UP FRONT JEWELRY APPRAISALS At Very Reasonable Prices Call For An Appointment 30400 Telegraph Road Suite 134 Birmingham, Ml 48010 VhateiteW 141ii established 1919 k..-" 1/4..." FINE JEWELERS Historic Village • Continued from Page 5 (313) 642 5575 - GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST Daily 10:00-5:30 Thurs. 10:00-8:30 5at. 10:00 5:00 AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA IN GRADING AND EVALUATION L - Advertising in The Je - wish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 4 611 ° • N.CS$c- gP 0\) \0e (cp a ‘ci` 94 \ • 67-C\-- c0 °()\ Nt ies\eRP° UNITED FASHIONS OF BENETTON Orchard Lake Rd. • South of Maple 737-3737 Monday thru Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Thursday 10:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Sunday 12:00 noon - 5:00 p.m. --....re4,WV` far,: /• volve more than 175,000 books and an estimated 20,000 are anticipated to re- main un-sold. Goldstone, who expected that several hun- dred would be available, found the number "absolute- ly astounding." The effort will benefit the libraries of Brandeis Univer- sity and is the second largest Brandeis book sale in the country. Paperback prices will range from 30 to 90 cents while hard covers will begin at one dollar, according to book sale chairman Shirley Weiner. "Our books are bargains," Weiner said. And bargains they are for buyers as well as beneficiaries. The book sale committee traditionally in- vites community organiza- tions to take unlimited numbers of the un-sold books on the final day of the sale as part of their efforts to "recy- cle our books into the com- munity.' "All we ask is that the people come in with some identification of the organization" and they are eligible to acquire the books, committee member Eleanor Roberts explained. In the past, what remains after this •/, , la& . point has been donated to the Farmington Library and Jackson Prison among other groups in need. This year, members of the Hendricks Library Associa- tion will step in to collect every remaining book from approximately 40 of the more than 50 categories, according to Weiner. The headings in- clude fiction, non-fiction, literature, classics, children, music, art, mystery and political commentary. The library will not select the various text book categories. The Hendricks Town Hall, a century old structure, located seven miles north of Epoufette, will temporarily house the volumes. Volunteers will sort the books and distribute duplicate copies to people in the sur- rounding communities. The association presently seeks truck transportation for shelving and the books. Weiner who joined Roberts in a meeting with Goldstone to organize the exchange said,"We're thrilled to be able to partake in (this pro- ject). Getting in on the ground floor of something like this is very heartwarming." OBSERVATIONS Afw Historian Calls Zionism, Democracy 'Estranged' MARGIE OLSTER Special to The Jewish News p SLEEK AND SENSUOUS, IT MOVES WITH A SILENT RUSH OF V-12 POWER. THIS IS THE STUFF OF LEGENDS. THE 1988 JAGUAR XJ-S A true thoroughbred, the XJ-S is powered by Jaguar's overhead cam, fuel-injected V-12, an engine proven in international endurance racing and millions of highway miles. The XJ-S is also a truly elegant Grand Touring car, built to Jaguar's highest standards of hand- crafted luxury. Its interior is graced by seats covered 643.6900 1815 MAPLELAWN, TROY 12 FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1987 with supple top grain leather, rich polished burl walnut in the dashboard, console and door panels and a wealth of thoughtful amenities. The 1988 V-12, Jaguar XJ-S is truly the stuff of legends. It is covered by an extensive three year/ 36,000 mile warranty and Jaguar's new Service- On-Sites"" Roadside Assistance Plan. For details on this uniquely comprehensive plan and Jaguar's limited warranty, applicable in the USA and Canada, see your Jaguar dealer. ENJOY TOMORROW BUCKLE UP TODAY. JAGUAR XJ-S BETWEEN CROOKS AND COOLIDGE OPEN MONDAY AND THURSDAY UNTIL 9 P.M. 0 hiladelphia — Muki Tzur, a historian of the kibbutz movement and the second and third aliyot, educator, writer and Zionist ideologue expressed concern over the perpetuation of Is- rael's social democratic sys- tem. In an interview in Philadel- phia where he addressed the American Zionist Federation's first Zionist Assembly, Tzur said modern Zionism is linked inextricably to democracy and criticized the Israeli Labor movement for losing track of its earlier social-democratic values in the constant struggle to maintain political power. Zionism and democracy have become estranged and Israel today faces the problems of re- conciling the dreams of early .socialist and democratic Zionist thinkers with a dif- ficult political reality, in Tzur's view. Even within his own Labor Party, in which Tzur has been active politically and ideologi- cally for almost his entire life, the social-democratic princi- ples on which it was founded have been compromised in the constant struggle to regain the political power it lost to Likud, he said. "I don't believe we should always be repeating A.D. Gor- don or Berl Katznelson. There should be something original about the Labor movement, but politically speaking we are very dull," he said. Tzur at- tributed this to years of chal- lenges in war and peace and of compromises creating what he called a coalition mentality wherein retaining power in government was the primary goal. "Even the times we were not in power, we still saw ourselves only in terms of getting back in power," he said. Tzur, 49, was born in Jerusalem in 1938, a first gen- eration Israeli. His father Yaacov Tzur, a Russian im- migrant, served as Israel's Ambassador to Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay and France. A father of four, Tzur has lived on Kibbutz Ein Gev on the shore of the Kinneret since 1956, where he now works in the children's house. He authored several books, including The Seventh Day, a series of interviews with soldiers following the 1967 war. He is a professor of Kab-