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July 24, 1987 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-07-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TYPEWRITER • ADDING MACHINE • COPIER REPAIRS • COMPUTER RENTALS
BANKRUPTCY ASSETS JORDAN LABS

20% TO 75% OFF

0

II

BBYO





M LTER

Typewriters

$49.95

• WOOD OFFICE DESKS & CREDENZAS 5249.96, Reg. $900
• OFFICE PARTITIONING 8 49.96, WERE TO $200, MANY SIZES AVAIL.
w • BANQUET TABLES 5',6',8', BEGINNING AT $49.96
8 • NEW CORRECTING TYPEWRITERS $169.96
IBM's $119,96
< • COMPLETE COMPUTER FURNITURE DEPT., BIG DISCOUNTS!
co • IBICO BINDING MACHINE $269.96 (Big discounts on binding supplies)
0 ,,
• EXEC. CHAIRS USED $49.96, NEW $89.96 • SECRETARY DESK W/CHAIR $149.95
" • PLAIN PAPER COPIER $499.96 • COPIER $199.96 • ASST. REFRIGERATORS $99.96
Q
• BRAND NEW IBM SELECTRIC III $699.96 • DECOLLATORS $349.96 • CHAIRS $9.96
• DESKS $49.96 • FILES $69.90 • LARGE SELECTION OF LATERAL FILES IN STOCK, BEGIN AT 549.99

tk'

u j 1.•11.7,

3 ` : WORD PROCESSOR

• SHREDDING MACHINES

L ct- j Complete WIPrinter $499.96
>-

2 EXECUTIVE CARS • NEW OVERHEAD

$13,496
1983 T-Bird Heritage Loaded $5,996

(HEAVY DUTY)

1985 Mark VII Loaded

$399.96

BETTER BUSINESS EQUIPMENT

231 W. 9 MILE ROAD

Block West of Woodward
Ferndale
548-6404

1/2

Daily 9-5:30, Sat. 9.4

Of Harvard Row

Designers of Fine Furs
Complete Fur Service

PRESENT
THIS AD
FOR FREE
GIFT

11 MILE & LAHSER
Phone: 358-0850

PROJECTORS

$249.96

Delivery
Available

UIPIEDS
GET RUM •

30235 W. TEN MILE ROAD

Farmington Hills 474-3375

Call The Jewish News

Mon., Turs., Wed. & Fri. 10:30-5:30
Thurs. 10:30.7:30 Closed Sat.

354-6060

NOT ALL MERCHANDISE AT BOTH LOCATIONS

ti

S4 u4t 1 Summer Sale

-s•

The More You Buy.-
The More You Save!

tit [If

4

and even 60%
Discount Off Retail Price
Come into the store for details 1 —7-,
-=--

50%,

55%



SHIRT
34DX

r••••`••••z••,,,•1•!•?6••,:•,....

z



19011 West Ten Mile Rd.

Southfield

(Between Southfield and Evergreen)

352-1080

Hours:
Monday-Saturday 9:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Thursday 9:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
PARKING AND ENTRANCE IN REAR

Sale Ends August 15

Studio In Harvard Row Mall

',AA. 4

A 4-fe

The

B

SPOT

50%-70% OFF

ALL NAME BRANDS

• Vertical Blinds
• Levolor Blinds
• Pleated Shades
• Wood Blinds

21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd.
Harvard Row Mall
Southfield, MI 48076
_

Free Professional Measure at
No Obligation
Free in Home Design Consulting

50, FRIDAY; JULY 24, 1987

J '

Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5
Thursday 10-8

352-8622

Officers Elected

Continued from Page 48

dinator. Carol Parven is ad-
visor to the chapter.
The AZA Council Softball
League continues its summer
schedule Sunday at the
Southfield High School fields,
as follows: 9 a.m., Rose vs.
Posen; 10:20 a.m., Mendoza
vs. Chalutzim and Brandeis
vs. Jolson.
Maccabee AZA has elected
its executive board for the
1987-1988 program year. Of-
ficers include: Stuart Levy,
president; Marc Blackman,
vice president; Stuart
Shiland, moreh; Dan Frieden-
zohn, treasurer; Bobby Budai,
recording secretary; David
Slater, corresponding
secretary; Scott Beckerman,
reporter; and Jeff Blackman,
counselor. Advisor to the
chapter is Elliot Chandler.
Eight Michigan Region
BBYOers will attend the
BBYO International Leader-
ship Training Conference,
which will begin Tuesday at
the B'nai B'rith Perlman
Camp in Starlight, Pa. Par-
ticipants in the program in-
clude: Karyn Moss of Aliyah
BBG, Jeff Ehrlich of Chalut-
zim AZA, Trevor Hart and
Rob Weiss of Hart AZA, Jeff
Dwoskin of Kishon AZA, and
Ellyn Craine, Debbie Rosens-
tein, and Wendy Shanker of
Machar BBG. Joel Colman

and Adele Lewin, Michigan
BBYO assistant directors,
will also participate in the
program as members of the
leadership staff.

Shoshanna BBG has
elected its executive board for
1987-1988. Officers include:
Randee Carp, president;
Sarah Richelew, vice presi-
dent; Jenny Levin, MIT mom;
Kelley Emmer, treasurer;
Rachel Rosen, recording
secretary; Cheryl Chudnow
and Stephanie Kaplan, cor-
responding secretaries; and
Lori Nelson, counselor. Alyse
Cash is the advisor to the
chapter.
BBYO seeks volunteers to
serve as advisors to AZA and
BBG chapters for the coming
year. Activities begin in
September and run through
June; groups meet on a week-
ly basis. For information, con-
tact BBYO, 350-2760.

Daniel Mendoza AZA has
elected its executive board for
the 1987-1988 programming
year. Officers include: Andy
Grinbaum, president; Eric
Schiffer, vice president; Marc
Cooper, moreh; Rick Goren,
treasurer; Steve Blum, recor-
ding secretary; Dan Serlin,
corresponding secretary; Josh
Norber, reporter; and Mike
Goldberg, sergeant-at-arms.

■•••■■■•■1 ISRAEL UPDATE l'''••••••• ■

Rose Garden. Village
Thrives In Galilee

Kfar Vradim — A new, ex-
erimental science village now
being built in the Western
Galilee seems to be shaping up
as the high technology heir to
Israel's unique agricultural
communes, the kibbutzim.
Financed and run entirely by
the residents themselves, Kfar
Vradim, or Rose Garden
Village, is the first town in
Israel to be established without
the help, of government
assistance of donations from
abroad. In conjunction with the
nearby industrial park, Tefen,
where many of the residents
are employed, it is expected to
serve as a model, showing
Israel the way to economic
independence.
The idea for Kfar Vradim
came from businessman Stef
Wertheimer. During the 1970s,
Wertheimer was increasingly
disturbed by Israel's continued
dependence on economic aid
from the United States and
donations from well-to-do
Jewish communities from
abroad. "It was like not letting
a child grow up," he explains.
The key to Israel's economic
independence, as Wertheimer

sees it, lies in high technology:
export industries which depend
not on natural resources, which

Israel does not have, but on
brain-power, which it does.
Wertheimer would like to see

the Israeli landscape dotted by
small to mid-sized towns offer-
ing their residents a high quali-
ty of life: high living standards
and creative employment in
neighboring, highly productive
industrial parks built to har-
monize with the environment,
rather than harm it.
Kfar Vradim is the first of
these villages. Located in the
hills of the Western Galilee,
some eight miles from Israel's
northern, Lebanese, border, it is
surrounded by some of the
country's most beautiful
landscape.
Planned for an eventual
population of 10,000, the new
town is still in the incubation
stage. The first 600 plots of land
were offered for sale three years
ago. 450 have been sold so far,
and over 100 families have
already completed building
their homes and moved in.
The first public building to be
erected was the school, which
now boasts a student popula-
tion of nearly 200.
All public construction is be-
ing paid for with the money
received through the sale of the
housing plots.

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