Ws dOefe NCR o t PURELY COMMENTARY EVERGREEN PLAZA O'S inside Greg Shoes SOUTHFIELD 559-7770 cg ce ORCHARD MALL WEST BLOOMFIELD 851-3333 COME SEE OUR FABULOUS JEWELRY & ACCESSORIES Leslie Cady Judye Glazer WE MAKE THEM! YOU INSTALL THEM! ■ IN • NI V II NI• "IM II NB . VIIBBm•BIB IN Om NB IBBIAIMMIN=IN NI I ■ ■ M IMO NI •IM B INN II - AIM 111111M1=1 FACTORY PRICES! AO N•M BO III • •11 MB • MP • MI NO FREIGHT OR HANDLING ALL WINDOW TREATMENTS 36% to 75% OFF! 1" VINYL • MINI-BLINDS VERTICAL- BLINDS ALL IN-STOCK 8 23"x42" Your Choice Of: IVORY • WHITE • BLUE • ROSE READY-TO-GO SIZES! SOUTHFIELD Deluxe Aluminum from 1 PVC - 23"x42" Choose From Hundreds Of Colors! FINEST QUALITY and workmanship! All vertical blinds for your windows & doorwalls are custom made to fit perfectly. Fastest service! Lowest prices! THE VERY FINEST selection of blinds in mini and micro-louvered styles! Each is custom made to fit your windows beautifully. ALL SIZES & STYLES! SATISAFACTION GUARANTEED! LIVONIA 353-6191 488° DECORATOR COLORS! COMPLETE! I • • Doorwall S 99 21421 HILLTOP • In Bridge Indust. Park Unit 28 • 8 Mile W. of Telegraph Mon. to Sat. 9 to 5 . 0 Now! 6-Foot from 23"x64" to 36" x 64" ALL $9.99 39"x64" $15.99 43" x 64" $16.99 48"x64" $17.99 Custom-Made MINI-BLINDS UTICA 33710 PLYMOUTH ROAD W. of Farmington Road Daily 10.6 • M. & Th. 10-9 13921 HALL ROAD Across From Lakeside Mall Mon. to Sat. 10.9 261.6530 247.1870 TROY 3303 ROCHESTER RD. In Troy Pointe Mon. to Sal. 10 to 6 137 S. TELEGRAPH In Rainbow Plaza Mon. to Sat. 10 to 6 25923 ORATIOT AVE. At 10 P1 Mile Rd. M.-F. 10-9 • Sat. .10.6 777.9510 BRING YOUR MEASUREMENTS! ALL OUTLETS OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 4 • North Park Place I n South field The perfect surroundings for the professional. Spacious apartments, luxurious appointments and all the fun of community recreational activities. Here is high rise living with built-in country club amenities. North Park Place . . . Your kind of place. swimming pool • tennis court • party room • exercise room • valet parking available • TV screening to lobby 2 and 3 bedroom apartments from S615/month Phone: 559-4588 weekdays 9am-5pm Sat. 10am-2pm A limited number of furnished executive apartments available. BEM 1ER-I TANISR IN-S\ Im 24 Friday, August 15, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Continued from preceding page v'Israel, Sol Lapinsky; Beth Abraham, Rabbi Joseph Thumin, Rabbi Israel Hal- pern, Louis Ellenbogen; Beth Itzchock, Rabbi Jacob Hoberman, Isidore Rosent- hal; Beth Joseph, Abraham Walter; Beth Moses, Rabbi Gerson Frankel, Emil Kahn; Beth Shmuel, Rabbi Joseph Rabinowitz, Isador Rosen- berg; Beth Tikvah, Rabbi Leizer Levin, Jerome Ka- gan; Beth Yehudah, Harry Stolsky; Beth Tefilo Emanuel, Rabbi M. J.Wohlgelernter, Jacob Shevitz; B'nai David, Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka, Joseph Gorman; B'nai Israel, Jacob Lesser; B'nai Jacob, Sam Rosenberg; B'nai Zion, Rabbi S. Gruskin, Morris Snow; Chesed shel Emes, Sam Nelson; Cong. Dov Frenkel, Max Kaplan; Ezras Achim (Turover Temple), Rabbi David Bakst, Isadore Sesnick; Gemiluth Chasodim, Rabbi Leopold Neuhaus, Max Marx; Mis- hkan Israel, Rabbi Isaac Stollman, Philip Stollman; Mogen Abraham, David I. Berris; Nusach Ari, William Axelrod; Shaarey Shomayim, J. L. Berman; Shaare Zion, Rabbi Leo Goldman, Benjamin Assik; First Hebr ew Congregation of Delray, Sam Klein; Young Israel branches, Rabbi Samuel Prero, Samuel W. Platt, Alter Greenbaum. In addition to congrega- tional schools Detroit has two yeshivoth (theological schools) — Beth Yehudah and Chachmey Lublin; the United Hebrew Schools, whose nine branches have a daily afternoon school attendance of 1,200; Far- band, Sholem Alechem and Arbeiter Ring schools. Detroit's Jewish Welfare Federation, an affiliate of the Community Chest and United Foundation, is the central fund-raising body for local, national, and overseas philanthropies and educational move- ments. Its president is Ju- lian Krolik. The Jewish Community Council super- vises the civil-protective and community relations programs for Detroit Jewry. The Zionist movement, B'nai B'rith, and the Jewish War Veterans are the lead- ing community organiza- tions next to the organized synagogue functions. PONTIAC ROSEVILLE 524.1883 332.7200 RF_ T X RI Nt \T1( Federation Pioneers AJC Takes Issue With Rehnquist Nomination New York (JTA) — The American Jewish Congress last week criticized the nomination of William Rehn- quist as Chief Justice of the United States as "a serious error of judgment" on the part of President Reagan. A statement by Henry Siegman, executive director of AJCongress, said that the error was not that the Presi- dent selected an individual lacking legal and intellectual qualifications, but rather that Justice Rehnquist "has chosen to use his considerable talents in ways that are an- tithetical to the fundamental principles of personal freedom and individual liberty. The text of Mr. Siegman's statement follows: President Reagan's nomina- tion of William Rehnquist to be Chief Justice of the United States is a serious error of judgment. The error is not that he has chosen a person lacking legal and intellectual qualifications but rather that the nominee has chosen to use his considerable talents in ways that are antithetical to the fundamental principles of personal freedom and in- dividual liberty. Justice Rehnquist has demonstrated throughout his career a regrettable insen- sitivity to the protection of minority and individual rights. His early opposition to school desegregation and civil rights legislation in the sixties has since resonated time and again in opinions that deny or restrict efforts to expand the scope of in- dividual rights. Without vigilant protection of such rights, the vibrant, plural- istic, heterogeneous society envisioned by the founders of this nation over 200 years ago would soon wither. The job of Chief Justice re- quires more than legal ability of the highest caliber. It also demands humane wisdom and leadership in a' Supreme Court that will be confronting issues of great moral and legal complexity in the years to come. It is precisely such sensitivity that Justice Rehn- quist appears to lack. In objecting to Justice Rehnquist's nomination, we do not seek to impose a single issue litmus test for judicial appointments — be it church- state, abortion or affirmative action. We have, in the past, objected to the use of such tests by others. We do believe, however, that Justice Rehn- quist's consistent and un- wavering disregard for the rights of those members of society who must depend upon the Judiciary to protect them from tyranny of the ma- jority makes him unsuitable for nomination as Chief Justice.