NEWS I
From the old neighborhood
to your home.
A taste of tradition
This Passover, bring GOLD'S home for the holidays. A traditional
celebration isn't complete without the rich, familiar taste of
GOLD'S white, creamy-hot or milder red horseradish with beets.
And the taste is just like you remembered, because we haven't
left the neighborhood or sacrificed on quality for over 56 years.
So GOLD'S is still all natural, pure, homemade, kosher for
Passover and shipped fast for freshness.
11 ► Now you can order GOLD'S fine line of products in time for
Passover and also receive a FREE recipe booklet.
Send for a Gift Pack and receive
%)4,34W
all 3 GOLD'S delicious
homestyle horseradishes.
All Kosher for Passover.
Supreme Court Hears
Lubavitch Arguments
Golis
ORDERS RECEIVED BEFORE
APRIL 3, 1989 WILL BE
RECEIVED IN TIME FOR
PASSOVER.
rGift
TOTAT1
QTY. , PRICE
Pack includes a complete assortment of Gold's
traditional Red with beets, White and Cream Style/Hot
horseradish in three 6 oz. jars. @ $5.95
Add $1.50 Shipping/Handling per box
PLUS S/H
Gold's Horseradish
895 McDonald Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11218
TOTAL
AMOUNT:
Make check or money order payable to "GOLD'S"'
NAME .
ADDRESS:
CITY:
STATE
L Cannot ship without ZIP:
JDN ,
GLATT
Air Condition., a Heated
SCHECHTER'S
0
.01/ 7 1E40
KOSHER
© 2 Hours More of
KOSHER HOTEL GLATT Sunshine daily
YOUR HOME AWAY FROM HOME
MARCH SPECIAL
1 0
Announces The Opening Of The
NEWLY
RENOVATED
• SERVING 2 MEALS DAILY
• 3 ON THE SABBATH
Any 8 days & 7 nights
March 7 to April 19
$2
person
(Formerly the
• SYNAGOGUE ON PREMISES
• OCEANFRONT BOARDWALK
per
double
occ.
for
phone TOLL FREE:
1-800-327-8165
Entire Oceanfront Block
DAYS INN
KOSHER DANIEL HOTEL)
PASSOVER ONLY
10 & 12 Night Packages Available
Serving 3 GLATT KOSHER MEALS DAILY
• Heated Pool • Private Beach • Color TV in All Rooms
• All Diets Catered To • Resident Mashgiach
On The Ocean at 43rd St., Miami Beach
• HEATED THERAPEUTIC WH RLPOOL • NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT
• PRIVATE BEACH FREE PARKING
• WE CATER TO ALL DIETS
• COLOR TV & RADIO IN ALL ROOMS • DELICIOUS KOSHER FOOD
• FREE CABLE TV
L
MIAMI BEACH
The SCHECHTER Family
of The Caribbean Hotel
Call the:
37th to 38th Sts., Miami Beach
SCHECHTERS
TOLL FREE:1-800-327-8165
SCHECHTER FAMILY Mgm't
JEWELRY APPRAISALS
At Very Reasonable Prices
L
Call For An Appointment
‘4 11 1:11,g6ri
established 1919
FINE JEWELERS
GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST
30400 Telegraph Road
Suite 134
Birmingham, MI 48010
(313) 642-5575
DAILY 10-5:30
THURS. 10-7
SAT. 10-3
AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA
IN GRADING AND EVALUATION
"You'll like our service „
you'll love our people."
Adeline A. Laforet, RN
Healthcare
President
PROFESSIONALS LTD.
Home/Hospital/Nursing Home
Nursing Care/Personal Care/Homemaking
Rent-a-Mom
ALWAYS OPEN
563.0056
Dearborn
357-7080
Southfield
656-7075
Rochester
Medicare/Blue Cross/Private Insurance
80
FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1989
747-8070
Ann Arbor
Washington (JTA) — The
Supreme Court heard oral
arguments last week to
decide whether religious sym-
bols, including a menorah,
displayed in two Pittsburgh
government buildings violate
the constitutional principle of
separation of church and
state.
The case pits the Lubavitch
Hasidic movement against
several major Jewish
organizations.
The case may test the limits
of the court's 1984 decision, in
Lynch vs. Donnelly, to uphold
a Pawtucket, R.I., nativity
scene erected in a private
park near City Hall.
In making its ruling, the
court argued that because the
Rhode Island display includ-
ed reindeer and other or-
naments, the nativity scene
had a secular, seasonal pur-
pose, rather than a purely
religious one.
This time around, the
nativity scene is in the
Allegheny County Cour-
thouse. But unlike the Lynch
case, the presence of
Christmas trees and
menorahs on public property
is also being challenged.
There is a 45-foot-high
Christmas tree with an
18-foot-high menorah on the
second floor of Pittsburgh's
City-County Building, known
as City Hall. The menorah is
owned by Chabad.
The U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit ruled
last March that both the
Pittsburgh displays were
unconstitutional.
Chief Justice William
Rehnquist noted that Chabad
is a Jewish group in favor of
displaying the menorah on
public property.
Nathan Lewin, lawyer for
Chabad, said the menorah
has an "appropriate educa-
tional effect" on the public.
While conceding that it has
some religious significance,
he stressed it also instructs
citizens of faiths other than
Christianity, thereby showing
that non-Christian faiths are
treated well.
The National Jewish Com-
mission on Law and Public
The case may test
the limits of the
court's 1984
decision to uphold
a Pawtucket, R.I.,
a nativity scene
erected in a
private park near
City Hall.
Affairs filed a friend-of-the-
court brief in favor of the
displays.
Jewish groups that filed
amicus briefs opposing the
displays are the Anti-
Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith, the American Jewish
Committee and the American
Jewish Congress, which filed
its brief also on behalf of the
National Jewish Community
Relations Advisory Council —
an umbrella group of 11 na-
tional organizations and more
than 100 local community
relations councils.
Demonstrators Demand
More Settlements
Jerusalem (JTA) —
Thousands of Gush Emunim
supporters gathered last
Week to call for a renewed set-
tlement drive in the Israeli
occupied territories.
The demonstration raised
the tension level once more
between Labor and Likud,
whose opposing policies on
the settlements are now
focused on the Finance
Ministry, led now by Labor
Party leader Shimon Peres.
Peres declared categorical-
ly that "the Likud would not
get an extra shekel for set-
tlements."
Peres was reacting to
threats by the Likud that it
would agree to write off the
huge debts of the kibbutzim
only if the Treasury allocates
another 80 million shekels
($45 million) for the
settlements.
Last week, the government
and the banks agreed to write
off and reschedule four billion
shekels ($2.25 billion) of the
kibbutzim's debt, as part of a
wide-ranging recovery
program.
Many settlers say the
Likud-led government, which
has professed to support new
settlements, is not sym-
pathetic enough to settlement
efforts.
The demonstrators Tuesday
called for the government to
"hit the PLO with eight new
settlements," referring to the
Palestine Liberation
Organization's stated intent
to establish an independent
Palestinian state in the
territories.