24 Friday, April 20, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS •• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • BIG DISCOUNTS • GE Food Processor • • • • S • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Slice, chop, shred, grate, • crumb. Reversible cutting • discs save storage space • and cleaning. Stainless • steel knife blade. • • • We . 7-1700 bring good things to life. "'Es' COLOGNE : SEIKO MEN'S •QUARTZ WATCHES CHLOE-CHANEL • 0 s;;r • 40%°" • 40% OFF TELEPHONES sugg. list SUNBEAM : .CROSS PENS • 407 0 OFF OPIUM-GUCCI HALSTON-NORELL DOUBLE List $25. NOW HEAD ELECTR1C$1 998 SHAVERS I L \ • • • • • This Year Relax and enjoy a lush, beautiful lawn while we do the work. • • • • IRVING FAITLER, MSU graduate forester brings 34 years experience in turf management to his company. He implemented this area's first large-scale weed control program in 1950 for Wayne County. He'll be glad to answer all general land- scape as well as lawn questions. TV'S • VIDEO • RECORDERS • • • LINCOLN TOWERS, SUITE 111 • 15075 W. Lincoln (10 1/2 Mile) ‘i_ • f RCA • • OSCAR BRAUN'S Continued from Page 1 LAWN SPRAY SERVICE Super Compact FM/AM/FM • Stereo • Headset Radio • • S • NEWS Tg t: d i ia sr • • 356-8010 • One Block East of Greenfield Mon. Uwe Sat. 10-4 p.m. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Seiko introduces the DATA-2000. Your personal Data Bank. Only Seiko Sport•Tech gives you a quartz alarm chronograph with so many advanced information system functions. Simply type your travel plans, telephone numbers, addresses, anything in the 2000 character memory bank. It can all be called up on your wrist with a - SEIKO DATA-2000 A: Stores 200 lines of data SPUR/RESET SET ti START/STOP MODE TRANSMIT SELECT B: Time/day/date alarm stopwatch C: Add, subtract, multiply and divide touch of a button, wherever you are. Detachable compact keyboard gives you simple data entry and it doubles as a calculator. The wrist- - watch giyes you day/date, stopwatch, alarm and quartz accurate time, of course. -5"41F Free Gift wrap • Cash Refunds 26.400 West Twelve Mile Road in Southfield's Racquetime Mall Northeast corner of 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy. "The bad news is there are still 4,600 pledges to se- cure," which would net the Campaign an estimated $2,901,000 more. Campaign Chairman Jack A. Robinson said he was "shocked and sur- prised" by the figures. In his remarks, Robin- son cited a proverb "What a person gives, God gives back. Considering the generosity of this commu- nity, He will be returning much to all of you." A Campaign worker for 35 years, Robinson said the 1984 Campaign was based on a concept called "capacity giving," asking donors to extend themselves beyond what they initially planned to contribute. He added: "The capacity to give is dictated by the heart. The capacity to give is prompted by a recognition of the need. The capacity to give is de- cided by a sense of responsi- bility to other Jews. And- given this criteria, this community seems to have an unlimited capacity when it comes to helping other Jews . . . The capacity to give and our commitment to renewal helped us accom- plish our goals and, of course, they produced re- cord results." • Robinson also expressed his gratitude to the myriad volunteers and Federation staff for the tasks they per- formed for this year's drive. "There is no one reason for our success. I•has to do with teamwork, with volun- teers and staff who work beautifully together." Robinson spoke of his par- ticipation in the United Jewish Appeal missions to Israel and Poland. "I went from the celebration of light, hope and fruitfulness of Israel to the darkness, de- spair and barrenness of Warsaw, of Auschwitz and Birkenau .. . "And yet, here too, we found light, just the small- est flicker, but light nonetheless, and the Cam- paign made it possible — a kosher canteen operated by the Joint Distribution Committee . . . our dollars. It brought home only too vividly our responsibility as survivors. "As Jews we are all sur- vivors. We have a duty to renew the vibrant Jewish life that once existed in Po- land and so many other parts of the world." He said that despite the success of the drive, there was still more work to be done, and a concerted effort will be made to collect cash on outstqnding pledges. The evening also was the occasion to pay tribute to Philip Slomovitz, editor emeritus of The Jewish News. In presenting the gift of a tzedekah box to Slomovitz, Joel D. Tauber, Federation president, said . the gift "sums up what you've meant to the Detroit Jewish Community and Federation." In his response, Slomovitz said there is a "need for per- petuation" of such com- munal activities as the Al- lied Jewish Campaign, and recalled some past Cam- paign leaders and events. "This is a perpetuation of a very important relationship in our community We con- tinue to have an excellent Jewish community," he said. Tauber's remarks in- cluded the reading of corre- spondence from persons who have benefited from funds raised by the Cam- paign. He said the letters show "what your money and your efforts mean to real people." He concluded his remarks by thanking Cam- paign workers and con- tributors "for providing se- curity for Jews everywhere." The evening opened with an introduction of the Fed- eration leadership and of The Jewish News' new pub- lisher and editor, Charles Buerger and Gary Rosenblatt, respectively. Rabbi Efry _Spectre, spiritual leader of Adat Shalom Synagogue, gave the invocation. Entertain- ment by Israeli vocalists Albrecht and Zfira con- cluded the program. Also participating in the program were Campaign co-chairmen Stanley D. Frankel and Robert H. Naf- taly. Terror threat won't fade, Shamir says Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel may have to face "thousands of years" of ter- rorism, according to Pre- mier Yitzhak Shamir who made this bleak assessment in a Passover interview with Maariv Sunday. But he added that ter- rorist attacks were not a serious factor affecting Is- rael's life and development within the present reality of the country. He said that following the destruction of the terrorist infrastructure in Lebanon, the capability of the Palestine Liberation Organization to strike Is- rael is restricted. Shamir stated: "One must know how to fight terrorism just as one must know how to fight all the sorts of crime from which we suffer. We may have thousands, o• even scores of thousands, of years of terrorism before us. Jews must know how to live with the enemies -3-and de- fend themselves against them. Even when we have peace with all our Arab neighbors, I don't know if terrorism against us will disappear from the world."