News ARE YOU LOOKING FOR AN ENERGY SAVING AIR CONDITIONER? Call Bryant ') to the rescue 111 Visit Ou And r New Showroom arts Depart k50 4ub inent oil Rd, Utica ea CD 41o2-fti Z10-Z30 • Sat 7104 AIR CONDITIONING ENGINEERS OW- 11 op21101 Heating & Cooling * Residential & Commercial 5250 Auburn Road ** 979-3000 * 739-4942 bryant bryant I WINTER OFF . Electronic I I BLOW-OUT I High Efficiency: Air Cleaner I 111) SALE Plus90 Installed From 'YOUR NEXT bryant :Furnace' $450? Expires 2/25/94 SERVICE 1 • I • Air Conditioner I Installed Installed FROM I I After Rebates I Humidifier FROM $1295 0° $1775" bryant I CALL New Settlers Group Plans Settlements Jerusalem (JTA) — A recent- ly formed Jewish settlers group planned this week to establish the first of 130 new settlements it intends to set up in the administered ter- ritories. The leaders of the group, called Zu Artzeinu, or This Is Our Land, announced at a news conference that the first settlement would be es- Regular $499 I I I I Expires 2/25/94 I Installed From $19500 Expires 2/25/94 FREE PROGRAMMABLE SET BACK THERMOSTAT WITH EVERY INSTALLATION OF AIR CONDITIONER. Valentine's Day is Monday, Feburary 14th MAKE AN IMPRESSION THAT WILL LAST A LIFETIME. Yosef Begun: One of the group's leaders. THE DETRO IT J EWISH NEWS Greenstone's has specialized in fine diamond solitaires and wedding Tings for over 68 years, featuring a large selection of G.I.A. graded diamonds and custom designed settings. Greenstone's personal service and three generations of experience in diamond jewelry assure your complete satisfaction. 54 GREENSTONEIS CREATORS OF FINE JEWELRY SINCE 1925 528 North Woodward • Birmingham, MI 4 Blocks North of Maple • (810) 642-2650 Monday - Saturday, 9:30-5:30 Next time you feed your face, think about your heart. Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are high in saturated fat and cholesterol. The change'll do you good. U American Heart Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE tablished to coincide with the holiday of Tu B'Shevat. Joining the settlers at the news conference were the leaders of a new group of immigrants from the former Soviet Union established to protest the government's peace initiatives. The _leaders included several well-known former prisoners of Zion: Ida Nudel, Yosef Mendelevich and Yosef Begun. "We were willing to be ar- rested for Zion in Russia. We are certainly willing to be arrested for Zion in Israel," they said in a statement. The new settlements, which will be named after victims of Arab terrorism, are intended to foil the government's plans to implement the Palestinian self-rule accord signed in Washington last September. "Each one of these new communities will be a nail in the coffin of the Oslo ac- cord," said David Romanoff, a spokesman for the group, referring to the secret agreement made in the Norwegian capital between Israel and the Palestine Lib- eration Organization. The group's leaders said they plan no violent confron- tations with security forces who may try to evacuate the settlements. Instead, they said, they will opt for civil disobedience. Mr. Romanoff said the new settlements will be posi- tioned close to existing set- tlements, which will help sustain them. He said he also expected to draw sup- port from thousands of citizens who live inside Israel's Green Line, the country's boundaries before the 1967 Six-Day War. Mr. Romanoff said that Zu Artzeinu plans to create a new settlement every day, except for Fridays and Sat- urdays, until all 130 new communities are estab- lished. The new settlements will effectively double the number of existing set- tlements in the territories. The first settlement will be called Givat Lapid, in memory of Mordechai and Shalom Lapid, a father and son recently slain by Arab terrorists. It will be estab- lished close to Kiryat Arba, located near the West Bank city of Hebron. 0 Teacher Strike Impacts Studies Tel Aviv (JTA) — A strike by university faculty across Israel, now in its third week, is having a devastating im- pact on studies. The countrywide strike, which has taken all univer- sity faculty members out of the classroom, is continuing without any signs that the end of the work stoppage is near. The strike, which began Jan. 9 over wages, has brought to a halt the ac- tivities of all Israeli univer- sities. Negotiations between the Finance and Education min- istries and faculty represen- tatives have led to no agreement. Meanwhile, students are complaining that the cur- rent semester has been ruin- ed by the refusal of teachers to return to their normal duties. On Jan. 18, more than 1,000 students and faculty demonstrated in front of the Knesset, calling upon the government to meet the teachers' demands. O