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September 16, 1994 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-09-16

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

At Harper, Low Price
is a Design. Element.

Right-Wing
Extremism

Natuzzi LEATHER

Three piece sectional as shown
Compare at $4,350.00

NOW $2,295.00

545-3600 FURNIP
HAR TUER
RE

916 N. Main, Royal Oak, N. of 11 Mile Rd.

Hours: Tues., Wed., Sat. — 10-5
Mon., Thur., Fri. — 10-8

The Comparison Shopper – Buys At Harper

...for women's special needs

p

Have You Heard?

by Felix Cruz

Hearing Aid Specialist

omen's Health Boutique is for
women, by women...to meet the
special healthcare needs of women.
Our goal is to make a positive dif-
ference in the way women look and
feel about themselves whether their
special needs are related to cancer,
personal care or special pregnancy
and childbirth problems.
Our personal fitting service and
beautiful decor is just what women
deserve.

We specialize in:

- Mastectomy
- External Breast Reconstruction
- Wigs and Turbans
- Compression Therapy
- Personal Care and Hygiene
- Maternity and Breastfeeding

A WORKING DEFINITION
The story of a dentist from Florida helps
define just how insidious hearing loss due
to factors in the workplace can be. It seems
that the dentist in question became
alarmed when he noticed that the high-
pitched noise from his dental drill grew
quiet. An investigation into this silence
revealed that the dentist had experienced
a hearing loss that was caused by the very
drill that he was no longer able to hear.
Noise-induced hearing loss at work is fairly
common among dentists, but the prob-
lem is not restricted solely to their occu-
pation. Carpenters, factory workers, and
others experience the same loss. Those
who think that they might be affected in
this manner are advised to adopt protec-
tive measures at work and have their hear-
ing checked regularly.

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Paid for and brought to you as a public service by Fekx Cruz

Mack Pitt

T- Shirts . Boxer Shorts • Sweats • Caps
• Mugs. Water Bottles • Etc,. .

E3 D 1J

If you feel that your hearing may be
affected by noise at your workplace, please
come visit us at CRUZ HEARING AID
SERVICE. We rehabilitate our clients into bet-
ter hearing by offering check up appointments
and consultations to ensure a proper fitting
and sounding hearing aid. Semiannual clean-
ings are also incorporated into our regular
routine. We check your hearing aid's perfor-
mance, clean it, and offer free hearing screen-
ings to be sure your hearing aid is working to
benefit your hearing loss. Your hearing is
precious to you, and we want to help! Please
call us today at 424-8450, or come see us
at 18899 W. 12 Mile Rd., in Lathrup Village.
P.S. It is estimated that ten percent of the
American population experiences some de-
gree of hearing impairment, which would
make it the nation's number one disability.

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Bonn (JTA) — Amid reports that
two radical right-wing parties are
planning to join forces, the leader
of German Jewry warned this
week that neo-Na zi extremism,
once the province of violent
youths, is now spreading to Ger-
man intellectuals.
Ignatz Bubis, chairman of the
Central Council of Jews in Ger-
many, issued the warning as the
Republican Party and the Ger-
man People's Union said they
may close ranks to form an ul-
trarightist alliance.
Neither of the two parties has
elected officials serving in the
German Parliament, because nei-
ther has been able to receive the
necessary 5 percent minimum of
the total votes required for entry
into Parliament.
The Republican Party, the
larger of the two, has also done
poorly in recent regional and mu-
nicipal elections.
Republican chairman Franz
Schonhuber and DVU Chairman
Gerhard Frey urged their sup-
porters this week to set aside
their differences.
Responding to the rise in right-
wing activity, Mr. Bubis said in
a radio interview that new groups
of far-right thinkers are more
dangerous than neo-Nazi skin-
heads.
"The state will be able to cope
with the violence (of the skin-
heads), but the intellectuals sup-
ply the ideology that lures young
people and makes them into vio-
lent criminals," he said.
"This is a recent phenomenon.
You do not find these intellectu-
als among the violent perpetra-
tors," Mr. Bubis added, noting
that far-right thinkers deceive
themselves into believing that
they are simply providing youths
with a way to enter the German
political process.
"They do not see that they
themselves become the ones who
give far-right radicals their
ideas," he said.
Mr. Bubis expressed similar
concerns in Dresden, the eastern
German city where he was
awarded the Erich Kestner
Award for his achievements in
advancing liberal ideas.
At the award ceremony, Mr.
Bubis expressed special concern
about the involvement of high
school teachers in rightist polit-
ical parties.
He also warned of the danger
that the radical right would grad-
ually become the "in thing"
among German intellectuals.
Mr. Bubis was the first to be
honored with the newly estab-
lished Kestner award, which was
initiated by the Dresden Press
Club to honor the memory of
Erich Kestner, a popular writer
of children's books whose writing
was banned by the Nazis.

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