LIBERTY page 25 6 6 I financed my first truck at Franklin Bank eight years ago. Now I have over twenty and I'm still with Franklin. / HENRY ABRAMS H. A. Sun Heating & Cooling Inc. Stability and lasting relationships are important to a small business or practice. That's why so many of them have turned to Franklin Bank. We value your business in a way big banks don't seem to. And we want to be your banker for a good, long time. So we treat you right, with services and attention tailored to your needs. Like commercial checking with the lowest fees in metropolitan Detroit. And banking hours that fit your schedule. Come in or call today. You'll see why peo- ple stay with Franklin Bank. Franklin Bank N. A . 358-5170 FDIC INSURED Southfield • Birmingham • Grosse Pointe Woods BRA SALE THE DETROIT JEWIS H NEWS Friday, Saturday, Monday Only (in stock only, no special orders) Roslyn's Intimate Apparel Applegate Square Northwestern and Inkster Road Daily 10-6 • Sat. 10-5 • Thurs. 10-8 28 353-5522 demonstrations. ACLU National Execu- tive Director Ira Glasser says ACLU has defended pro-life groups' right to peacefully demonstrate. ACLU contends the consti- tutional right to privacy protects a woman in mak- ing reproductive choices. "We are very conserva- tive," says the ACLU's Oakland County presi- dent, Ms. Shartsis. "We are not making anything up. We are defending the Bill of Rights, which has been around for 200 years." Howard Simon is accus- tomed to the controversy surrounding the organiza- tion he wears on his shirt- sleeve. Nasty letters are routine, and cards with Christian psalms come in the mail regularly from foes. "For the last several decades, most of the peo- ple we have represented are those who wanted to fight for free speech — civil rights workers, Vietnam War protestors, Nazis — they were against the government," he says. "We became asso- ciated with the people we represented. "Our legal system is kind of crazy in a way," Mr. Simon says. "We may not like the flag burner or the Nazi. We could stand by and say these are peo- ple we would never invite to our homes for dinner. But the strange thing about our legal system is that what happens to them affects all of us. "Our mission is to limit government power and enhance government free- dom," Mr. Simon says. "What is so radical about that?" ❑ Levy Pleads Guilty To Embezzlement Jerusalem (JTA) — A former member of Israel's Knesset has admitted in court to embezzling money from a fund affiliated with the Shas party and is likely to go to jail as a result. Yair Levy pleaded guilty to illegally taking money from the El Hamayan cultural association during his service as director- general of the association, which is affiliated with his fervently Orthodox party. The prosecution thereupon asked for a 40-month prison term under a plea-bargain arrangement worked out by the Tel Aviv District At- torney's Office and the defense counsel. Under the deal, Mr. Levy admitted to stealing 310,000 shekels ($118,000), an amount smaller than the 500,000 shekels cited in the original charge sheet. The agreement was struck in the midst of lengthy hear- ings on charges of theft, fraud, forgery and breach of trust against Levy and his wife, Geula. Under the terms of the plea bargain, Geula Levy will get a suspended sentence. A former speaker of the Knesset, Dov Shilansky, led a procession of public figures who took the stand as character witnesses on Mr. Levy's behalf. The spiritual mentor of Shas, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, sent a letter to Judge Micha Lindenstaus, citing a rab- binic rule to the effect that "where one comes to sentence a man, the man's good deeds should be re- counted." A venerable leader of the rigorously Orthodox Ashkenazic community, 95- year-old Rabbi Eliezer Shach, offered to give character testimony if the court would come to his home, but the judge declined the offer. Mr. Levy himself showed emotion, for the first time during the trial, when the court was told of his adop- tion and rearing of a young, homeless boy. Under Israeli law, a judge is not required to hand down his sentence in conformity with the terms of a plea- bargain. In practice, though, the vast majority of such bargains are indeed mir- rored in the court's verdict. Sixteen people called by the prosecution during the trial were declared hostile witnesses when they backtracked from statements made earlier to the police.