COLONY INTERIORS Introduces a New Innovation In Designer Bedrooms A 5-Piece Bedroom Group in a Rainbow of Colors I NEWS hm•"•"" BOOKS We Buy and Sell Good Used Books LIBRARY BOOKSTORE 545-4300 Open 7 Days Books Bought In Your Home M. Sempliner Ruth & Marlene Invite you to . . knit separates 29107 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield Mon.-Fri. 10-4. Sat. 10-3 3 58-408 5 CO ATS 'Armoire available 2-Three Drawer Cabinets, 1-Queen Headboard 1-Queen Platform Bed, 1-Dresser (6 Drawers, 1 Door) $ 1 j Lincoln Center, Greenfield at 106 Mile 968-2060 West Bloomfield Orchard Mall, Orchard Lake at Maple (15 Mile) • 855 - 9955 Delivery in 30 Days COLONY INTERIORS Sugar Tree Plaza, 6203 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield, 626-1999 Fine Fashion Jewelry Reproductions THE AFFORDABLE LUXURY (Across From Jacobson's Children's Shop) BMW SPECIALISTS And That's All We Do. 1 1 $5 1 L Major SERVICE 00 F F of any BMW With Coupon • Expires 3-31-91 Saturday Appointments Available ff1 1 7 222 = l A r020100Pr Ci e B 0 m Z PEI '>11 sse0 Orchard Lk. Rd. ■ ■ 2142 Beechmont, Keego Harbor, MI 48320682 - 7755 104 FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1991 Call The Jewish News Premium Quality Drycleaning and Fast Service Are Compatible Phrases .. . We Guarantee It! Every Customer Can Receive .10 FREE vu r Ron Ftv Dais HOURS: Monday thru Friday 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 31221 SOUTHFIELD ROAD • 646 - 0047 North of 13 Mile — Next to MC Sporting Goods 33210 WEST 12 MILE ROAD • 553-0025 One Block East of Farmington Road 6389 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD • 626-0047 In Orchard Mall — Orchard Lake Road and Maple 26263 WEST 12 MILE ROAD • 353-0048 Just East of Northwestern — Next to Burger King 31140 HAGGERTY ROAD • 661-0083 Just South of 14 Mile — Country Ridge Commons SAKE DAY SERVICE' ON SHIRTS- In By 10 a.m. Monday.Friday DRY CLEANING - In By 10 a.m. Monday-Saturday SATURDAY DRY CLEANING 433-1150 r- CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! 354-5959 DRY CLEANING 280 N. Woodward Downtown Birmingham Sterling Place • 37680 Van Dyke at 16 1/2 Mile Oak Park 59500 TRUJUAL Sterling Heights 939-0700 Regularly Priced $3,195 NOW ONLY UNLIMITED JABOTINSKY HERUT ORGANIZATION presents A SPRING FESTIVAL DINNER Performance by: CANTOR BARRY OLRYCH Piano Music by: LILLIAN ZELLMAN Guest Speaker: GARY TORGOW SIT DOWN CATERED FULL COURSE DINNER WILL BE SERVED AT THE TABLE Sunday, March 17th Donation: $17.50 6:00 p.m. Per Person CONGREGATION DAVID BEN NUCHIM 14500 Lincoln Rd., Oak Park For tickets call: SIMON CIECK SAM HORNUNG 873-5757 or 548-3073 547-1847 Orthodox Defer Summertime Jerusalem (JTA) — Daylight-saving time, to have begun March 9 as a war measure, has been postponed until March 23 under pressure from Or- thodox circles. While the Persian Gulf war raged and Israelis lived under the threat of missile attack, the extra hour of daylight was essential to business and manufacturing because the Iraqi Scuds hit after dark. Observant Jews complain- ed that the late arrival of dawn at this time of year made it hard for them to pray in the morning before leaving for work. Shacharit, the morning prayer, may not be said before sunrise. Interior Minister Arye Deri of the Shas party was squeezed between the demands of his Orthodox constituency and the needs of the general society. He had personally opposed even the March 23 date. But the ministry said daylight time was set back two weeks for other than re- ligious reasons. It mentioned the strain on the national electricity grid as the population woke up to the predawn cold. El Al Starts Prague Flights Tel Aviv (JTA) — El Al will inaugurate weekly flights between Tel Aviv and Prague starting March 23, the Israeli air carrier an- nounced. The service will be con- ducted jointly with CSA, the Czech national airline. El Al now has regular flights to Budapest, Warsaw and Berlin, in addition to its long-established services to Western Europe and North America. Jews immigrating to Israel from the Soviet Union cannot fly directly from Moscow but must change planes at an Eastern Euro- pean capital. The Ministry of Tourism disclosed, meanwhile, that tourist hotel bookings were down 75 percent in January 1991 compared to January 1990, a falloff attributed to the Persian Gulf war. By the same token, hotel bookings by Israelis soared 60 percent in Jerusalem and Eilat, where residents of the Greater Tel Aviv area fled to escape Iraqi Scud missile at- tacks in January.