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 . 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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.