SAY IT WITH TREES The Family Of GERTRUDE LIPSCHUTZ wishes to acknowledge the many expressions of sympathy which have touched us deeply. We thank you for helping us through a most difficult time. - JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 18877 W Ten Mile Road Suite 104 Southfield. Michigan 48075 Phone (313) 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday 9 A M to D P M Friday 9 M to 2 hrs before Sabbath JtEl i Z Zcz. 24370 W. Ten Mile Rd., Just W. of Telegraph Heartfelt wishes sent with delicious gift baskets from .. . 355-0088 A TISKET A TASKET (313) 661,4789 Give your heart an extra helping. Packaged and Delivered 7 Days a Week Say no to high-fat foods. %P 4 Asm soecrifac;inoHnecirt KOSI-IER•PAREVE In Memory Of In Loving Memory Of ANN SCHIFF PEARL SPINNER Who passed away October 31, 1990. Sadly missed and never to be forgotten by hus- band Robert and family. Who passed away Oc- tober 28, 1979. Loved, missed and remembered by her husband Morris, daughter Bobbi, son Marshall and family. DELICIOUS CANDY DRIED FRUIT & NUTS 968-NOSH .**\ Local & Nationwide. Delivery * * * * * * * * ******** . * That • Special * Something:: * * eookiz * & Catzly gtayl * * The Family of the Late The Family of the Late SARAH HURWITZ DORIS SCHLAFER Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory 3 p.m. Sun- day, November 3 at Hebrew Memorial Park Cemetery. Rabbi Nelson will officiate. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory 11 a.m. Sunday, October 27 at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Schwartz will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. The Family of the Late The Family of the Late When So Sorry is not enough... Send a tray ALEX RUZUMNA SAUL SILVERSTEIN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory 10:45 a.m. Sun- day, October 27, at Beth Tefilo Emanuel Ceme- tery. Rabbi Milton Arm will officiate. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his memory 10 a.m. Sunday, November 3, at Adat Shalom Memorial Park. Rabbi Nelson will of- ficiate. Relatives and friends are invited to attend. Nibbles & Nuts * * 9oz LgOiZ tirriEd. Ci7G-11 * * * * 014 tfiz BEST ,ILL d 0 * * * * oarr ,E.ti 399-4148 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 737-8088 Breast self-examination — LEARN. Call us. AMERICAN SOCETY °4NCER Islamic Party Strong In Turkish Elections Istanbul, Turkey (JTA) — Turkey's Islamic fundamen- talist Welfare Party has emerged as a strong can- didate for the coalition government that will be formed by the conservative True Path Party in the wake of last week's upset elections here. The True Path Party edged out Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz's Motherland Party, which has been in power for eight years. The Welfare Party, which believes the United States and "Zionists" are involved in a plot to rule the world and dominate Moslems, received about 17 percent of the national vote. The party, led by 65-year- old Necmettin Erbakan, will send about 62 deputies to the 450-seat Parliament, mak- ing it the fourth-largest par- ty. While the True Path Par- ty came out ahead with 181 seats and 27 percent of the national vote, it did not receive enough votes to form a government on its own. Whether or not Mr. Er- bakan is invited to join a co- alition, he is expected to ex- ert a loud and charismatic presence in Turkey's third parliamentary government since the 1980 military coup. The success of Mr. Er- bakan, who has rarely polled more than 10 percent in his many decades of political in- volvement, has surprised po- litical commentators and worried Turkey's tiny Jew- ish community of 22,000 people. "There is some concern be- cause Erbakan does not hide his anti-Semitic and anti- Israel feelings," said Sami Kohen, a veteran political columnist for the daily Milliyet newspaper. Mr. Erbakan is against Turkey's effort to join the European Community, which he sees as an Israeli- run- organization, even though Israel is not a mem- ber of the 12-nation body. In his campaign speeches, Mr. Erbakan often warned that the elections were a choice between "Greater Israel and Greater Turkey." "If you don't want your sons, when they are soldiers, to be ruled by Solomon in Tel Aviv, you must vote for our party," he said in a nation- ally televised speech last week. "If you are not careful, Turkey and Israel will become one state," he added. Political commentators warned against assuming that the success of Erbakan meant a resurgence of pro- Islamic feelings in this secular Moslem country. Since the founding of the republic in 1923, a certain tension has always existed between the state's secular underpinnings and its almost 100 percent Moslem population. Over the decades, suc- cessive governments have eased restrictions on some Islamic practices and organ- izations. Islamic banks now function, Islamic schools are "There is concern because Erbakan does not hide his anti-Semitic feelings." flourishing, and last year the country was rocked by the Islamic-inspired assassinations of four prominent secularists. But it remains a crime to advocate an end to Turkey's secularism, and in the streets of major cities, wo- men in miniskirts are more prevalent than women in chadors, the long gowns and veils mandated by Islamic laws on female modesty. The Welfare Party's ascendancy is "not serious, perhaps, but there is some concern in the Jewish com- munity because it reminds many people of what has happened in other Islamic countries, where pro- fundamentalist leaders have taken a lead or power," said Mr. Kohen, the columnist. He and others pointed out Erbakan has never attacked the Turkish Jewish corn- munity. The elections saw the end of eight years of rule by the Motherland Party, which presided over Turkey's tran- sition to a more open econo- my and solidified a pro- Western position. But President Turgut Ozal's rule was marked by spiraling inflation, a growth in Kurdish nationalism in the southeast and criticism over increasing "family rule." The Motherland Party emerged second, with 24 percent of the vote and 111 seats. The left-of-center So- cial Democratic Populist Party fell to a surprising third, with 21 percent of the vote and 88 seats. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 135