of Call after 4:30 p.m. their daughter, Eileen Ab- 537-4247 Bill to ramovitz, Glogower, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Glogower. A June wedding BARR HOME is planned: (Required by 39 U.S.C. 3685) ar PHYLLIS ELIASBERG Ms. Eliasberg will speak on "Fight Back and Don't Get Ripped Off," announces Joyce Bloom, vice president of program. A former attorney for the Federal Trade Commission, Ms. Eliasberg has been a consumer reporter since 1976. While working in Los Angeles, Calif., she earned an Emmy nomination. She has won several legal pro- National Unit Elects Lerner CRUICE'S CUSTOM WOODWORK, INC. Custom Home Builder LET ME DO YOUR WORK NOW - Aluminum Siding Roofing Painting Heat & NC Room additions Paneling ALL TYPES CEMENT WORK Licensed & Insured 968-2886 GRANT HEATING & COOLING Furnace installations, Replacements & Service. Oil to gas conversions. Energy conservation devices. Air-conditioning installation. Sales & Service. Reasonable rates. 967-3042 City of Hope Couples Plan Fund Raisers Mr. and Mrs. Group, City of Hope, will meet 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Colony Park Apts. club house. President Nate Light will discuss plans for the second annual bowl-a-thon fund- raiser to be held 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8 at Thunderbird Lanes, Troy. A social hour will follow the meeting. Hosts are Mr. and Mrs. Hy (Ethel) Blackman and Mr. and Mrs. Iry (Sarah) Pitt. Civic Agency Picks Officers Dr. Morton Plotnick has been elected president of the Greater West Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce. Other officers are: Robert Frick, vice president; Pat- ricia Kelley, secretary; and Dan Chapp, treasurer. Board of directors in- cludes: Bill Audette, Dr. Stephen Bendix, Rudy Campbell, Jim Fancy, Jim Helmrich, Jeffrey Leib, Robert Lindstrom, Don Schlitt, Gary Serayderian, Sy Warshawsky and Dr. Joseph Mangen. SAMUEL LERNER Samuel Lerner, executive director of Jewish Family Service and Resettlement Service, has been elected president of the National Association of Jewish Fam- ily, Children's and Health Professionals. This organ- ization has the responsibil- ity of preparing the casework program for the annual Conference of Jewish Communal Service. Lerner has just completed two years as president of the Michigan Society for Clini- cal Social Work. . Civiletti to Argue Federenko Case NEW YORK - Attorney General Benjamin R. Civiletti will argue the Government's case in the first Supreme Court test of the country's power to re- voke the citizenship of a Nazi collaborator or war criminal. The case, scheduled for Oct. 15, involves Feodor Federenko, 73, who has ad- mitted serving as an armed guard at the Treblinka con- centration camp in Poland. Federenko claims his serv- ice was involuntary since he was a prisoner of war. 1. TITLE OF PUBLICATION: The Jewish News Publishing Company. 2. DATE OF FILING: Sept. 30, 1980 3. FREQUENCY OF ISSUE: Weekly. A. NO OF ISSUES PUBLISHED ANNUAL: 52. B. ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: $15.00 4. LOCATION OF KNOWN OFFICE OF PUBLICATION: 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865, Southfield, Oakland County, Michigan 48075. 5. LOCATION OF THE HEAD- QUARTERS OR GENERAL BUSINESS OFFICES OF THE PUBLISHERS. Same as above. 6. NAME AND ADDRESS OF PUB- LISHER, EDITOR AND MANAG- ING EDITOR: Philip Slomovitz, 22300 Lucerne Dr. Apt. 101, Southfield, Mich. 48075. 7. OWNER: The Jewish News Publ. Co., 17515 W. 9 Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Michigan 48075. Philip Slomovitz, 22300 Lucerne, Apt. 101, Southfield, Michigan 48075. Carmi M. Slomovitz, 16400 N. Park Dr., Apt. 706, Southfield, Michigan 48075. 8. KNOWN BONDHOLDERS, MORTGAGES, AND OTHER SE- CURITY HOLDERS OWNING OR HOLDING 1 PERCENT OR MORE OF TOTAL AMOUNT OF BONDS, MORTGAGES OR OTHER SECURITIES: None. (In the following tabulation first column of figures is "Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preced- ing 12-Months," second column is "Actual Number of copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date.") 10. EXTENT AND NATURE OF CIR- CULATION: A. TOTAL NO. COPIES PRINTED (Net Press Run): 15,900 15,750 B. PAID CIRCULATION: SALES THROUGH 1. DEALERS AND CARRIERS, STREET VENDORS AND COUNTER SALES: 2 2,000 1,850 2. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS: ,463 13,413 C. TOTAL PAID CIRCULATION: 15,263 D. FREE DISTRIBUTION BY MAIL, CARRIERS OR OTHER MEANS, SAMPLES, COM- PLIMENTARY, AND OTHER FREE COPIES: 327 317 E. TOTAL DISTRIBUTION (Sum of C and D): 15.790 15,850 F. COPIES NOT DISTRIBUTED 1. OFFICE USE, LEFT OVER, UNACCOUNTED, SPOILED AFTER PRINTING: 60 75 2. RETURNS FROM NEWS AGENTS: 50 95 G. TOTAL: Sum of E&F 1 and 2 - should equal net press run shown in A): 15,900 15,750 I certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete. CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ, Bus Mgr./Corp. Sec'y. FOR COMPLETION BY PUBLISHERS MAILING AT THE REGULAR RATES (Section 132,121, Postal Service Manual) :39 U.S.C. 3626 provides in pertinent part: "No person who would have been entitled to mail matter under former section 4359 of this title shall mail such matter at the rates provided under this subsection un- less he files annually with the Postal Service a written request for permission to mail matter at such rates." In accordance with the provisions of this statute, I hereby request per- mission to mail the publication named in Item 1 at the reduced postage rated presently authorized by 39 U.S.C. 3626. CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ, Bus. Mgr/Corp. Sec'y sor emeritus of sociology at Rutgers University and an activist in the United States and in pre-war Germany in Jewish affairs, died Sept. 27 at age 77. Born in Munich, Ger- many, he was educated at the University of Berlin and the University of Munich where he received his PhD degree in sociology. During the 1930s he was a spokes- man for Jewish groups in Germany and was the leader of the Central Union of German Jews. After Hitler's rise to power, Dr. Cahnman was imprisoned in the Dachau concentration camp. After a year, he was released on the condition that he would leave. Germany. He came to the United States in 1940 and several years later taught at Fisk University in Nashville. He was also a visiting scholar at the University was chairman of the Ameri- can Committee for Dachau and participated after the war in efforts to raise funds for constructing an interna- tional memorial on the site of the death camp. During those years he joined the Rutgers University staff as < an assistant professor. Dr. Cahnman was chair- man of the Rashi Associa- tion for the preservation of i\ i ts Jewish cultural monu in Europe. He also ser. as a consultant to the Federa- tion of Jewish Philan-`=) thropoes and was a leader ire current efforts to promote understanding among ra- cial minorities. Known for his contribu- tion to the development of historical sociology in the ,z U.S. and Europe, Dr. \ Cahnman was the editor of=/\ several books, including, "Sociology and History" (1965), and "inter-Marriage and Jewish Life" (1963). Attorney Henry Pariser Dies Henry Pariser, an attor- ney and retired vice president and member of the board of Maryland Cup Corp., died Sept. 19 at age 75. Born in Baltimore, Md., Mr. Pariser was graduated from Baltimore City Col- lege and received a law de- gree in 1929 from the Uni- versity of Maryland. He practiced law in Baltimore until 1935. In Detroit, he was the president of Northwest Cone Co., a division of Maryland Cup Corp. He was active in efforts on behalf of or held membership in Adat Shalom Synagogue, Al- lied Jewish Campaign, Jewish Home for the Aged, Hillel Day School, Sinai Hospital, Chil- dren's Hospital, Standard Club of Detroit and Knollwood Country Club. Mr. Pariser was an active leader for many years on committees for the Balfour Concerts of the Zionist Organization of Detroit and Jack Beckwith one year hosted with Mrs. Pariser a dinner for Balfour workers. He was a resident of Palm Beach, Fla., at the time of ( his death. Mr. Pariser leaves his wife, Inda; a son, Allen of Los Angeles, Calif.; two daughters, Mrs. Bertram (Barbara) Adler of Los Angeles and Mrs. Douglas (Sue) Moss; and five grandchildren. Interment Los Angeles. Irving Steinberg Irving Steinberg, formei-\ bakery owner and member of Jewish communal organ- izations, died recently at age 67. Born in Russia, Mr. (I Steinberg lived many years in Detroit prior to moving to / Old Bridge Township, N.J., four years ago. While in De- troit he was a member of Bnai Brith, Knights of Pythias and Cong. Bnai David. He is survived by his wife, Ruth; a son, Lawrence of Troy; a daughter, Mrs. Be- verly Erwin of New Jersey; a brother, Joseph of Sher- man Oaks, Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Etta Green of Oak Park; and three grandchildren. Interment New Jersey. _ Jack Beckwith, co- founder of Beckwith-Evans, died Sept. 30 at age 66. Born in Poland, Mr. Beckwith founded his com- pany in 1945. He was the Lawrence Gelb past president of the Detroit NEW YORK - Lawrence Chapter. City of Hope; on M. Gelb, retired chairman the board of directors of the of Clairol, Inc., the man- ( Retail Floor Covering Insti- ufacturer of hair colr tute, a board member of the and hair-care products Better Business Bureau and Sept. 27 at age 82. a corporate member of the Founders Society of the De- Walter Kaufmann troit Institute of Arts. PRINCTEON, N.J. - He leaves his wife, Fay; two sons, Stuart and Peter; Walter Kaufmann, author three daughters, Mrs. How- and professor of philosophy ard (Fredi) Crane, Mrs. at Princeton University,( Alan (Marcia) Dorfman and died recently. Mrs. Joel (Jackie) Smith of We gain nothing by being Ann Arbor; his mother, Mrs. Morris (Ethel) with such as ourselves: we Beckwith; a brother, Barry encourage each other in (I of Beverly Hills, Calif., a mediocrity. I am always sister, Mrs. David (Frances) longing to be with men more Rice; - - • and five excellent than myself. -Lamb grandchildren.