TAILORING ()CITIZEN MENS•WOMENS.AND CHILDRENS NO OTHER WATCH EXPRESSES TIME AS BEAUTIFULLY —WAIST Lin or our) — 5.00 — PANTS SHORTENED — 5.00 —SLEEVES — 8.00 —ZIPPERS (Ponrs) — 5.00 —NARROW LAPELS —25.00 —NARROW TIES — 3.00 —TAPER LEGS — 8.00 NO TAILOR SHOP IN WEST BLOOMFIELD, FARMINGTON HILLS OR ANY CITY CAN OFFER A SERVICE LIKE THIS. "LET US BE YOUR TAILOR" MARK'S CLEANING & TAILORING —SHIRT LAUNDR Y- 32730 NORTHWESTERN HWY. FARMINGTON HILLS, 48018 737-0360 Not Your Ordinary Wakeup Call Alarm Watch JOB HUNTING? Changing careers? Re- entering the workforce? Feel you are too old, inexperi- enced, not sure of what job you want or should be look- ing for? Not satisfied with cur- rent employment? Can't seem to get interviews? We have helped many clients solve these and other career problems since 1974. Mail your resume, or bet- ter yet, phone anytime to set up a no obligation, pri- vate orientation to see how we can help you. Men's Stainless Steel Bracelet. Black Dial. Crystal Glass illustrated watch $95 George Ohrenstein LOU ELLMAN ASSOCIATES JEWELERS, LED. 14805 Lincoln, Oak Park, MI 48237 CERTIFIED qP GEMOLOGIST AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY (313) 968-8770 HARVARD ROW MALL • LAMER & 11 MME RD (not an employment agency) 353-3146 AUCTION SATURDAY & SUNDAY, APRIL 25 & 26 — 1 P.M. at our galleries 2975 W. Maple Rd. at Coolidge, Troy (STALKER GALLERIES) FEATURING: ANTIQUES, FURNITURE, PORCELAINS, SILVER, CRYSTAL, JEWELRY, PAINTINGS & PRINTS from several promi- nent Estates and Collections including items from the Collection of Mr. & Mrs. W. Stewart, WEXFORD, ENGLAND, as well as a superb collection of ORIENTALIA removed from a BIRMING- HAM home (Owner retiring to Florida), etc. SPECIAL HIGHLIGHTS Pr. Massive Rose Medallion Fish Bowls, Antique English Map Desk, Pr. Large Ivory Standing King & Queen, Louis XV style Curio Cabinet, Bronz'e Sculpture: Bulldog signed Valton, Chinese Chippendale Style Console Table, Russian Bronze signed Gratchow, Antique Wellington Style Chest, Large Steuben Centerpiece Bowl, 19th Century English Mahogany Hepplewhite style Side- board, Pr. Rose Medallion lamps, Antique English inlaid Corner Chair, Art Nouveau style lamp, 60" Rosewood Alter Table, 54" Chinese Blue and White Palace Vase, COLLECTIONS OF: Antique American Cut Crystal, Ivories & Hardstones, Art Glass, Oriental Rugs, Netsuke including Erotic, Bronzes; A 48" Standing African Ebony Figure, Hammond B-3 Organ. A LARGE ESTATE & MODERN JEWELRY COLLECTION & MUCH MORE! VIEW: Wed. & Thurs., April 22 & 23 - 10 a.m.-8 p.m. and Fri., April 24 - 10 a.m.-4 p.m. and one hour prior to each session. CATALOGUES: $2.00 at the door TERMS: Cash, Check, American Express, Visa & MasterCard (10% Buyers premium on all lots) NOW ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENTS FOR FUTURE AUCTIONS • ABSENTEE BIDS ACCEPTED atset' s a/levies, nc. Estate Specialists - Auctioneers - Appraisers In Association with Stalker Galleries 2975 W. Maple Rd., Troy, MI 48084 18 Friday, April 24, 1987 ■ (313) 288-3522 or 288-3822 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Zionist Election Continued from preceding page the Congress, while Labor had 116, making theirs the two largest delegations. So the con- test in the U.S. election next month, as it is in Israel, is real- ly between Labor and Likud. Key portfolios in the WZO are in the hands of Herut, the senior partner in the Likud, a situation Herut is determined to maintain, according to Herut USA national executive direc- tor Glenn Mones. "The election determines the leadership in the Jewish Agen- cy and the WZO. Herut now has the chairmanship of the Aliyah Department, the chairmanship of the Settlement Department which is crucial to us, and the Department of Education and Culture in the Diaspora. We support the positions taken by Prime Minister Shamir: that Judea and Samaria never be returned!" The WZO Settlement Depart- ment is largely responsible for building settlements in the ter- ritories, where the Jewish Agency and the United Jewish Appeal do not operate (See following story). For this reason, the department is a ma- jor source of contention between Labor and Likud, which have radically differing plans for the future of the territories. A Labor chairman of the Set- tlement Department would shift "priorities to settle in the undisputed part of Israel," ac- cording to Yoav Peck, director of Friends of Labor Israel which will, along with Naamat USA, join the Labor Zionist Alliance on the Labor ticket. Herut's chairmanship of the Aliyah Department "enabled Gush Emunim recruiters to use (the department's) facilities," Peck charged. "It also placed obstacles in the path of people (making aliyah) who had been converted by Reform rabbis!' "We're social-conscious peo- ple," Detroit LZA president Henry Faigin added. "We believe that democracy is bas- ed on the rights of all people." Herut's Mones said that Or- thodox, Conservative and Reform Jews are members of his organization, which will run a joint slate with Techiyah and the Sephardic Movement. "We are stressing that the Con- gress should not be a place for interreligious strife." Next month's elections will select 152 American delegates to the Congress, roughly one- third of all delegates. Israelis form a slightly larger con- tingent and the remaining delegates are drawn from the rest of the world. Over 900,000 ballots will be mailed to American Zionists, according to Karen Rubinstein, executive director of the American Zionist Federation. She estimated that there are 1,118,000 members of American Zionist organiza- tions. The difference in the two figures is caused by multiple Theodor Herzl: First Zionist Congress was in 1897. memberships by some American Jews. The AZF has hired American Arbitration Association to con- duct the election. "Corruption will not happen," she asserted. Organizations' membership lists have been "merged and purged. An address that shows more than 20 names will be checked," she said. Like elections to the Knesset, delegates to the Congress are elected by proportional representation — by the percen- tage of votes each organization receives. So if Hadassah was to receive ten percent of the U.S. vote, it would have ten percent of the American delegates. Each organization draws up a list of delegates it hopes to send to the Congress. Many organizations report that while the names of potential delegates have already been ranked on_the list, final choice of positions will not be deter- mined until after the election. So it is nearly impossible to vote for an individual you think would be a good delegate to the Congress. If a voter wishes to elect, for example, the ZOA's David Hermelin, currently number 54 on the list, he must vote for the ZOA ticket and hope that Hermelin is placed more pro- minently on the list, say 20 or above. In the end, the voter must choose an organization, not an individual. "The prestige of any organization depends, to some extent, on the number of delegates they send to the Con- gress," observed Ezekiel Leikin, executive vice president of the ZOA's Metro Detroit District. He described his group as "neither left or right," whose platform affirms "religious pluralism, free enterprise and the unity of the Jewish People!' The ZOA is the American body of "General Zionists," whose Israeli branch, the Liberal Party, is a partner of Herut in the Likud bloc. And while the views of many Israeli Liberals on defense and settle- ment issues more closely K