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July 06, 1990 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-07-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

WHATEVER THE BOOK SAYS YOUR TRADE IS WORTH $

7

MEL FARR WILL PAY m

NEW '90 ESCORT

I PURELY COMMENTARY I

Historic Tour

oRE

NEW '90 TAURUS

Comer of 10 Mlle & Greenfield
(Exit of 698 MN
OAK PARK

961•3100
TOYOTA

N II MU

ISE. ►Ant

#796 $ 6,090

„511450

NEW '90 CEUCA

NEW '90 CAMRY

-,!1/

1951 S. TELEGRAPH
ML North of Square Lake
111.00MRELD HILLS

Ily•N

=Fr-

3313300 #7.111 660

'90 CONTINENTAL "EXECUTIVE SERIES"

LINCOLN
MERCURY

17 IN STOCK

4178 HIGHLAND RD
(M-59 Near Pontiac Lake Rd.)
WATERFORD

Buy

6834500 w2stfra s i?"

•$750 more for your trade based on average Block Book value less
mileage. appearance & mechanical noccindltioning. Apples to all
new vehicle purchases plus used vehicles 3500 a above. One trade
per customer. NI prices plus tax. Ia. Me. deaf. Applicobie rebalee
assigned to dealer. S1000 Cosh Rotate cei used cox valued at 55000
& above, prices include rebate. Sale ends 6 p.m. April 27. 1990.

"The Superstar
Dealer"

Lease

#

(36 mos.)

$42550 * + Tax

0" DOWN

plus lax. 111M and desilnation al rebates and dealer inceinitves
assigned to dealer.
— •Scold end Mope Cars bawd on 36 moos. with veNcies same as
monthly. -0- down, plus 14 and *sc. dome& Sec deposit on all Yaw
vehicle same as monthly payment refundable at lease end. NI
payments plus 4% use tax. b ger total payments mullary times
number of moneu. Penally for excessive wecx, tear and mileage
Mileage Omit:Mon 15.000 per year. 6 1 per mks °vamp&

ei
aye a. chafe

Ea'

less saturate

f ats .

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR
YOUR LIFE

American Heart
Association



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36

FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1990

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Continued from Page 2

BARBRA HOCHHEISER

Travel Consultant

968-8600

For All Your Travel Needs

hopes of the Jews for the
long awaited Messiah were
dashed.
For the multitudes visiting
Israel and being at the Kotel
there is special privilege of
considering it a pilgrimage. A
page devoted to the Western
Wall is a special lesson for
all readers. Here is Rabbi Rez-
nick's treatment:

The Western Wall. The
Wailing Wall. Wall of Stone.
Holy stones. Sacred stones.
What sorrows they have
seen. What secrets they
'contain. The Wall watched
over our forefathers as they
passed this way driven in-
to exile. The Wall watched
as the Romans passed this
way to tear down its
mighty stones. The Wall
watched as the Byzantines
passed this way to plow up
the sacred mountain. The
Wall watched as the Per-
sians, the Omayyads, the
Abbassids, the Crusaders,
the Mamelukes, the Ot-
tomans, the French, the
British, and the Jorda-
nians passed this way to
destroy and conquer. But
today you still stand wat-
ching as we once again
pass this way. Your feet are
buried beneath the rub-
bish and debris. Rubbish
thrown in hate. Debris
thrown with abandon-
ment. Remnants of civiliza-
tions long gone. But it is
the debris of the Jewish
people that lies at the very
bottom, and it is the Jewish
people who stand on top,
embracing your stones,
kissing the tears you have
held all these years of exile.
Into your crevices you
receive our bits of paper
with our longings and
hopes written upon them.
Hold them dearly and
watch over us, and soon we
shall pass by again, into
the Holy Temple. May it
speedily be rebuilt in our
days.
The knowledge provided in
The Holy Temple Revisited is
marked by timeliness for the
readers of all faiths and all
ages and for Jews it becomes
must learning. It includes
facts about Jerusalem not
available in other historical
writings. There is enrichment
here that lends fascination to
historiography. ❑

Obituaries: nibutes
To The Venerable

0

bituaries keep re-
minding us about the
accomplishments of
the departed.
Many, as in instances now
to be referred to, have so

much to their credit that
mere death notices are insuf-
ficient for emphasis on the
labors performed in a lifetime.
We are now paying tribute
to the man who was the first
Israel Ambassador to the
United States. Eliahu Elath
had a remarkable career as
author of works dealing with
Middle East history and
Israel's progressive role in it.
My own cooperative tasks
with him began at the con-
ference sessions in San Fran-
cisco in 1945 that marked the
founding of the United
Nations.
We shared the dais when he
was here, at the Shaarey
Zedek on Chicago and
Lawton, the week of the
rebirth of Israel's statehood
and his assuming the am-
bassadorship. I knew him

The obituary often
reveals a forgotten
name.

when he was Eliahu Epstein
and always admired him as
Eliahu Elath.
Tribute is due to the
memory of Doris Sky who
died last month. As editor of
the Intermountain Jewish
News of Denver, she was a
great credit to the English
Jewish Press.
Rabbi Solomon Freehof,
who was among the
distinguished in Reform
Judaism, died June 12 at the
age of 97. He will always be
remembered for legacies
numbering many volumes
devoted to Responsa — the
English versions of L'Shaalot
B'tshuvot — Questions and
Answers — providing vitally
needed explanations of many
codes and traditions. His
books will always be referred
to for required definitions.
The obituary often reveals a
forgotten name. This is the
case with the obituary of
Ephraim London in the New
York Times of June 14.
We read about the
achievements of this very
courageous lawyer and find
toward the end that he was
the nephew of Meyer London
who was elected to the United
States House of Represen-
tatives as a Socialist. It was
an unforgetable time when
the ultra-conservatives tried
to expel Meyer London from
Congress and failed.
London was elected to Con-
gress in an East End New
York District in 1914. He was
re-elected in 1916, defeated by
a small margin in 1918 and
re-elected again in 1920.
That's how we learn history
— from obituaries. ❑

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