I HOLIDAYS Dress Shop FALL & WINTER SALE 50% OFF October 19, 20, 21 - Thursday, Friday, Saturday Orthodox Jews check and recheck the kashrut of the etrogim. Architects Find Answer To Sukkot Puzzle APPLEGATE STORE ONLY on selected groups only Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 Thursday eve till 8:30 29839 Northwestern Hwy. Between 12 & 13 Mile Rd. At Inkster Road HUGH ORGEL ' A Woman's Touch CAR CARE CENTER MAKES YOUR CAR LOOK LIKE NEW! SPECIAL • Interior cleaned and shampooed • Exterior buffed, finished off with a coat of polish Reg. $139.95 $ 9995 Free Estimates On: Body Side Moldings Scratches & Dents Repainted Wheels & Wire Covers Cleaned Vinyl Tops Cleaned & Sealed Clean Engine - Pin Striping Puritan Puritan Auto Service Auto Service Center 355-1200 21545 Telegraph M-F 8 am-5 pm, Sat Sam-Noon Just South of Nine Mile Lenny's Body Shop 357-3020 M-F 8 am-5 pm, Sat 8 am-noon JEWELRY APPRAISALS At Very Reasonable Prices Call For An Appointment ‘ihie teitt,g6n estegAshed19191L, FINE JEWELERS GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA IN GRADING AND EVALUATION 58 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1989 30400 Telegraph Road Suite 134 Birmingham, MI 48010 (313)642-5575 DAILY 10-5:30 THURS. 10-7 SAT. 10-3 I Special to The Jewish News sraeli architects design- ing apartment houses for Orthodox and observant Jews, especially in Jerusalem and B'nai B'rak, are faced with a problem not encountered by most archi- tects: providing space and facilities for Sukkot. Those who live in one-story cottages and villas have no problem — they can erect their booths in their gardens. But it is different if the family lives in an apartment block. Israeli architecture is not particularly outstanding and with few exceptions, medium- or high-rise Israeli apartment blocks do not rate photographs and descrip- tions in architectural jour- nals throughout the world. By and large, Israeli towns are noted for their monotonous rows of flat- roofed housing blocks. In the early days, the facades were varied by balconies stuck on to the fronts. But with rising living standards, many house owners blocked-in their balconies to provide an enlarged or extra room. It was not long before the architects decided to do away with the external balconies altogether and in- corporate them inside the building. But even where outside balconies were available, Orthodox and observant Jews found they could not use them for the traditional sukkah by merely fixing poles to the outside corners, stringing sheets or carpets to the three outside sides and covering the whole contrap- . tion with lathes on which greenery could be laid. Such sukkot were not kosher, as the floor of the balcony upstairs obstructed the view through the s'chach, or leafy coverage, to the open sky above, as re- quired by Jewish law. The solution found by the enterprising architects designing apartments for the Orthodox community was to stagger the jutting- q out balconies along the facade. This meant that the ter- race would be outside the living room on the lower floor, outside the bedroom on the floor above, and outside yet another room — even the kitchen — on the next story. The staggered balconieS not only provide facilities for even the most observant Jew to be able to fulfill the mitz- vah of eating and living in his sukkah, with a view of the sky and stars through the leafy roof; they also break the monotony of the standard horizontal and ver- tical lines of traditional apartment blocks, by pro- viding a slanting line across the facade — an interesting halachic and architectural design solution. ❑ Jewish Telegraphic Agency Stone Soup - Jerusalem — A stone taken from the botanical garden of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Mount Scopus campus will be buried along with stones from all over the world at a ceremony in 'Ibkyo marking the beginning of construction of the largest university auditorium in Japan.