If I NEWS l'Immm.""milmimmmal your waste is Impeccable... Ours is Unforgettable! Traditionally, Wedding Cakes have been nice to look at but nothing special to eat. Our Wedding Cakes put an end to that! Tantalize your guests with flavors such as chocolate mousse, strawberry, kahlua, chocolate chambord torte, or one of our many cheesecake flavors. Strict Water Saving During Drought Our Wedding Cakes are made from the finest chocolates, butter, fresh fruits and creams. To enhance the subtle flavors, we frost your selections with Lightly sweetened fresh whipping cream. We extend an invitation to the bride and groom to make an appointment for a private wedding consultation and complimentary sample tasting. CAP11111424i 11111111Wr1•• -..1 1111 7,1111M.- 1•• MO IONS IMO # -INN M U BM . e. 4r, ( ;011/C( . 1 1 0 11, it c h 1,47.41 • „ • ,,, 4 ft i t - Y O U R S ► fp • 464-8170 Alarming Questions? Does your present alarm system: • Tell police if you're home or away? • Work when your phone line is cut? • Prevent false alarms? • Tell police which door or window is open? Does your present alarm company: • Have a UL approved central station located in Southfield? • Offer radio dispatched patrols? • Have 24 hour a day, 7 days a week service? • Offer key vault service? Guardian Alarm Does It Better! itte stat ............. CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354.5959 98 FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1991 Tel Aviv (JTA) — Strict water conservation mea- sures were announced by Apiculture Minister Rafael Eitan, in face of Israel's con- tinuing drought. The restrictions, effective as soon as they are published in the government gazette, Reshumot, include a ban on watering public parks and private gardens and lawns - during the daylight hours. The rules will remain in force through October 1992. The penalty for non- compliance is a fine of up to $400. Mr. Eitan has been urging drastic conservation mea- sures since last winter, when the seasonal rains were late in coming for the fourth con- secutive year and the level of Lake Kinneret, the coun- try's largest natural reser- voir, fell dangerously low. He nevertheless en- countered strong opposition. The new rules are a com- promise with critics, who warned that verdant areas in towns and villages were in danger of becoming arid wastelands. But Mr. Eitan told the public they would have to make the choice between sit- ting on lawns or eating tomatoes. Farmers have been urged to switch to crops that re- quire minimum water. Householders are banned from planting new lawns or seasonal plants. They may plant new gardens of up to one-eighth of an acre, pro- vided they get permission from the water commis- sioner. Exempted from the rule is the use of ground-level drip pipes, which replace water lost through evaporation, and recycled sewage water. Veterans Target Revisionist Group Paris (JTA) — Outraged war veterans and former resistance fighters have brought legal action against a group of revisionists spreading propaganda among schoolchildren that the Holocaust never oc- curred. The latest example was a 15-page pamphlet written in 1979 by Robert Faurisson which mocks "the war fib" that Jews and others died in Nazi concentration camps. The pamphlet was mailed recently to about 40 French students from the Caen area in northwest France who had just returned from a tour of the former Auschwitz death camp in Poland. The group consisted of winners of an annual essay contest on the French Resistance movement and deportations, and was spon- sored by the Education Min- istry and the Ministry of Veterans' Affairs. The pamphlet denying the Holocaust was accompanied by a letter congratulating the contest winners. "We are glad to see that young people are still inter- ested in this painful period of our history," the letter said, adding that the enclos- ed pamphlet would unveil "a different aspect of life in concentration camps." Three organizations of veterans, Resistance fighters and former deportees have filed suit under a law passed by Parliament last year that makes it a misdemeanor to deny crimes against human- ity. Arafat Seeks Paris Meeting Paris (JTA) — Yassir Arafat, whose 1989 welcome to Paris severely strained French Jewry's relationship with President Francois Mitterrand, reportedly wants a return engagement. The Palestine Liberation Organization leader is fishing for an invitation, ac- cording to Arab diplomatic sources in Paris. The sources said Mr. Arafat's wishes were con- veyed recently to Mr. Mit- terrand's foreign policy ad- viser, Pierre Morel, by Hakim Balawi, a senior member of Al Fatah, the PLO's largest faction, which Mr. Arafat heads. The Palestinian news agency WAFA reported that Mr. Balawi stressed France's role in the Middle East peace process and ask- ed the French to support the "active and effective par- ticipation of the PLO" in the process.