STEAL Chinese Rug N Save 60% Hot Shipment! Hot Prices! Hot Colors! Because the Hagopian Rug Outlet Buyers got this huge shipment of Chinese Rugs for a steal - now so can you. These beautiful Carved Chinese Rugs are in- credibly hot right now, and the prices are even hotter! Save 60% on the entire col- lection! And make no mistake - these are 1st quality 90 line Chinese Rugs in today's hottest colors like black, teal, mauve, emerald green, peach and ivory. Plus steal your Chinese Rug today and we'll give you one more exclusive bonus - 90 days interest free! A hot shipment with hot prices and hot colors! And one hot tip - if you want to carry off this grand theft - do it quick! Just look at these hot prices Size Retail 9x12 _$4,500 8x10 3,350 6x9 2,250 4x6 1,000 Hot Price $1,799 1,299 899 399 Rugs also available in 2x3 and 3x5 sizes HAGOPIAN RUE C)UTLET The Original Since 1939 The Right Rug at the Right Price! Oak Park - 14000 West 8 Mile Rd (just west of Coolidge) • Ph: 546-RUGS Hours: Mon, Tues, Weds, Fri 10-6pm • Thurs 10-9pm • Sat 10-5pm • Sun 12-5pm This Chinese Rug offer not available at Hagopian World of Rugs in Birmingham and Ann Arbor DR. CARY WOLF, DPM MEDICAL & SURGICAL FOOT SPECIALIST ANNOUNCES THE RELOCATION OF HIS OFFICE TO 18239 W. 12 MILE ROAD LATHRUP VILLAGE, MI 48076 TELEPHONE: 557-1340 OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT FREE TRANSPORTATION AVAILABLE 22 FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1990 Shimon Schiffer (right) and friends at the weekly laundromat club. The Leaders Of The Laundromat GARY ROSENBLATT Editor When friends and colleagues see you've spent two weeks in Israel, they want to know what the current mood of the country is like. But they don't want a long, philosophical dissertation. They'd probably prefer a short anecdote that sums it all up. So I've got a story that may not be definitive, but is illustrative of the Israeli psyche. Every Friday afternoon for the last dozen years or so, a group of friends in Jerusalem get together and shmooze about the events of the past week. What is unique is the group's mem- bership and its location. The group is made up of some high-powered people — several members of the Knesset, several leading print and TV journalists, a police chief and government officials. And they meet in Ramat Eshkol, a Jerusalem suburb, in a neighborhood laundromat about the size of a large closet. My friend, Shimon, the chief diplomatic correspon- dent for Yediot Achronot, Israel's biggest daily, in- vited a couple of American Jewish journalists to come to the laundromat with him on a Friday afternoon and take part in the discussion. No one seems to know quite how the "club," as they call it, got started or how the site was chosen. Most of the participants liv- ed in Ramat Eshkol at the time — though some have moved and still come back on Friday afternoons — and patronized Effie's laun- dromat. A visitor, on entering, can't even imagine that more than three or four peo- ple could fit in the space. There are only a couple of chairs, and the huge dryers next to them make quite a racket. But there was an immediate sense of cora- raderie as the regulars began to arrive and greet each other. There was Ariel, a member of the Knesset on the finance committee, and Mordechai, who heads the government customs department. Ovad, a bear of a man who became famous as the personal bodyguard for several Israeli prime ministers, now is in the personal security busi- ness. Yigdal is a diplomatic correspondent on Israeli television and Yair is an ex- ecutive with Israeli Broad- casting. Within a few minutes, about a dozen of the regulars had gathered and been in- troduced to the guests. Effie, the owner of the laun- dromat, offers tea and coffee first, and later a shnapps. Berakes, an Israeli delicacy of cheese and dough, are brought in from a nearby bakery. By now, the conver- sation is louder than the rumbling dryers. "This is our own miniature parliament," Shimon ex-