arts • ,filo da Custom Clothirr Caul Ciccitini :oar c714en Suits • Sportcoats Tuxedos • Slacks • Shirts Topcoats • Raincoats Shoes • Sweaters • Socks Ties • Cuff Links Custom Buttons &n.nw.%N-\, GARY WETTENSTEIN Taut Ciccitint jor (- Women Skirt Suits • Pants Suits Blazers • Slacks • Shirts Topcoats • Accessories PERSONALIZED SERVICE IN YOUR HOME, OFFICE OR IN OUR SHOWROOM BY APPOINTMENT 271 MERRILL BIRMINGHAM • 48009 (248) 646-0535 Don't Be A Drip! Get Your Faucet Fixed! Check out the Plumbers in our Marketplace Home and Service Guide. 8/27 1999 'MO- Detroit Jewish News Booked For Browsing Brandeis University comes up a big winner from annual used book sale. DIANA LIEBERMAN Stall Writer 4$, R etired physician Marie Fly likes the annual Brandeis University Used Book Sale so much, she visits it often. Its a relief after spending my whole life reading medical textbooks," she said. "I usually come three or four times," the West Bloomfield resident added. "I must spend about $80-$100 in all." Her choices include non-fiction, classics ; science fiction and biographies. Book lovers had no trouble filling their shopping carts with treasures at this year's sale — but they had a hard time spending a lot of money with the low prices. The weeklong sale, in its 33rd year at Tel- Twelve Mall in Southfield, ended Wednesday. All volumes were priced to sell. A recent Ann Rice novel cost $7, while hardcover editions of the Iliad and The Odyssey, both like new, went for $1 each. And, for only $1.60, a lucky cookbook collector could walk off with the illustrated A Russian Jew Cooks in Peru. At these prices, it's hard to imagine the event could make a profit. But every year, between $50,000 and $100,000 flows into the treasury of the local chapter of the Brandeis University National Women's Committee. Even after paying expenses, that leaves a healthy chunk to donate to the Brandeis library system centered in Waltham, Mass. Books for the sale are collected all year long, from 9 a.m.-noon Mondays and Tuesdays, at the Book Depot, 25595 Coolidge Highway, in Oak Park. All dona- tions are tax-deductible. Once August rolls around, book lovers throughout the state know to head for Tel- Twelve Mall in search of bargains. "We had 350-400 people come to the opening alone," said Joan Braun, Brandeis Midwest Region president. Despite the admission fee of $5, people lined up all day for the 9:30 p.m. official opening. When we opened the doors, they just rushed in," Braun said. "I didn't get home until 2 a.m." As usual, admission was free during the rest of the week. Sixteen-year-old John Caramia took advan- tage of the sale to add to his collection of humor books, while Johanna Schwensen snapped up an Audubon Field Guide to North American Wildflowers for $2. "I work in Southfield, and I come every year," Schwensen said. "But even if I didn't work in Southfield, I'd come anyway." • ‘. • Top: Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz of Oak Park fills a carriage fill of title selections. Above: Bargain seekers are everywhere at the used book fair.