APY* 6 Months $100,000 min. The Rate Leader Is Back! Franklin Bank N.A. 358-5170 FDIC Insured The New Thinking In BankingTM Southfield • Birmingham • Grosse Pointe Woods EQUAL HOUSING LENDER 'Annual Peroentope Yield. Minimum balance requirement of $100,000. A penally may be imposed for early withdrawal. Rate accurate as of May 25, 1994 and is subject to change or withdrawal at any time. Not valid with any other bonuses or coupons. THE DETRO IT J EWIS H NEWS Retired Craftsmen Offer Low Cost Home Repair 94 They planned to call themselves the "Gray Team," but thought that took much explanation. Instead, they settled on "Handyman Connection" for their business venture: a group of retired craftsmen who provide low- cost home repairs. "We're not out to get rich," said Arthur Neu- man, who co-owns the business with Marvin Belkin, 'It's a business niche we'd like to fill. Neuman got the idea for the business after he became chair- man of his condominium maintenance committee. He found that residents could not find repairmen to do plumbing, electri- cal, plaster, drywall, carpentry, painting, wallpapering, ceramic, etc. After doing market research, they found that there was a def- Marvin Beikin watches Arthur Neuman writes another inite void in the marketplace for these services and it was a niche work order at Handyman Connection. Their homerepair they could fill. business based in Metro Detroit, 4743670 Neuman grew up being "handy" and he takes care of most of the repairs while Belkin handles the business end of the venture. Belkin is a retired sales-marketing executive of11-i- fari Jewelry Company and a volunteer with the Service Corps of Retired Executives. Although the business was started in Cincinnati over 3 years ago, Handyman Connection has expanded to the Greater Detroit area - call 474-3670. In order to reduce cost to customers, Belkin said they reduced their own business expenses. They have no com- pany trucks, no fancy uniforms, no cellular phone and no billing. Customers pay when the work is completed. To tackle jobs in the Nashville area, Belkin and Neuman have recruited 10 other craftspeople, many of whom are multi-talented. "Some of the people have several crafts, "Neuman said. "It's time saving to have one person who can plaster and wallpaper because you don't have to call on two people to get the job done." The company relies on the talents to take care of odd jobs, such as leaky faucets, shelves, electrical switches, cutting doors down, wallpaper, plumbing and carpentry. Although the business cuts corners to keep rates low and save the customers money, they don't cut the wrong corners: Their work is guaranteed for 18 months. ADVERTISEMENT NOW OPEN IN METRO DETROIT, CALL 474-3670 Overlooked Victim A synagogue community rallies around the bereaved family of Ronald L. Goldman, the forgotten man in the O.J. Simpson tragedy. NAOMI PFEFFERMAN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS E veryone is by now familiar with the news headlines: O.J. Simpson accused of the stabbing deaths of his ex- wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, the 25-year-old wait- er Ronald Lyle Goldman. What is less known is the story of Mr. Goldman's Jewish family, and the synagogue community that has rallied around them in their time of distress. The shul is Temple Beth Haverim in Agoura Hills, a close- knit, Conservative congregation of 330 families on the outskirts of Los Angeles County. Fred Gold- man and his wife, Patti (Ron's stepmother) were immediately drawn to Beth Haverim when they moved here from Chicago in 1987; it was at the synagogue that they made many of their close friendships in a large chavu- rah, and that Patti's three chil- dren by a previous marriage became bar/bat mitzvah. Fred joined the Men's League and Patti the sisterhood (she even became a board member who worked for the telephone com- mittee). As for Ron Goldman, he had apparently followed his father and stepmother to Los Angeles: Fred had raised him, and his sis- ter, Kim, from the time that the boy was 5 (at the time his biolog- ical mother left the family and has not been in contact since). Young Ron attended Hebrew school and became bar mitzvah in Chicago; he worked as a camp counselor, volunteered to help disabled children and taught kids tennis. This last was his great love. In Los Angeles the youth hoped to find his California dream: He worked as a waiter, as a tennis coach and employment headhunter; he was a charis- matic, helpful "people person," ac- cording to friends and co-workers. Mr. Goldman appeared on the Fox TV show "Studs," in a print advertisement for Giorgio Ar- mani, put together a modeling video and avidly exercised at the gym, according to the Los Angeles Times. The Times also reported that he was an enthu- siastic surfer, volleyball player and nightclub-hopper who dated beautiful women; though Mr. Goldman once trained as an emergency medical technician he worked as a waiter at the upscale Brentwood trattoria Mezzaluna, and dreamed of opening his own trendy Westside bar or restau- rant. And despite his apparent love for the fast lane, friends say, his great talent was working with children. In the last weeks before his death, the Times said, Mr. Gold- man had developed an increas- ingly close, if platonic relationship with 35-year-old Nicole Brown Simpson. The two had appar- ently exercised together, met for coffee and dinner and made the dance club scene in Ms. Simp- son's white Ferrari. It's been painful for the family to see that what little attention Ron's death has received has focused on his fast-lane lifestyle. On the night of their deaths, Nicole had dined at Mezzaluna and had accidentally left her pre- scription glasses behind. Mr. Goldman volunteered to return them — and was stabbed 22 times as he put up a fierce strug- gle. His bloodsoaked body was found near Ms. Simpson's, early on June 13, in the shrubbery out- side her townhouse on the 800 block of South Bundy Drive. The youth's funeral was sched- uled for June 16, in the Beth Olam section of Pierce Bros. Val- ley Oaks Memorial Park in West- lake Village, and some 400 mourners spilled outside the tiny chapel as Rabbi Johnson gave the eulogy. "This horrible deed was brought upon an essentially good soul, a caring young man who was just beginning to get his life in order," the rabbi said. "Ron loved people and children ... and his (handsome) physical appear- ance should not conceal from us his sensitivity. "We've come together to get through all this," Rabbi Johnson said. "Our bonding has helped counterbalance all the media hype about (Goldman), and the hyper-excessive focus upon celebrity instead of who Ron was as a person." El Naomi Pfeffeiman is a senior writer for the Jewish Journal of Los Angeles. 64