Belgians Honor Late King year. The kids come, they eat, they kibbitz, they eat, they show pictures, they eat, they kiss, they leave. I have my cup of Sanka® and love 1 993 Kra ft General Foods, "The Holidays. My favorite time of every minute of it. Did I mention they eat?" SANKA®. EVERYTHING YOU LOVE ABOUT COFFEE Bonnie 's PATISSERIE • HOLIDAY DINNERS • DELICIOUS DESSERTS 357-4540 May The New Year Bring To All Our Customers, Family & Friends Health, Joy, Prosperity And Everything Good In Life. JEWEL BAKERY 188 21784 W. 11 Mile Southfield, MI 48075 T All Our Friends and Clients, Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity. H THE NURSING HOME GROUP COMPLETE RANGE OF SERVICES FOR YOUR HOME Brussels (JTA) — Belgium's Jewish community will add trees to a forest in Israel to honor the memory of King Baudouin, who died sudden- ly July 31 at the age of 62 while vacationing in Spain. The forest already bears the name of the late king and was inaugurated in February 1964 when the king and his wife, Queen Fabiola, paid a private visit to Israel. "It's a gesture of the grati- tude of our community toward our sovereigns," George Schneck, president of the Belgian Central Jewish Consistory, said during a ceremony at a memorial here to the Jews in Belgium who were killed by the Nazis. The Jewish community also sent a message of con- dolence to the new king, Albert II, brother of the late king, expressing its warm feelings for the Belgian royal family. The message spoke of "the kind interest which the members of the royal family have always granted the Jewish community." The Jewish Consistory recalled "the late King Baudouin's esteem, interest and respect for Judaism." In response, the king's Cabinet chief sent a letter to the Jewish organization ex- pressing his gratitude to the Jewish community. King Albert II, who is 59, was sworn in as the sixth king of Belgium on Aug. 9. In his first speech before the Parliament, the new king appealed to his people "to show that it is possible to live harmoniously in the same country with women and men of various cul- tures." Israel Reverts To Winter Time Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel re- verted to winter time turn- ing its clocks back one hour as midnight struck last weekend. The move, which sets Israeli time two hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time and seven hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time, follows demands by Or- thodox Jews to facilitate Selichot prayers, which are recited in the early morning in the weeks preceding Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.