100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

June 17, 1994 - Image 33

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-06-17

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

righteous, God is more exacting
and demanding.
Many who enjoy life's privi-
leges and security, demonstrate
carelessness, irresponsibility and
wastefulness. Worse yet, we see
. how people who occupy positions
of trust and responsibility in busi-
ness, finance, government, and
even the institution of religion,
violate that trust and commit acts
that dishonor their positions. Is
not their transgression greater,
precisely because of the exalted
station they occupy?
It is not difficult to criticize oth-
ers; it is much more difficult to
. criticize ourselves. This thought
would not be complete were it not
applied to our own lives. Being
a Jew is a great privilege. Our
religious and moral heritage con-
fers upon each of us the vision
and faith of all the centuries that
have preceded us. We, as Jews,
ought to set standards for in-
tegrity and moral excellence for
our world. In our relationships,
• we should demonstrate compas-
sion. In our striving for a better
world, we should seek the estab-
lishment of justice. We ought to
express to our children and
grandchildren love and devotion
for our way of life. The great priv-
ilege of being a Jew should be
matched by a sense of duty and
obligation to the advancement
and enrichment of that tradition
that informs our lives. We are to
be judged by standards different
than those that obtain for other
people.
Moses enjoyed the extraordi-
nary privilege of being God's
spokesman. When he gave way
' to impatience and faithlessness,
he violated the standards of his
high office and he was disbarred
from the land of promise. Let all
who enjoy great privilege be cog-
nizant of this truth and recognize
the obligation it imposes.111

And now, will the
real #1 please stand up.

"We offer some of the lowest rates around and our
professional Mortgage Experts can process,
approve and fund your loan locally."

— Beth Grossman
Regional Vice President

C ountiywide® became #1 by giving local Branch

Managers the authority to approve your loan and speed
it through processing, right in the local office. We also
offer an aggressive product line — fixed rates,
adjustables, FHA/VA, jumbos, even balloons — and
House America,"' our low-to-moderate income
program. Number #1 Gets It Done.

Call the Mortgage Experts near you!

Ann Arbor
(313) 663-6767

Birmingham
(810) 647-3701

Detroit
(313) 891-7200

Farmington Hills
(810) 489-8500

Lathrup Village
(810) 443-2449

Livonia
(810) 4766699

Novi
(810) 344-9050

Plymouth
(313) 459-5511

Troy
(810) 680-9880

Waterford
(810) 673-4860

No one works border to deliver lbe Ammmer•icarr Drea m

In

MI Countrywi d e®

.

HOME MORTGAGE LOANS

Equal Housing Lender 01994 Countrywide Funding Corporation.Trade/service marks are the property of Country -wide Credit Industries Inc., and/or its subsidiaries. RBA 40567-494

NOW AT

BILL COOK

Play the market right and
you could lose it all.

mazDa

New Board
For Beth Shalom

Congregation Beth Shalom will
install their executive officers at
Shabbat services, June 18 at 9
a.m. at the synagogue. Kiddush
will follow.
Sy M. Finkelstein will be in-
stalled as the president for the
1994195 year along with Arthur
Langer, Mark A. Goldsmith, Bar-
bara Aronow, Dan Biber, vice
presidents; Steven A. Levine,
Treasurer; Arlene Gorelick,
recording secretary.
Trustees are Susan Dones,
Fran Hildebrandt, Jerry Isler,
David Kirsch, Howard Lax, Ver-
non Leopold, Richard Polk and
Elizabeth Schubiner.

You could lose things
like extra weight. High
blood pressure. And high
blood cholesterol levels.
The very things that con-
tribute to heart attack and
stroke.
All you have to do is invest
wisely at the supermarket.
Buy more in the fresh prod-
uce, pasta, breads and ce-
reals sections. And pur-
chase fish, poultry and
lean meats instead of fatty
or processed meats.

Switch to low-fat dairy prod-
ucts and margarine. And
check the nutritional list-
ings on food labels.
In short, be selective about
how you play this market.
Because no matter how
much you lose, you've got
a lot to win.

WE'RE FIGHTING FOR
YOUR LIFE

American Heart
Association

Protection Package • 4-Seasons Package • Alloy Wheels *Dual Air-
Power Tilt Wheel • AM/FM Cassette * 36 Month, 50,000 Mile Warranty
Emergency Road Side Assistance

0,



4a.

,k

,k 1 a

f3ILL Cook maze)
. a

um CO RIVER_
rvi esa
na

■IG IFt

WE

.1ES

:

iss

LU

.4 AIILST E a
Clo —4171 — CO*3 11:31 CP

'Lease requires 1st mo. payment. Destination, doe, title, license and 5450 acq. fee clue at incep-
tion. Payments plus applicable taxes. 50,000 mile limit. 10c per mile over. $950 cap cost reduc-
tion clue at inception. No security deposit required. Lessee has option but is not obligated to buy
at lease end for price determined at inception. Picture may not reflect actual vehicle. Offer ex-
pires June 30. 1994.

33

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan