I LIFE IN ISRAEL
drapery, boutique
Since
I N C
ustom V t Blm • s
f
•FREE Dust Cap Valance
.Fast 7-Day Delivery*
1969
a Inn NM Inn a71 0 Inn iliage71 l
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tillireiorup7SnIssu awl Inisr lanr
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ALLSpecial Order
WALLPAPER
in our library. Present
coupon when
ordering only. fvfnimum order at sale price, $50. I
Otherwise
discount
is
only 35%. Borders with coupon 35°,6 I
off. Freight and handling added. Sorry, charges not accepted.
Coupon oxpires Sun., C*1.29,1989
nos MEI Ism num
OFF
UP TO
7RIE E
k,usrso--.
Dust Cap Valance
-' ,
Pattern
P.V.C. or
Fabric
Action
Value
Price
C-CURVE
PLAIN
P.V.0
C-CURVE
CORD TRIO
P.V.C.
Retail Prices
BOUCLE
IMPORTED
FABRIC
GALA
FABRIC
Widths up
to 120"
Save up to Save up to Save up to Save up to
Sample Sizes
77% 67%75% 78%
wooret mws
48.51
To 50" x48"
85.80
122.10
To 74" x 84''
and Prices.
166.54
12892
Or and I . 14 . tr
30858 Orchard Lk. Rd.
Farmington fills
478-3133
626-4313
NO FREIGHT • NO HANDLING
vg 23" VS, 29" vr, 36" 240" VS. 48"
•
36.80
TO 54" 21.20 25.40 32.40
35.00 39.60
5 Working
Days after date 01 purchase. Delivery to store
applies
to In store
and
orders only. Chen reflects
prices after discount.
GRAN* RIVER 14 MILE RD & ROCHESTER RD./ F ORD RD
& HAGGERTY ORCHARD LK. & SO. LAKE RD. 1 & LJLLEY
epper • uare
39253 Grand River
Farmington Hills
Crest, Elite II, 1-Inch
70 Custom Mini Blinds
•Free Valance
OFF
'Fast 5-Day Delivery
yl; 20" 12.00 19.00 22.40
24.00 27.80
ro 42" 16.80 21.60 27.40 29.60
33.40
.2 48" 18.80 23.00 30.00 32.40
51.70
115.28
To 10V x 84"
25
84''W x 84"H
10
fits
6" Doorwall
a
to
store
to
an d pplies
date of purchase. Delivery
'7 Working re orders
prices after d iscou nt
atter only. Chart reflects
in
o
1
JN .
moo ono Mum umml Wm um IN= Mu nom mum mon
Venus Plaza
6046 Rochester Rd.
Troy
4.41
Canton Corners
42775 Ford Rd.
Canton
879-1010
STORE HOURS
CANTON & NOVI OPEN: Mon.-Fri. 10 to 8:30.
Sat. 10 to 6. FARMINGTON HILLS & TROY:
Mon. & Thur& 9:30 to 8:30 Daily, 9:30 to
600. All Stores open: Sun 12 to 500
981-7400
Fashion
With Value
Always
db
V .
Some of the 17,000 Arab students enrolled for school in East
Jerusalem. Overall, about 116,000 students, from pre-school through
12th grade, have been registered this year, a growth of 4 percent.
DO YOU NEED JEANS?
WE CARRY THE BEST SELECTION OF:
•
•
•
•
• EDWIN
• NO!
• MAJOR DAMAGE
• NOT FRENCH
Z. CAVARICCI
GIRBAUD
GUESS?
FARLOW
I COMPLAISANT
WE HAVE
THEM ALL!
From Colonial to Contemporary
Brass • Glass • Oak • Woods
•Chrome • Painted
Over 180,Sets On Display!
Hunters Square • 3 1065 Orchard Lake
14 Mile at Orchard Lake • 855.6566
Sylvia's
3
6
tl
Exceptionally sturdy 36' x 48" oak
finished table with formica top, one leaf,
4 wood chairs with padded seats. $449
DINING
FURNITURE
• •
26151 GRATIOT
Between 1-696 and 10 1 '2 Mile
Beautiful 5 piece contemporary
dinette. It tilts, it turns, it has a
S
formica top. Choice of colors. $849
•
775-6310
sizes 4-16
544-3322
Always 20% OFF
FROM $1689
Bricker-Mills Furs
EL-Ir'CD1=7
6335 ORCHARD LAKE RD • ORCHARD MALL
42
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1989
in fabulous party
dresses and cocktail
suits.
at Woodward Hgts. (9 1 /2 Mi.)
AMERICAN MINK COAT
West Bloomfield
"new directions"
23716 WOODWARD
FULL-LENGTH
AND
Come see our
855-9200
1111
6692 Orchard Lake Rd.
West Bloomfield, MI
851-4410
Mon Sat. 10-5:30
CLASSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS!
C all The Jewish News
354.6060
Chicken Soup
Without The Fat
NECHEMIA MEYERS
Special to The Jewish News
T
raditional Jewish
cooks may not be
pleased by a new, low-
fat
chicken
recently
developed at the Hebrew
University's Faculty of
Agriculture in Rehovot, south
of Tel Aviv.
"How do they expect us to
get a reasonable amount of
shmaltz for our kneidlach
from a lean chicken?" they
are like to ask.
"Moreover," they are likely
to add, "our chicken soup will
lose its full-bodied flavor and
its widely acclaimed
medicinal qualities if it is
made from scrawny fowl!"
Chicken researchers
Avigdor Chaner and Israel
Nir from the Hebrew Univer-
sity, and Zafrina Nitzan, from
Israel's Agricultural
Research Organization will
not be swayed from their
work.
They believe that most of to-
day's consumers want less fat
in their chickens. Moreover,
they point out, leaner
chickens are cheaper to raise
because they utilize their feed
more efficiently: four times as
much grain is needed to pro-
duce fatty tissue as is re-
quired to produce an
equivalent weight of muscle,
i.e. meat. Therefore, con-
sumers should be paying less
for their chickens while pro-
ducers spend less for feed.
Cheaper chickens are just
one product of Israeli
agricultural research. As a
result of research - and, of
course, the efforts of Israeli
farmers - the country grows
most of the food it consumes
and annually exports
agricultural products worth
over $500 million.
Fresh vegetables are an im-
portant component of exports,
and Hebrew University
researchers are making a
significant contribution in-
that sphere as well.
A team headed by Nachum
Kedar, for example, has
developed new varieties of
tomatoes which stay fresh
and firm twice as long as
those currently on • sale in
North America and Western
Europe. The increased shelf-
life makes Israeli tomatoes
more competitive on overseas
markets.
Less singificant where ex-
ports are concerned, at least
so far, are Israeli wines.
However, new studies at the
Hebrew University may help
increase sales.
Researchers have long
known that wine contains
large quantities of aroma-
enhancing materials known
as monoterpenes, but, for the
most part, these monoter-
penes are bound chemically
to sugar compounds, preven-
ing their release into the
wine.
Now Hebrew University
scientists Oded Shoseyov,
Ben-Ami Bravdo, Ilan Chet
and Raphael Ikan have suc-
ceeded in isolating an enzyme
which breaks this bond, frees
the monoterpenes and
significantly improves the
taste and aroma of the wine.
Needing no improvement,
say connoisseurs, are the
oyster mushrooms being