16 Friday, April 11, 1981
40—BUSINESS CARDS
POWER
RAKING
Reasonable
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
GIL RABIN
Custom Painting
Interior - Exterior
Exterior Specials
Ranches—$199
Colonials—$299
355-5160
Free Estimates
PAINTING
AND
WALLPAPER HANGING
EXPERIENCED
CARPENTER
661-5563
After 6 p.m.
MEET AN HONEST MAN
Back Again
Roofing -- flat hot roofs or
shingles. Painting -- ex-
terior or interior. Sewer
cleaning — gutters and
other minor repairs. Still
doing very good work.
Call today
538-3645
534-7667
INFLATION BUSTER PRICES
40--BUSINESS CARDS
40—BUSINESS CARDS
552-0488
Fine craftsmanship of all kinds.
All home repairs, remodeling and
new construction. Remodel
kitchens, baths, basements,
build additions, garage and re-
pair doors and locks.
No Job Too Big or Small
Reasonable Rates
SEAMLESS
FURNITURE
DOCTOR
Any Furniture Repair
CALL THE
•
•
•
•
•
ALUMINUM
GUTTERS
Home Improvements
Call
533-3754
Experienced. Free Estimates.
Courteous Service.
AIR CONDITIONING
326-1511
Mike WOOD
CALL SAM THE PAINTER
& DECORATOR
Interior & Exterior
642-0337
Reasonable.
JOAB'S PLUMBING
Remodeling Repairs
Sewer Cleaning — Sump Pumps
Licensed Contractor
J. Shevach
MIKE'S PAINTING
Interior-Exterior
Wallpapering
Specializing in Repairs
Loose plaster, cracks and peel-
.
ing paint.
Reasonable prices
Call anytime
777-8081
MR. FIX-IT ALL
Complete home repair.
Auto sprinklers, alarm.
Free Estimate.
US 1-8575
PRE-SEASON
SALE
Air-condition now
and save $$$$
Free flue damper with
furnace or air-
conditioner installa-
tion.
Free Estimates.
Joseph Snyder
ACTIVAIRE
HEATING & COOLING
644-0336
Licensed & Insured
25 yrs. Experience
,
851-2118
TRIMMER
Complete remodeling or alt-
erations. Kitchen, den,
basement, family room.
Reasonable
354-6473
PIANO TUNING-REPAIRS
Graduate of "Detroit school for
Piano Technicians"
Reasonable Rates
Laurence Eisenberg
398-0721
CARPENTRY
• Rec Rooms
• Basement Floors Tiled
• Suspended ceilings
installed
• Closet Organizing
• Misc. Repairs
• Custom Formica Work
References
Very Reasonable
CALL RON COHEN
661-4576
LILA'S HOUSEPAINTING
Exterior - Interior
Excellent Work
Reasonable Prices
Call 895-8548
24 hours
Licensed Contractor.
Reasonable Rates
QUALITY
Licensed — Insured
CALL MARV KAY
851-2550
SERVICE, IS OUR BUSINESS
399-1233
Alan R. Sukenic,
Re-upholstering
Refinishing
Chair Caning
Our Speciality is
repairing, regluing &
re-upholstering
dining room chairs
H & A HEATING
HUNTINGTON WOODS
Painting, paper hanging and
general home repairs.
356-3191
Also
Furnaces,
Humidifiers,
Air Cleaners
WELLS
366-5322
EMERGENCY
557-2896
"RODGERS DOES
IT RIGHT"
Commercial-Residential-Industrial
A.R.S. SERVICE CO., INC.
Insured
RICHARD HYMAN
Y
L.J. RODGERS
Installation & Service
(By Machine)
We clean dirt cheap •
Special discounts to senior citizens,
retirees and disabled.
Licensed
SMITH BROTHERS INC.
COMPLETE
LAWN CARE SERVICE
Shrub trimming & removal
Fertilizing
Debris Hauling
FEINBERG
CARPET SERVICE
Seams and tears or re-
place the stairs. Old and
new carpet installation or
call for an interesting esti-
mate for purchases of new
carpet.
•
' Call GARY
398-3149
WALL WASHING
10% SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT
537-2349
537-1262
53—ENTERTAINMENT
VERSATILE sophisticated party
music. 272-7586.
54—CEMETERY LOTS
Three adjoining cemetery
lots. Prime location.
Nusach H'Ari. Will sac-
rifice. $375 each or best
offer.
399-1985
Day-Care Centers
at Israeli Plants
JERUSALEM (JNI) —
Industrial plants which
build day-care centers for
their employees' children
will receive government
grants, under an amend-
ment to the encouragement
of Capital Investment Law
which passed its first read-
ing in the Knesset recently.
Industry, , Trade, and
Tourism Minister Gideon
Patt said the bill is particu-
larly important to Israel's
scientific industries, where
women are becoming "al-
most dominant" on the
production lines.
Yeshiva Students
Study in Israel
NEW YORK — As part of
their senior year in high
school, some 100 American
Yeshiva High School stu-
dents flew to Israel recently
to begin a six-month pro-
gram of Judaic and Israel
studies in the Jewish state.
Known as Tohnit Yud
Gimel, the program in-
cludes student participation
in a wide range of activities
such as study of Talmud,
Torah, Halakha, Jewish
history and philosophy, He-
brew, modern, Jewish his-
tory, and Holocaust and
Zionism.
Readers
Forum
Materials submitted to the
Readers Forum must be
brief. The writer's name will
be withheld from publica-
tion upon request. No un-
signed letters will be pub-
lished. Materials will not be
returned unless a stamped,
self-addressed\ envelope is
enclosed.
Eruv Aftermath
Editor, The Jewish. News
I would like to comment
on what one of your recent
contributors to the Reader's
Forum called an "historic
meeting."
The meeting of the Or-
thodox group and its after-
math could more accurately
be described as a "Tempest
in a Teapot." After all, what
percentage of the 80,000 or
so Jews of greater Detroit is
really concerned whether or
not there is an eruv? The
great majority could not
care less, but may well ask
themselves, why is "The pot
calling the kettle black?"
When the modus
operandi of one group is
questioned, it would be a
good time indeed to disclose
the modus operandi of those
who are engaged in the rab-
binic supervision of food
items, and some things that
are not even edible, like for
instance plastic bags and
aluminum foil.
If the meeting of March 4
would result in an
enlightened public, it would
indeed have been worth-
while.
* * *
Kurt Bauer
Beth David
Editor, The Jewish News
I can add two more facts to
the history of Beth David:
.According to the ;Jewish
Directory of the Detroit of
1907," the congregation was
located at 293 Adelaide. Its
officers were Isidore Mellen,
president; M. Muskovitch,
vice president; Joseph
Shechter, secretary; and
Nathan Shreiber, trea-
surer.
"The Survey of the De-
troit Jewish Community of
1923" states that Beth
David was composed of 300
members and were in the
process of abandoning the
district.
Allen Warsen
Warsaw Ghetto
Wheels Within Wheels
By ISSACHAR MIRON
(A Seven Arts Feature)
-
I had a dream
In which the Passover epic
Appeared like a perpetuum mobile
Of wheels within wheels,
Resounding never-failing hope.
On the wheels' axles rotates freedom;
Every hub is a lifeline of tradition;
The spokes reverberate love and compassion.
The re-spring-ation of human soul and spirit,
Revolves new horizons
Around their rims.
The whole vernal complex
Of the perpetuum mobile
Of wheels within wheels
Is rolling on as:
A holiday for those who believe,
Commemoration of a struggle
For those who keep
The torch of liberty aflame;
A reminder for those who forget;
Clarity of vision for those who overlook;
A spring cleansing of tenets;
Warmth of friendship;
Anonymity of true chartiy;
The healing silence of the strength of trust.
Family reunions for the scattered;
Four exquisite cups of wine
For the connoisseur;
Excitement of anticipated gifts
For children of all ages;
A singsong festival for music lovers;
Four self-rejuvinating questions for the discerning mind;
Many more things for many others.
In my dream I've seen
Many putting their shoulders
To the wheels within wheels,
And making this season,
An act of faith,
Reflection of eternal light,
Precipitating holy from profane
Motivating to aspire and to strive,
Toward attainment
Of the two egalitarian aims of life:
Freedom to live as equals among equals
And peace to sing
A new song unto the Lord,
Thus making the dream,
A symphony on high,
And a vibrant reality.
Foreign Student
Hosts Sought
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Pr-
ince of West Bloomfield,
state coordinators of the
North Atlantic Cultural
Exchange League, are seek-
ing Michigan families will-
ing to host a French teenage
exchange student in July.
Host families do not have
to speak French, since the
students have had English
language training. Their
parents provide them with
pocket money and pay for
their transportation and in-
surance.
Families interested in
hosting a student should
call the Princes, 626-6641.
Is Remembered
Bethlehem Opens
Rehab Center
The Workmen's Circle
will commemorate the 38th
anniversary of the Warsaw
Ghetto uprising 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Workmen's
Circle Center, 26341
Coolidge, Oak Park.
The commemoration will
be marked with a
candlelighting ceremony
and recitations in both Yid-
dish and English. The main
address will be presented by
Dr. Sidney Bolkoskyl,- pro-
fessor of history at the Uni-
versity of Michigan - Dear-
born, who teachers the
Holocaust and Germany be-
tween the two World Wars.
The public is invited.
BETHLEHEM (JNI) —
The first rehabilitation cen-
ter in the administered ter-
ritories was opened in
Bethlehem last week by
Labor and Social Affairs
Minister Israel Katz.
"In 1967 when these ter-
ritories fell into Israeli
hands, 220,000 residents
needed government aid to
survive. Today that number
has decreased to 20,000
with no unemployment,"
Katz. said.
Bethlehem Mayor Elias
Freij also attended the
opening of the center, estab-
lished with the support of a
German organization.
AJCommittee:
No Split After
Osidach Decision
PHILADELPHIA —• The
American Jewish Commit-
tee has joined with leaders
of the Ukrainian-American
community in expressing
the hope that a recent
citizenship-revocation deci-
sion against Vladimir
Osidach, a Ukrainian im-
migrant accused of war
crimes, should not be "a
source of divisiveness" be-
tween Jews and Ukranians
in Philadelphia.
Osidach, a retired 76-
year-old slaughterhouse
worker, was convicted for
having lied when he said his
occupation was dairy
worker when he entered the
U.S. in 1949. The U.S. gov-
ernment contended that'
Osidach was an officer rn
the German-backed Ukrai-
nian National Police in
Rawa-Ruska, and that he
had helped Germans round
up 14,000 Jews in 1942-43
and send them to death
camps.
French Customer
BOSTON (ZINS) — The
Christian Science Monitor
reported that France has
become the world's third
largest arms manufacturer
and 90 percent of her prod-
uction goes to the Arab
states to offset her annual
$22 billion oil bill.