WOOLF ROOFING 47th STREET COMMERICAL & RESIDENTIAL Hot Tar-Built-Up Roofing Southfield West Bloomfield 646-2452 "Quality witl; a toad'of ,fals" (End of the Golden Corridor 682-7336 18161 W. 13 Mile Rd. Orchard Lake Rd.) OLD ORCHARD SHOPPING CENTER ORCHARD LAKE RD. COR. MAPLE 2495 Walce THIRD GENERATION ROOFERS z "THE UNBEATABLE DEALER" * e, ? .?Ne .,—, . . z . i_! tat CC' 6. A e o ,,,; t C, . it• ,c ts. 0 e ‘ c., ,, ,, c,'L .e ,,,,o • C*5‘ O;.'0 e - ! ---z • ■ ,. ' 1 ■ .-14.---t— — J _. 1 ! --4-1-4-- i -- 4--4--- !---T- 1986 SPRINT 11/13 COUPE z 3 X Er 4 0 2 door, cir. floor mats-fr. & rr., AM radio, 5 spd. mon. trans., 1.02 BBL L3 Suzuki, saddle C/V bkt., red, P145/80R12 rad. B/W. Stk. #3010. WAS $6031 sale 5625* 1986 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE 6-way pwr. seat, pwr. locks, graphite leather, elec. spd. con- trol, 5.7L TPI V8, auto oans., SBR tires, Delco GM/BOSE MUSIC, HD rad. Stk. #2439X. LIST $34, 915 03 z I tal Iv 2 dr., 2.8 Itr V6 MFI, air, AM/FM stereo, CL interior, rear window defogger, tinted glass and power windows. -Stk. #3332X Was $11,852 1986 1/2 TON VAN Rear glass, pass. seat, V-6, 5 tires, gauges, blue. Stk. #2401. 1986 S-10 EXTENDED CAB Fr. floor carpet mat., rr. floor carper mat, etr am/fm sr., body side moldings, elec. rr. wind. def., 2.8 liter mfi V-6, 5-speed man trans. Stk. #1831. UST $10,194 * 1986 3/4 TON SUBURBAN 1986 3/4 TON VAN sale '11,213* 1.5 liter 2-BBL L4, 5 speed man. trans. P155/80R-13 Rad. B/W. black, gray cloth bkr. Stk. #2717. List $7284 Sale 6495* . Heavy duty trailering package. 454 V8, panel doors, center and rear seat, power windows & locks, cruise, tilt, air, buckets, cas- sette, Silverado package, two tone brown and tan. Stk. #2602 i rn 2 1986 NOVA 4 DR. SEDAN 1.6L, 2 bbl., 5-speed man. trans., P155/80R-13 rad B/W, blue cloth bkr. Stk. #1856. UST $7725 Sale 6995 * w m 1986 CHEVETTE CS 4 DR. HATCHBACK SEDAN Blue custom C1, 1.6 liter 2-BBL L4, 4 speed man. trans. P155/ 8PR13 rod. B/W. Stk. #905 LIST $6249 Unique Desei0 Deli's Tables Going Condo 55 to choose at similar savings! 1986 MONTE CARLO SS SPORT COUPE P. door lock, T-gloss, mots, removable glass roof, int. wiper, elec. r-wind. defog.,_ air, console, twin remote spr. mirr., elec. spd. control, auto, tilt, SBR tires, aux. lighting, Halogen lights. AM/FM stereo. Stk. #2927. UST $15.126 C 14 to choose at similar savings! 1986 1 /2 TON 4x4 SUBURBAN H.D. trailering pkg., center & rear seat, air, cruise, tilt, cuss. , PW, PDL, panel doors, Silverado, buckets. 2-tone blue/gray. Stk. #3165. . sale 18,847* 1986 3/4 TON VAN Pass. seat, air, V-6, auto., P225 tires, gauges. Stk. #2459 1986 EXTENDED CAB 1500 lb. payload, dark glass, delay wipers, air, V-6, auto., tilt, stereo, white letter tires, T/windows, locks, Tahoe, jump seats, 2-tone grey/block. Stk. #2522. Sale '5595* 2 C LOOK, SHOP GET YOUR BEST DEAL BUT DON'T BUY UNTIL OU SEE THE E UNBEATABLE DEALER! m VROLET •ples tn. nee destmanon • 'M Rebate ullet enU d, Andusl 3181. r• in `THE UNBEATABLE DEALER" 8 Friday, August 29, 1986 "THE THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS UNB ATABLE DEALER" JEAN WEISS Special to The Jewish News T Sale 13,195* 7 to choose at similar savings! CH "Grandma, your chicken soup is really state-of-the- art." ma sale 18,759* 1986 SPECTRUM 2 DR. 11/13 COUPE 26 to choose at similar savings! 1500 lb. payload, Tahoe, V-6, auto. tilt, cruise, stereo, liner, red. seats, buckets, jump sears, white letter tires, 2-tone red/silver. Stk. #1900 sale '11 5 732* Cony. chassis, side & rear glass, pass. seat, delay wipers, air, chrome bumpers & mirrors, tilt, rally wheels, gauges (white, dk. blue & dk. brown). I 1986 CAVALIER Z-24 SPORT COUPE 1986 CAMARO 2 DR. SPORT COUPE 19 to choose at similar savings! CO 1.1.47111 sale '8810* Sale '8895 0 SUMMER Sale '29 5 982* 5 to choose at similar savings! 737-2322 "THE UNBEATABLE DEALER" Sale 10,852* 23 to choose at similar savings! LIGHT SIDE JEWELRY EXCHANGE ucson, Ariz. — When the hosts and hostesses at C.B. Rye, a New York- Jewish-style delicatessen here say, "Your table is ready," that is exactly what they mean. For $500 anyone could buy their own table. By the time the deli opened in February, 28 of 40 tables were sold. What began as a joke caught on quickly, says part-owner and co-manager Aaron B. Fox. Sev- eral months prior to the restau- rant's opening, a friend of Fox's complained that delicatessens don't accept reservations. The friend objected to waiting in line for a table. Jokingly, Fox replied, "Well, why don't you buy your own table?" His friend asked the price and Fox responded, "$500." The man immediately pulled out his checkbook and wrote a check, telling Fox to fill in the estab- lishment's name when one was selected. His only stipulation was that he be allowed to choose his table before the deli opened, Fox says. Within weeks, the friend telephoned to say he had two checks from other people who wanted to buy tables, Fox says. A small brass plaque engraved with the names of the owners or their business and the words "charter member" is embedded in the center of each table sold. "It is a nice way to start up cap- ital when you're starting a busi- ness," says Elaine Trost, who with her husband Charles, pur- chased a table in the smoking section. The name of their busi- ness, Trost Bake Shop, is also engraved on the plaque. Trost says she has received more feed- back from the plaque than from newspaper and magazine adver- tising. Bakery customers come in and say, "I sat at your table," she says. Owners purchase the table for their lifetime. The joke at the res- taurant is that when a table Ick owner dies, C.B. Rye will provide "a corned beef sandwich, a con- tainer of pickles, potato salad and a chocolate phosphate (egg cream) to go right into the casket, like the Egyptians used to do - with the Pharoahs so they wouldn't be hungry on their long journey to heaven," Fox says. Owning a table ensures that by giving one hour advance notice on weekdays and two hours on weekends, the table will be wait- ing when its owner arrives, Fox says. Otherwise, tables are occu- pied by the general public. Table owners do not get special treatment, Fox says. "We try to bend over backwards to satisfy all our clientele," he says, but admits that owners are "a little closer to us than are some of our other customers. They frequent us more so we know them better and our staff might cater to them a little more because they are a frequent customer." The restaurant, while not kosher, has a wide variety of ethnic food on the menu. The market for a kosher restaurant is very limited, Fox says. It was difficult teaching the approximately 105 non-Jewish employees about the Jewish items on the menu, Fox says. Training classes were held and pictures of various foods were used to familiarize the staff with such food as kishka, knishes, kasha, matzah balls and the deli meats, Fox says. Of the 37 tables sold, most people who purchased them are Jewish. But a number of tables were sold to hispanics and blacks, including Denver Broncos linebacker Ricky Hunley. All investors received a table, but one Edward Rogoff, a physi- cian, says he prefers waiting in line. "When you invest in some- thing and you're standing in line it makes you feel good. That means a lot of people are there," and the business is doing well, he says. Copyright 1986, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.