`NN VP, $ AM. Light's Jewellers Court Ordered GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE Chapter 11 Court Cases #89-08477-G • #89-07428-G Light's Jewellers I consolidated inventr• The Bankruptcy 7.1osed the Meadowbrook Village Mall Store and the Birmingham store located at 280 N. Woodward. rdered the entire inventory from both locations J old to pay creditors and to ... .AE DOORS FOREVER! 70N THE RETAIL DOLLAR ON SELECTED FINE JEWELRY Light's FINE C SJC JEWELLERS All Major Credit Cards and Layaways Accepted All Additional Merchandise Will Be Sold At Savings Up To... 700R745 :1 Prices 280 N. Woodward One Block N. of Maple Birmingham Daily 10:00 to 5:30 Thursday and Friday VI 9:00 • EXCEPT GOLD CHAINS IF ALL THE WORLD'S A S *PA* G* E /-1 I WANT BETTER LIGHTING BREAKFAST SALE SUNDAY, MAY 6th 9:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M. ALL LAMPS & SCONCES cn % IN STOCK 30% OFF ON ALL SPECIAL ORDERS %eV OFF COFFEE & BAGELS ON US!! Bright Lights fan FRinty &AV d IQQfl inside Colony Interiors West Bloomfield • 851.1881 Jewish Settlers Leave The Christian Quarter Jerusalem (JTA) — Jews who have been occupying a complex of buildings in the Christian Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City have complied with a court order to evacuate all but 20 of their number from the four- building complex owned by the Greek Orthodox Church. "With respect for the Supreme Court's decision — and in the spirit of the deci- sion — 20 people are left in- side, and they've got the keys," Shmuel Evyatar, a representative of the 150 Jewish activists told The New York Times. A lawyer for the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate inspected the premises on Tuesday and confirmed that. Israel's High Court of Justice ordered the May 1 evacuation on April 26 against the Jewish settlers who set off a firestorm of protests when they moved into St. John's Hospice dur- ing the holy days just before Easter. The activists, many of them students at the Ateret Cohanim and Mercaz Harav yeshivot, were ordered out pending a lower court's nil- ing on the validity of their lease, which they obtained through SBS, a Panama- nian-registered company. The lease has been chal- lenged by the Greek Ortho- dox Church. The justices, nevertheless, allowed up to 20 represent- atives of the company to stay on for "maintenance and security" purposes. While the controversy over the settlers move into Jerusalem's Christian Quarter has simmered down, it has not died. The Greek Church does not recognize the Jewish group as its tenants. It maintains that the lease was fraudulently obtained from the legitimate tenant, an Armenian businessman who was paid $3.5 million, about half of it supplied clandes- tinely by the Likud govern- ment. The Jews made no secret that their intention was to establish a Jewish presence in the Christian Quarter of the Old City, which tradi- tionally has been segregated according to religious faiths. The move drew worldwide condemnation, even from friends of Israel and from many Jews here and abroad who considered it needlessly provocative. But defiance of world opi- nion and a drive to plant Jewish settlements in disputed areas apparently is considered politically advan- tageous by the Likud caretaker regime, which is courting the right-wing and the ultra-Orthodox parties to form a new governing coali- tion. The impetus for Likud's settlement drive is credited to Michael Dekel, an activist recently appointed adviser to the prime minister. With no dovish coalition partner to keep the settlement drive in check, Likud has given Dekel a free hand. The settlement issue is high on the agenda of Likud's coalition talks with the far right. An understan- ding is believed to have been reached that a Likud-led regime will proceed immedi- ately with 14 new set- tlements, approved by the former Likud-Labor coali- tion but never built. They include one to be called Tirza, which was vetoed by former Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin, a Laborite, because of its prox- imity to Nablus — the largest Arab city in the West bank and a focal point of the 28-month-old Palestinian uprising. Lithuania's Role Under Scrutiny Jerusalem (JTA) . Israelis of Lithuanian origin are demanding that Lithuania acknowledge its role during the Holocaust before it asks world support for its declara- tion of independence from the Soviet Union. The Lithuanian govern- ment, headed by President Vytautas Landsbergis, has not spoken publicly of col- laboration between Lithua- nians and the Nazis during World War II. Lithuania is trying to rewrite Lithuanian history of that era, according to Dr. Abba Gefen, chairman of the Organization of Israelis of Lithuanian Origin. He said it was "most seri- ous, especially now, when even the East German government has accepted their responsibility for the Nazi crimes and have asked forgiveness from the Jewish people and Israel." The organization is pro- testing specifically against turning the site of Holocaust atrocities in Kovno (Kaunas)