HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS DISC or DRUM BRAKES wtf COMPUTERIZED 4-WHEEL ALIGNMENT NEWS Reg. $29.00 $1995 • • • • • • Replace Pads or Shoes Resurface Rotors or Drums Repack Front Bearings Inspect Calipers and Hydraulic System Add Fluid • Road Test Most American Cars Reg. $79.95 $49.95 Set front or rear wheel caster, camber, and toe on cars with adjustable suspension. Strut and ball joint correction extra. Most American cars. With four tire purchase. With Coupon MOST AMERICAN CARS 4 For $49 With Coupon PAIR BIG AL SAYS I'LL BEAT YOUR BEST DEAL ON SAME OR LIKE MERCHANDISE Semi-Metallic Pads Extra ark • el us GLASS 8. AUTO TRIM CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS TIRES & ACCESSORIES 64 VFARS SERVING Mt tee Of ',o1 0 1 ' SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph 353-2500 Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park Effective June 29, 1987 Metropolitan Eye Surgeons Metropolitan Eye Surgeons are pleased to announce the relocation of our West Bloomfield office to the following address: 5813 W. Maple Road - Suite 137 West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (Located just West of Orchard Lake Road) Phone (313) 855-3346 MEET THE MEDICAL STAFF 14 Mile .... Midd lebe Maple Rd Dr. Donald Beser Dr. Robert Clark Dr. Robert Beitman Dr. Amy Eston Dr. Lawrence L. Stocker. P.C. In response to your numerous requests... Midrasha Summer Institute Tuesdays & Thursdays June 23, 25, 30, July 2, 7, 9 • 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Sarah & Morris Friedman Conference Room United Hebrew Schools • Sigmund & Sophie Rohlik Building 21550 West Twelve Mile Road • Southfield Tradition and Reform in Modern Jewish History Dr. Todd Endelman, professor of History, University of Michigan. . Examine the major currents in Judaism that developed in 19th century Germany; Reform, Historical (conservative) and Neo- orthodox. Evaluate these religious movements after their transfer to the United States. Explore the efforts of lay and rabbinic leaders in Europe and America to adapt Judaism to the modern world. DATES: June 23, 25, 30, July 2, 7, 9 • 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Effective Classroom Management WEEK I Assertive Discipline for the Classroom WEEK II Effective Communication WEEK III Maximizing Teaching Time June 23 & 25 • 9-11 a.m. June 30 & July 2 • 9-11 a.tn. July 7 & 9 • 9-11 a.m. Carolyn Rakotz, Development Consultant, Wayne County Intermediate School District. Dr. John Flatter, Assistant Sherri Abrams, private Consult- ant in effective instruction and classroom management. Director of Problems of Daily Living Clinic. For further information, please call 352-7117 _ *vs., if% 411_077 TUC nc-ron,IT NICIAM Peres Charges USSR With Reneging On Agreements Jerusalem — The Soviet Union has reneged on several agreements it had reached with Israel, Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said last week in an address to the conven- tion of the Independent Lib- eral Party in Tel Aviv. Peres warned that "the aliyah issue is slipping out of our hands." been dampened by the op- position within Israel to an international peace conference. The Soviets are thought to be unwilling to accede to the Peres preconditions and thereby antagonize their Arab allies for a conference that now appears to be in- creasingly remote. There was "a sharp back- tracking by the Soviet Union in its dialogue with Israel," he said, "and additional tireless efforts must be made to increase aliyah from the Soviet Union." This was the first public statement by the Israeli foreign minister on the decline in relations between Moscow and Jerusalem, which had recently shown signs of improvement. Last month, a Soviet con- sular diplomatic was sched- uled to visit Israel, ostensibly to inspect Soviet and Russian Orthodox Church property, but the visit did not materialize. There was speculation that such a delegation might have stayed on indefinitely, form- ing the nucleus of an unof- ficial Soviet diplomatic mis- sion to Israel. Moscow broke off relations after the Six Day War and pledged not to restore ties un- til Israel withdraws from ter- ritories it occupied during the war. The first official contacts between Israel and the Soviet Union after almost 20 years took place in Helsinki last August. The meeting broke up after less than a day, however, because Israel refused to con- fine the discussions to strict- ly consular matters and in- sisted on bringing up the sub- ject of Jewish emigration. Peres had insisted that mass Jewish emigration and the restoration of diplomatic relations were preconditions for Soviet participation in an international peace con- ference on the Middle East. There were indications that Moscow might have been pre- pared to at least partially fulfill the requirements in order to secure its seat at the conference table. Soviet officials had prom- ised American Jewish leaders Morris Abrams and Edgar Bronfman that almost 12,000 Soviet Jews would be allowed to emigrate this year, and Israeli officials were informed of the imminent visit of the Soviet consular delegation. However, it is believed that Moscow's enthusiasm has Yad Vashem Gets Documents On Grodno Jewry . Jerusalem (JTA) — A five- volume documented study of the destruction of the Jewish community of Grodno, a city in northeast Poland, was presented to the Yad Vashem Archives last Sunday by Nazi-hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld. The study includes trial and pre-trial documents from war crimes proceedings con- ducted in West Germany which the German authorities had refused to release until now. The volumes are collective- ly titled °°Documents Con- cerning the Destruction of the Jews of Grodno, 1941- 1945." Copies will be dis- tributed to all of the major documentation centers on the Nazi era and war criminal archives. Of the 35,000 Jews in the Grodno ghetto who were deported to Auschwitz and 11.eblinka, 70 survived. One of the survivors, Felix Sandman, who testifies at the trials of the Gestapo commanders in charge of the ghetto, said that he had asked the German government at the time to release the trial documents, but was refused. He said he appealed to Klarsfeld who eventually succeeded in ob- taining the documents. ISrael Loses Fifth Straight In Hoop Tourney Athens (JTA) — Israel's na- tional basketball team con- tinued its losing streak last week in the European basket- ball championship, falling to a mediocre French team 96-93 after leading at the start of the second half. It was the fifth consecutive loss for the Israeli hoopsters in the 12-nation tournament. They lost to weak Polish team 83-77. That followed a 99-97 drubbing by Italy, an 112-107 overtime loss to West Ger- many, and a loss to the Dutch team by a score of 61-60.