!NEWS! Family Run Pharmacy • FREE DELIVERY • SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT WALDRAKE PHARMACY 661-0774 Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. KEN JACOBS, R. Ph. I NOW A COMPLETE SUPPLY OF DURABLE MEDICAL SUPPLIES • • • • Power and Manual Wheelchairs Walkers and Canes Ostomy Supplies Incontinent and Urinary Supplies • Bathroom Safety MEDICARE 5548 Drake Rd., West Bloomfield • Hospital Beds and Accessories • Dietary Food Supplements • Patient Care and Wound Care Supplies • Independent Living Aids Equipment MEDICAID (corner of Walnut Lake, 1 mile north of J.C.C.) v4RIF'" Mirror Master Custom Mirror Installation • Residential & Commercial 13i fold Doors and custom wall mirror installation. 1st quality work at the iowest WE DEAL DIRECTLY WITH THE MANUFACTURER SO WE CAN GIVE YOU THE HIGHEST QUALITY OF WORK ANYWHERE AT THE LOWEST PRICES! I _ I HOLIDAY SPECIAL 1 1 4 FT. BIFOLD DOORS I I over existing doors I I $9 5 Exp. 1-14-88 .1 L Also Available: • Heavy Glass Table Tops • Tub & Shower Enclosures • Pedestals FREE ESTIMATES 624-7540 THE SEIKO BIGTIME SPLENDORS. Communal Service Applicants Sought Baltimore — Applications are now being accepted for the September 1988 term of the Baltimore Institute for Jewish Communal Service. The institute administrates three double master's degree programs combining the resources of the Baltimore Hebrew University and either the University of Maryland School of Social Work & Com- munity Planning, or Towson State University. Students accepted into the institute choose among the fields of Jewish communal service (social work), Jewish education, or Jewish jour- nalism. As part of the academic program, students intern in Jewish organiza- tions and institutions in the Baltimore and Washington Jewish communities. Institute students also par- ticipate in the Morris Lieber- man Overseas Seminar ex- ploring Jewish life in western and eastern Europe and Israel. Since 1971, the Institute has helped to train profes- sional leaders for work in Jewish communal organiza- tions, includng federations, family agencies, Hillels, com- munity centers, community relations councils, and na- tional and overseas organizations. Financial aid is available through the Council of Jewish Federations, the Jewish Welfare Board, B'nai B'rith Youth Organization, and through the institute itself. For information, contact Lauri Siegel, director, at (301) 727-4828, Ext. 285, or write to Baltimore Institute for Jewish Communal Service, 101 W. Mt. Royal Avenue, Baltimore, Md. 21201. Temple Women Have Auction The sisterhood to Temple Beth El will have an art expo and auction on Jan. 16 at the temple. The preview will begin at 7:30 p.m. and the auction will begin at 8:30 p.m. There is a charge. Coffee and cake, wine and cheese will be served. Soviets Allow Mutual Visits With Israel The news is chic. Sleek. Suave. Design with great dare and sophistication. The deco semi-circle, a startlingly beautiful breakthrough in contour. The subtle close-harmony of gold-tone and taupe. An immensely varied his/hers collection crackling with creativity. It must be seen. LaBret Jewelers FiAnnedJezetslry IN ROBIN'S NEST • WEST BLOOMFIELD • 7421 Orchard Lake Road Corner of Orchard Lake Rd. and Northwestern Hwy. Holiday Hours: Daily 10-8 Sat. 10-5:30 Sun. 12 noon-5 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 • Thurs. 10-8 • Repairs done on premises • 737-2333 Visa, American Express, Mastercard, Diners Club • Free Gift Wrap • Cash Refunds 12 FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1988 (JTA) — Soviet emigration officials are allowing Soviet Jews to apply for tourist visas to visit Israel and have eased restrictions on Israelis wishing to visit relatives in Moscow, the Israeli daily Maariv reported last week. Maariv quoted reports from Moscow saying that an an- nouncement was posted on the doors of the OVIR emigra- tion agency there announcing that "those wishing to visit Israel may now apply to do so.'' Israelis wishing to visit relatives in Moscow, mean- while, may now apply to Moscow via the diplomatic missions of Eastern European countries, who pass on the en- try tourist visas. Previously, such requests for visas to visit the Soviet Union had to be made through Rakah, the Israeli Communist party. The new procedures have been confirmed by the Israeli Public Council for Soviet Jewry, which also says that the number of mutual visits has increased recently. Maariv quoted a Soviet resi- dent now visiting his family in Israel as saying that when he applied to OVIR for a tourist visa he was told, "No problem. Make an applica- tion." He was granted permission for the visa after a three- month wait and a payment of 200 rubles, he said. The visa itself arrived two weeks later through the Dutch Embassy in Moscow, which looks after Israel's diplomatic interests in the Soviet Union. Letter Bombs Injure Israelis Tel Aviv (JTA) — For the first time in 15 years, Israel has been hit by a wave of let- ter bombs. Two residents of Or Yehuda, near Tel Aviv, were injured by one such device last week. It was one of 10 letter bombs, all posted from Istan- bul, that arrived in Israel. The other nine were detected by postal employees before delivery to the addressees and safely defused. According to Shlomo Ahar-