12 Year of Evelyday Savings just Got Better. SUPREME page 23 COATS UNLIMITED West Bloomfield • Orchard Mall Location Only MANUFACTURERS SUGGESIti nu/irk= West Bloomfield Only • Orchard Mall, Orchard Lake at Maple H01113.: Monday, Mayday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday 10-6, Thurcday 10-8, Sunday 12-5 A Division of Select group drapery boutique_ o u t i u 4 inside all 6 drape'', boutique locations! -- All Ragaz.-zi critis ntkvt or exceed the. Consumers Product Safety Commissions requirements 'Cribs 'Chests "Trundle beds 'Armoires 'Hutches • Bookcases •Desks 'Chairs 'Night Tables 'Mirrors Novi Area Farmington Hills Area may not marry relatives with- in certain' degreeS'of "consan- guinity and affinity." The source of this statute? Anglican canon law. By contrast, Jewish law would permit a man to marry his sister's daughter. But the Jewish practice is forbidden in Antonin Scalia most states. Also, in Maryland one may not murder, steal, bear false witness or legally commit adultery. The source of these concepts should be obvious. Presumably some are con- cerned that Justice Scalia may impose a strict Catholic anti-abortion viewpoint claim- ing that this violates the "sepa- ration clause." By that logic we must never have a Unitari- an or a Presbyterian on the bench, as those groups argue for choice. The Senate chamber has busts of Moses and Mahnonides displayed together with the hoary visages of Roman and Greek patricians as the "fathers' of Western Law. That is a simple historical fact, not a breach of the unassailable wall that separates church and state. If every lobby of every stripe can attempt to influence, why must religion be silent? And why can't a Supreme Court jus- tice get religion? Religion has the right to com- pete in the free marketplace of ideas with secular philosophies to influence individuals and pub- lic policy. Sometimes judges will be secular. Some will be reli- gious. But that is nothing less than a profile of the American people themselves. ❑ Publicity Deadlines - Fashion with V7" ,-- -- value always , • Commerce Area threw down the gauntlet at the liberals accusing them of taking a patronizing attitude toward re- ligious believers. "If we are fools," he-said, "then we are fools for Christ." Soon after, there was a Her- rblock cartoon in the Washing- ton Post that showed a row of Supreme Court justices on the bench, each holding in his hand a copy of the Constitution. All but Justice Scalia, who is shown holding a copy of the Bible — the implication being that Justice Scalia was trying to force his own Catholicism on the rest of us by judicial fiat. The First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees us free- dom of speech, press and reli- gion. In a revolutionary stroke it ensures that the Republic will not have a state church. It de- clares that Congress has no pow- er to interfere with the free practice of religion. In other words, government must be neu- tral in matters of religion, not hostile to it. Well, Supreme Court justices also have freedom of speech and of religion. It is no crime for any American to advocate religion before a sympathetic audience (as did Justice Scalia), or before a hostile one, for that matter. It _ is an incredible leap of logic to assume that Justice Scalia's pi- ous musings (or rantings, as the case may be) are in effect an at- tempt to force religion on the rest of us. Justice Scalia doesn't have to be a closet Catholic. What all this fuss is really about is a deep-seated hostility to religion by many who hold left- of-center political views. Lots of these folks are Jewish (Jews who believe more passion- ately in the ACLU than in the Sages of the Talmud). While cer- tainly we must be zealous to avoid having religious orthodoxy of a particular denomination imposed on the body politic, religion has always been an influence on society and govern- ment. In Moliere's Bourgeois Gentilhomme, M. Jardin, when taught the difference between prose and poetry, realized that he had been speaking prose his whole life without knowing it. Americans, too, have been observing religious law without knowing it. An example: Marylanders Troy Area • Canton Area Sterling Heights Area 37130 VanDyke 39800 14 Mile Road 39253 Grand River 30854 Orchard Lk. Rd. 6046 Rochester Road . 42775 Ford Road in Venus Plaza in Canton Corners in Crossroads Center at Haggerty in Pepper Square at .14 Mile (810 )795-1500 (810) 478-3133 (810 )879-1010 (810) 669-0330 (313 )981-7400 (810) 626-4313 The normal deadline for local news and publicity items is noon Thursday, eight days prior to issue date. The deadline for birth announcements is 10 a.m. Monday, four days prior to issue date; out-of-town obituaries, 10 a.m. Tuesday, three days prior to issue date. All material must be typewritten, double-spaced, on 8V2 x 11 paper and include the name and daytime telephone number of sender.