Worried about heart disease? Look* for options? 1 1 II I had bypass surgery but was having angina pains again. I didn't want to have surgery again. That's why I chose Beaumont's 'Change of Heart' program. Since going through the program, I feel better, and I feel like I'm more in control of my health. If THREE WAYS TO BUY A CAR WHY SETTLE FOR LESS? 500 Styles, over 2,000 fabrics, plus leather. Custom Sofas $695.00 - $1695.00. Custom made and delivered in just 35 days. AL HARRIS ARNIE WEISS MIKE GERMANSKY TAMAROFF TH E D ETRO BUICK • HONDA • NISSAN • IZUZU • DODGE WE WISH OUR CUSTOMERS, FRIENDS AND RELATIVES A VERY HAPPY AND HEALTHY PASSOVER Open Mon. & Thurs. Til 9 28585 TELEGRAPH ROAD ACROSS FROM TEL-12 Southfield Open Tues. , Wed. , Fri. Til 6 353-1300 FURNITURE NOVI • LIVONIA STERLING HEIGHTS ANN ARBOR MoosejaW CAMPING OurnnERs AND WILDERNESS GUIDES 738-JAW1 (5291) 3405 Orchard Lake Road Attorney General Cites Danish Help Washington (JTA) — In a year commemorating the 50th anniversary of many grim events relating to the Nazi Holocaust, Jews gathered here last week to celebrate one bright spot of 1943: the rescue of the Jews of Denmark. The Danish people, unlike so many others in Europe, protected their Jewish citizens from Nazi death camps, hiding Jews in Danish homes and smuggl- ing most of the Jewish com- munity to the nearby neutral country of Sweden. Among the speakers at the commemoration, held at a synagogue in Washington, was Attorney General Janet Reno, who is of Danish ancestry. Ms. Reno called the event "a symbol that each of us has to rededicate ourselves to stand up against evil." U.S. Ambassador to Den- mark Richard Stone read a letter from President Clin- ton, who cited the Danish "example of courageous kindness." About 1,500 people at- tended the commemoration, which was organized b Washington Hebrew Con gregation and a group calle Thanks to Scandinavia whose purpose is to mak people aware of the Danis rescue. Peter Dyvig, the Danis ambassador to the Unite States., called the events o 1943 "the first large-scal human rights action in th history of man." Henrik Liljegren, th Swedish ambassador to th Washington, noted that his country, "heroic act were performed more by i dividuals than by the au thorities." The event, lasting over tw • and a half hours, include • performances by a Danis Jewish pianist, and a Danis actress whose father was resistance fighter in Worl . War II. Also speaking was Frod : Jakobsen, the head of th Danish resistance durin the war, who is now 86 year old. Similar events will be hel in cities across the country including Los Angeles Chicago, and Minneapolis. . Female Prayer Group Holds First Meeting London (JTA) — Only the sound of emotional tears disturbed the reverent hush of prayer last weekend as more than 60 women gathered for the first wo- men-only Shabbat service to be sanctioned by Britain's chief rabbi. The historic gathering, at a private house in Nor- thwest London, was greeted with delight and not a little relief by the memberN of the Stanmore Women's' Tefillah Group, whose desire for their own service had sparked months of debate within the Orthodox Jewish community here. One participant, visiting from America, where such groups flourish, said she was struck by the confidence the women displayed in conduc- ting the two-hour service. Confident they may have seemed, but before they began their prayers, they were still discussing how being no precedent in this country to give the guidance. "We will have to • creative," concluded on participant, although th main concern for these Or thodox women was to re main strictly within th bounds of the Halachah, o Jewish law. Leaving husbands an sons to attend the normal Shabbat service at Stanmore Synagogue a few yards away, the women embarked on reading the weekly Tor portion from the Chumash rather than the Torah scro — one of the conditions sought by the chief rabbi, Jonathan Sacks. They went on to recite the traditional prayers for th Royal family and the State of Israel as well as a speci blessing for women, and a prayer for agunot — women who are unable to acquire a get, or religious divorce,