28

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Frid4, August 2, 1985

Lew Silver

■ Nrie
g mg 2 ■ 416

THE KNITTING . NOOK

SAVE 30-60%
ON NEW AND
OUT-OF-PAWN

• Expert Knitting Lessons, Yarns, Etc.
• Custom Patterns & Designs
• Hand Made Sweaters & Finishings

+
:NW
‘Irt 41,
DIAMONDS & JEWELRY

WEST BLOOMFIELD PLAZA

6666 Orchard Lake Rd.

Lew Silver Diamond Broker

9 Mile Road at Greenfield
Across from the Advance Building

559-5323

•

Confidential Loans On Jewelry

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• •
• •
NEW SPECIAL OFFER
•
•
• •
•
RAM MOBILE Communications
Detroit's
largest
Cellular
dealer
offers
you
your
choice
of
one
of
the
•
•
• •• following Cellular Specials with this ad and each Cellular package •
• •
• purchased!!!
•
• • FREE telephone removal and installation into your next • •
car.
•
• •
•
• • FREE Tone Alert Beeper
• •
•
•
FREE Cellular phone insurance
•
•
• •
• • for two years.
•
RAMS RED CARPET
•
•
• TREATMENT ALWAYS INCLUDES:
•
•
• •
One
Stop
Shopping
•
•
•
Latest
in
Equipment
•
• •
• Many styles to choose from
•
• Lease or Purchase
•
•
• Immediate Installation
•
• Competitive Prices
• •
•
• Free Demonstration
•

•
•

•

•

General ElectrIc
Star

(low monthly service charge applicable)

•

•

: Let's Talk

iliNM

• •

18311 W. 10 Mile Rd. •
Southfield, Ml 48075 •

:552-1111
#1 " In Cellular
•
I Cellular Agent Inquiries Welcomed

•
•
•

•

Beepers subject to availability. •
• Ofter subject to change without notice.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

LIBERTY
DEPOSITOR

In this, the first Anniversary of our Charter,
we proudly salute our nation's freedom.
The liberty of choice and action. The liberty
of conscience.
In celebration, Sterling Savings & Loan
will contribute .1/s of every deposit we
receive through
September 30 to the
September,
Statue of
Island Foundation.
Through restoration of
our beloved symbol of
freedom and democra-
cy, the beacon of hope
and opportunity
will shine for
generations to
come.

MINIMUM CO DEPOSIT ONLY $500
Money Markel 24Month C D 36-Month C D

6"

YIELD'

YIELD*

8.75

9.00

9.03
9.28
RATE
RATE

Rates subject to change

BEVERLY HILLS.

6442099
LAKE AGELUS
2966 Walton Road

At Clintonville Rd I

Troy at Third

We Create Solutions" TM

CLAWSON

FMK

Custer al 14 Mile

LOMB
Tx LOAM 4 30PIA f IOAM GPM

DRIVE TIMIS •
•
M 9 30AM GPM

•

DON'T LEAVE YOUR
BROKEN JEWELRY
IN A DRAWER!

WE REPAIR ALL JEWELRY WHILE
YOU WAIT! (In Most Cases)
SO

tttt ~

b uce Jewelers
m. weirs

26326 Twelve Mile Road at Northwestern Hwy.
In The Mayfair Shops - Southeast Corner
Behind Gabe's Fruit Market

Monday-Saturday 10-5:30
Thursday 10-8 30

353-1424

ROSEWOOD • TEAK • LEATHER • HOME • OFFICE \

WAREHOUSE
OUTLET

FURNITURE

SCANDINAVIAN/U.S.
TRADING COMPANY

Now Open To Public!
Designers • Dealers Welcome

SAVE AT WAREHOUSE PRICES

NO SALES • NO GIMMICKS • NO PROMOTIONS
Just Everyday, Year Round Low
Warehouse Prices, At Least 330
/0
Discount On All Items.

,

+

10%

Interior Design Service

543-5410

For Appointment call Paul Brasch
720 W. Eight Mile • Ferndale

Summertime Hours:
Mon. 10-8, Tues.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5

V

•

I

■■••■ ••1111 /

Kaufman's

sells the furniture
you want ...
at the prices
you want to pay.

We want you to know,
Kaufman Furniture
carries some of the
finest contemporary and
casual pieces available,
many of them only found
in the Detroit area
at our store.

Our salespeople are
design experts and are
ready to assist you in
all of your decorating
needs.

Our shop also specializes
in refurbishing, upholstering,
and customizing pieces
to your specifications.

31255 Soulh(Alrei id13Rmoialed)

COMING SOON...Two now,
corwonkmt Ixanchos1
ROYAL OAK

MAVIS

851.8188

IS

%It

stml:I monthly interest reinvestedp our rpcoey •

market at current rate. compounded monlhl

Come visit our unique
showrooms today.

AUEIVIABI_ 288-6400
Furniture

2801 N. Woodward
at 121 /2 Mile
Royal Oak

.

Mon., Thu•s., & Fri. 'M 9:00
Tues., Wed., & Sat. VI 6:00

FOCUS

Resouling

Continued from preceding page

Leonard Freedman, from
Detroit and Rochester, re-
spectively, caucused and
decided that the conference
was being dominated by tra-
ditionalists. And what was
more, many of the group felt
that they were being prosely-
tized by the Orthodox partici-
pants. As someone put it,
"We came here to learn about
outreach, but we feel we are
being reached out to."
Reform Rabbi Balfour
Brickner, of Manhattan's
Stephen Wise Free Syna-
gogue, phrased his dissatis-
faction with the traditional
trend of the seminar by point-
ing out that many of the Or-
thodox delegates were "say-
ing that the only way you can
enter Judaism is through the
Orthodox door."
The self-styled "secular"
group, which included, in ad-
dition to Plotnick and Freed-
man, delegates from Hadas-
sah, the Jewish Welfare Fed-
eration and a Jewish converts
support organization, issued
a protest that resulted in a
shift in the direction of the
final day's discussion:
"We came here as insiders
to talk about outsiders," said
Sally Weber, program direc-
tor of Congregation Adath
Ariel in Encino, California,
"and suddenly found our-
selves feeling like outsiders.
Is there room for an agenda,"
she asked the seminar, "that
is not rooted in a religious
ideology?"
The discussion topic, "How
We Make Our Agenda The
Jewish Communal Agenda,"
then took on a more secular
tone. Donald Feldstein, as-
sociate .exective director of
the Council of Jewish Federa-
tions, addressed ihe question,
asking the seminar attendees
to consider issues of identity
and emphasis within the para-
meters of outreach.
"We are carriers of val-
ues," said Feldstein. "We
have to be comfortable with
that. Part of the appeal is be-
ing out, being different. But
there is a preciousness to
these movements, a messian-
ism. The issue of the thera-
peutic versus the proselytiz-
mg model is an oversimpli -
fication."
"As professionals," said
Plotnick, "we have to move
in directions that open: ex-
pand, not restrict. There are
great opportunities to open
doors to people."
Reconstructionist leader
Teutsch expanded on the
theme, which had by this
time acquired the catchword:
"pluralism."
People's motivations to
come into the Jewish com-
munity are different, said
Teutsch. "Each reason is as

valid as any other."
Rejecting the idea that
outreach workers have a

responsibility • to • motivate
, Continued on Page ,

