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S. of Maple, • Next to the Birmingham Theatre • Free Adjacent Parking • 642-1690 Sale Hours: Monday-Saturday 9:30-5:30, Thursday 9:30-8:30 ressions S!)6 01.!0!N! • • ACRYLIC, TIPS or FIBERGLASS NAILS 1 1 reg. $45 NOW $35 with coupon exp. 2/26/93 HAIRCUTS reg. $22 NOW $18 with cut & style with coupon, exp. 2/26/93 reg. $25 NOW $20 I NOW $40 I I includes cut & style with coupon, exp. 2/26/93 DON'T' LEAVE IT TO CHANCE... 681.8280 BOOKS We Buy and Sell LIBRARY BOOKSTORE 5 45 -43 00 Open 7 Days Books Bought In Your Horne M. Sempliner Sylvia's ...leave it by choice. ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE 50% • 75% OFF LEAVE IT TO HADASSAH 6692 Orchard Lake Road • West Bloomfield In The West Bloomfield Plaza ...where your WILL assures the future of forward-looking programs for Jewish survival. AMERICAN ‘41‘, For brochure return this ad with your name and address. HADASSAH 5'01 W 58th Street New York. N.Y. 10019, (2121.303-8062 ILLS estAND BEQUESTS DEPARTMENT 6 Lacquering, Refinishing of new or old furniture, antiques, office furniture, pianos. For Free Estimates Good Used Books reg. $45 with coupon exp. 2/26/93 THE DETRO IT JEWIS H NEWS 1 1 476-8870 1 PERMS FILLS L 1 1 30336 9 Mile Farmington Hills Larry Paul makes FURNITURE NEW. Custom Restoration, 851-4410 CANCER SOCIETY' Help us keep winning. Moscow May Have A Jewish Mayor Moscow (JTA) — Moscow could soon have its first Jew- ish mayor. Konstantin Natanovich Borovoi, founder of the Rus- sian Commodities and Raw Materials Exchange and reputed to be one of Russia's wealthiest men, has thrown his hat into the ring for a mayoral election set for Feb 28. "I'm not Ross Perot," Mr. Borovoi told reporters at a news conference last week. "I'm not spending my own money on this." But Mr. Borovoi sounded very much like the Texas billionaire in disavowing personal ambition. "I don't want to be mayor," he said, "but I hate the Communists and I want to create here normal econ- omic structures, normal po- litical structures. That is the goal of my life." It is just as well that Mr. Borovoi does not have his heart set on the mayor's of- fice because the elections may not take place next month after all. Moscow's city government, like the Russian federal government, is plagued by a bitter struggle between the executive and legislative branches. The City Council voted to hold the election to test the political strength of Mayor Yuri Luzhkov. But the city's public pros- ecutor ruled against the call for elections, after an appeal. by Mr. Luzhkov. The matter is presently in the local courts. If the election takes place, Mr. Borovoi will face Mr. Luzhkov and two other challengers. One of them is radical-reform economist Larisa Piyasheva, herself not Jewish but a strong sup- porter of reforms that have affected Jews, such as easing emigration restrictions. The other challenger is a city of- ficial. Mr. Luzhkov himself was elected to the post of deputy mayor in June 1991, when Gavril Popov became the first popularly elected mayor in the city's history. That was the same election in which Boris Yeltsin became Russia's first popularly elected president. Mr. Popov resigned in May 1992, protesting the coun- cil's obstruction of his reforms. Mr. Luzhkov then became mayor to fill out Mr. Popov's term, which expires in 1996. But Mr. Luzhkov lacks Mr. Popov's "clean" reformer image. He has repeatedly been the subject of rumors of bribery and corruption, charges he has brusquely denied. "Luzhkov is a person of the old generation," Mr. Borovoi said last week. "He will never be a good manager be- cause he will not carry through on privatization." Mr. Borovoi, 44, is one of the country's most well- known ,businessmen. Reputedly a multimillionaire, he has started more than 20 enterprises over the past six years, including the com- modities exchange. His patronymic of Natanovich, or "son of Natan," indicates that his father was Jewish, but be has not been publicly iden- tified with Jewish causes. Privately, however, Borovoi has supported programs to aid the Jewish elderly hit by inflation. He also showed his Jewish feelings in a highly publiciz- ed case here in December 1991, when he provided pro- tection to the wife of a Jew- ish academician who was kidnapped and later murdered as part of ethnic violence in the Caucasus re- gion of Checheniya. Mr. Borovoi entered the political stage here last year when he founded the Party of Economic Freedom to rep- resent the interests of Russia's new en- trepreneurial class. UNESCO Head Postpones Visit Paris (JTA) — Federico Mayor Zaragoza, director- b general of the United Nations Educational, Scien- tific and Cultural Organiza- tion, has unexpectedly postponed his official visit to Israel. UNESCO has had a rocky relationship with Israel, but the election of Mayor to the leadership position was auguring more comfortable relations between the U.N. body and the Jewish state. It appears that Israel's re- cent expulsion of more than 400 Palestinians is to blame for the postponement.