PURELY COMMENTARY
Great Vacations
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FREEPORT 3 Com plete
s
9 ° 91999° $
arms
2099°
8 9° 9
990 028990 troni
4 nos
7 nts s
B FRIDAY & MONDAY MORNING
EVERY
$2
39 90
Pot person
round trip
Continernal Charters
nonstop
.
5 ., 9
00"
IC
n
4:Tampa
Air Only
s*so 825990
Comp. Pkgs. fr.
90490 839990
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EVERY SATURDAY MORNING
round trip
Non-Stop L-1011 Widebody/American Trans Air Charters
$.1599°.
'°
d
men trip
Continental Charters
nonstop
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT & SATURDAY
4: Lauderdale H rs $.17990
EVERY SATURDAY MORNING
4 sLas
nonstop
Acopulco
Beachfront
Packages from
847990
EVERY SATUR
D AY MORNING
e
round bid
Continental Charters
trdn,
round trip
Non-Stop L-1011 Widebody/Air America Charters
Vegas
Complete 3/4 nt. $189
packages
starting at 825950 fron,
90
Pot Mon
,mends trip
Non-Stop L-1011 Widebody/B-727 Continental Charters
THU-FRI-SUN-MON
Denver
Denv
Super
Cnise
New York
.fr $18990 =7 tt$14690-=
Daily Departures
dbl. oco,
h$425---
3 nts-4nts
Includes Air
e
Daily Departures
Continental Airlines
e
Continental Airlines
Rates listed are superfams and may not be available on all dates. Programs continue throughout 1989. Operatodpartictpant contract required he an trips.
GREAT ONE—DAY "FUN TRIPS!"
Day in Bahamas
Air
fr. $14990
transfers. meals 570 gambling bonus
pack. cocktails. boSOnakfY roc. & nere'
Net tr. SAN
Jan. 23, 30; Feb. 8
RESERVE
EARLY
I Atlantic City
. • I
.
One-ay Cruise
fr. 599 90
1 Att transfers. ,30 quarters 115 load cock!
1 '20 future can tread , I0 future thgnt
1 credl Net It 129■
fr. 5 14990
Ad transfers 3 meals ail Snip lacihteS
525 gambling bonus pack
Jan. 25; Feb. 1, 8
Call Your
Travel Agent
or (313) 827-4070
Jan. 31; Feb. 14
ar issw Hamilton, Miller, Hudson & Fayne
Travel Corporation
MN MAIM
%Mali) the "Low-Cost Travel People-
"" 1 "1".. `
Southfield, Ml
O
"YOUR"
CLEANERS OF FARMINGTON HILLS
PANTS
SHORTENING
SKIRTS
(No Lining)
(Lined)
Exp. 2-2-89
Exp. 2-2-89
1:113NV31
LEANERS • V. R CL EAN ER
YOUR CLEANERS • YOUR CLEANERS
Ladies'
$5.00 $6.00 (Plain,
$2.00
$2.50
no pleats)
(Lined)
Hours: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. M-F • 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat.
p
>-
Alterations On Premises
851-7172
NEXT TO GREAT SCOTT
13 Mile & Orchard Rd.
29571 Orchard Lake Rd.
Farmington Hills
YOUR CLEANERS • YOUR CLEANERS
Borg's Barbers
For Men 'Women
Welcomes
Geeta
TO OUR STAFF
14 Mile & Farmington Rd.
Simsbury Plaza
855-8250
walk-ins welcome
38
FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1989
Mon., Wed., Fri. 8-6
Tues. & Thurs. 8-8
Sat. 8.4
•
0
C
m
rn
Kemfer, one of the most
reputable of the Yiddish
Literary magazines. Perhaps
it would be possible to have
the media take these truths
into consideration when judg-
ing Israel.
Partnership
Marked By
Nobility
nniversaries are a
dime .a dozen in a
functioning communi-
ty. When it is a professional
or business venture it seldom
merits more than passing
mention because there are so
many such events registering
competiton. It is different in
one special case now inviting
attention. It is the 60th an-
niversary of an advertising
firm, that of
Simons-Michelson-Zieve.
It is not only the eminence
statewide of the founding
partners, Lenard Simons and
Lawrence Michelson. It is the
fact that joined in a partner-
ship in the advertising profes-
sion, in which there could be
many disputes, there were
never differing approaches
that might normally invite
antagonisms. They were
glorious decades now inter-
rupted by retirements.
What a marvelous example
of true friendship, continuing
to this day.
Many honors have been
earned by this team of
community-spirited men. Top-
ping them was the advertis-
ing professorship established
in 1988 at Wayne State
University. It is a community-
wide tribute, the purpose of
which is shared and admired
by the entire community.
Honoring
Marshall:
Recollections
G
eneral SLAM" was a
title that was revered
in Israel, with
graditude by the Israeli
generalship for many years. It
was the abbreviation for
Brigadier General S.L.A.
Marshall who was one of
Israel's staunchest defenders
from earliest years of the
Jewish state, until his death
in 1977.
Recollections of him now
reopen the pages of his ac-
tivities with the passing on
Jan. 19 of his widow Cate in
Tyler, Texas. She was 66.
Cate shared most of the
glorious achievements of the
late General SLAM. She was
at his side when he was the
military expert of the Detroit
News and the newspaper's
foreign correspondent and
when he was included in the
list of Righteous Gentiles.
When he visited Israel and
conferred with the Israeli
generalship, she was with
him.
When the Magen David
Adom, the Israeli equivalent
of the Red Cross initiated him
as the honorary president of
the Detroit MDA Chapter, she
was included in the honors ac-
cumulated for him.
With the passing of Cate
Marshall, who is survived by
four daughters and five
grandchildren, a chapter of
Jewish and American history
reopens, with marks of
respect for a Righteous Gen-
tile who was a great
American patriot and an
authority on the military
history of our country; and
the noble lady who stimu-
lated him in his labors. Their
friendship with Jews in this
state and with Israel enlists
them in philo-Semitism and
Jewish nobility.
My own association with
SLAM dated back to our
Detroit News
staff-
membershp and the public
rallies at Temple Beth El on
Woodward Avenue where I in-
troduced him. With both Cate
and SLAM there are recollec-
tions of mutual interests on
Israel, in the Magen David
Adom of Detroit whose presi-
dent, Dr. John Mames, always
welcomed him as a major
associate.
Therefore, • the honor for
Cate with a "blessed
memory" salute is as
privileged as it was for her
husband SLAM.
Teacher's 'Theories'
Are Probed In Canada
Toronto (JTA) — A Human
Rights Commission one-man
board of inquiry is in-
vestigating whethei a local
school teacher, Malcolm Ross,
should be fired for publishing
four books claiming a con-
spiracy of Jews is working to
undermine Christianity and
gain control of the world.
In his books, Ross condemns
abortion, bilingualism and
rock music, and asserts that
the Jewish conspiracy in-
vented the story of the
Holocaust to impose a feeling
of guilt on the West and to
create sympathy forthe Jews.
The case was brought to the
Human Rights Commission
by Minister of Labor David
Attis, a Jewish father of three
in Moncton, New Brunswick,
where Ross teaches.
Attis, a member of the na-
tional executive committee of
the Canadian Jewish Con-
gress, argued that the school
board failed to provide
teaching free of
discrimination.
Ross contested to the court
that he has "never taught in
a school attended by Mr. At-
tis' children and has never ad-
vanced my personal religious
conviction in the classroom."
While the lawyer for the
school board claims Attis can-
not act as complainant
because he's not the direct ob-
ject of discrimination, the
Education Ministry and
Human Rights Commission
counter that he is eligible
since he's a member of a
minority and since the in-
quiry was ordered by the
Labor Ministry.
The case is awaiting
Miller's decision.
Thatcher Recognition
Denied To PLO. State
London (JTA) — Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher
said she favors the dialogue
between the United States
and the Palestine Liberation
Organization, but has no in-
tention of recognizing the
Palestinian state proclaimed
by the PLO.
She gave that assurance in
reply to a letter from Stephen
Roth, chairman of the British
Zionist Federation, who had
urged the prime minister not
to change her policy toward
the PLO.
Thatcher noted that recent
statements by PLO leaders,
including chairman Yassir
Arafat, had "opened the way
to a dialogue between the
United States and the PLO
and to the PLO's eventual-
participation in peace
negotiations."
She said she expects the
PLO to live up to its word,
and hoped that Israel "will
take advantage of the new op-
portunities that exist."
Thatcher stressed, however,
that the British government
"does not intend to recognize
the independent state which
the PLO has proclaimed."
•