NORTHWEST SALES PARTS & SERVICE REPAIRS Panasonic Eureka Hoover !KIDS I MEM ORIENTAL RUGS VACUUM \Ari $17.95 Cleaning &Lubrication FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY Most Makes 32650 Northwestern Hwy. Farmington Hills, MI 48018 we sell them, buy them, clean them, repair them, appraise them and love them. 626-0626 - The Original Since 1939 HAGOPIAN WORLD OF RUGS Oak Park Showroom • 546 RUGS 14000 W. 8 Mile Road - (just west of Coolidge) Birmingham Showroom • 646-RUGS Piety Hill Plaza, 1835 S. Woodward (just north of 14 Mile Road) Ann Arbor Showroom • 973-RUGS 3410 Washtenaw Avenue (just west of Arborland) Images & Imagination ... A new approach to creativity Marion Phillips 851-5730 1111111111111111 Wolf 851-2763 —Licensed— HAROLD Has Moved!! Former owner of Breath of Spring r--., - . . ,_ I i y ae"--... , A 0//,, Qi,,,.. ut / —it 1, Lic, ,, _ / c/i ... / / / ji, z 1 ( i i , ■ verj/ ' NO I ., idiff r, I'Ver„, 7 . ,... t .. ,../r,,,,... „ a,,,, E30,,, ,, , c,:ei., -Lib/6i 749.06:v () O , ......01 .0 "....„.... 4117, A. e / ' I SCei)7A / Zrnf i AFFORDABLE FLOWERS 1 I1 /Z BLOCK NORTH 14 MILE N w S A DESIGN STUDIO TELEGRAPH 1820 S. Woodward • Birmingham Best Buys in town on cut flowers, plants and balloons SQUARE LK. RD. in Bloomfield HI 788 Industrial Court 644.2244 44 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 Children are made up as their favorite animals during an art workshop at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. At Art Seminar: Lions For Boys, Cats For Girls Tel Aviv — Strange creatures emanating floures- cent light entered the pitch- dark hall at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. They roared and meowed and barked. In the audience, a group of men and women watched and wondered. As the lights went on, an uproar of laughter and ap- plause burst out: The floures- cent creatures turned out to be new graduates of a five-day summer workshop for children conducted by the museum; the adults were their parents, relatives and friends. The masquerade was the culminating point of a week of art-and-fun activities of the workshop, centered on the topic, "Animals and I." Using animals as a theme is an unusually effective way of in- troducing youngsters to great artists and enhancing their artistic sophistication, accor- ding to Mira Caspi, associate education director at the musuem. Twenty youngsters from the first to the sixth grades par- ticipated in the carefully designed program, which in- cluded drawing, painting, and sculpting. For ideas and in- spiration, the children were shown slide shows of animal paintings by painters like Picasso and Kokoschka and the Israeli artists Moreh, Reuven and Gutman. On the first day, each child was asked to choose a favorite animal and paint and draw it in the form of a large tag to be attached to his or her shirt or hat. The favorite animals of boys turned out to be dogs, lions and monkeys. The girls, on the other hand, identified with cats, rabbits and occa- sionally dogs. The second day was devoted to explaining to the children how animals survive in the natural environments. On the third day, fables and stories of animals were read to the youngsters, who were then asked to translate what they had heard into drawings. The fourth day included discussions of mythological animals like dragons and the flying horse pegasus, whom the children were asked to draw. They were also en- couraged to create their own imaginary animals out of clay. On the fifth and final day, the children took part in an animal carnival. Each youngster worked on an elaborate paper doll represen- ting his or her favorite animal. The children then made themselves up as par- ticular animals, using flourescent paints, rouge and lipstick, and marched into a hall where their parents were assembled. The workshop showed that the key to encouraging a child's interest in art is in- volvement, according to Caspi. Jwv Shapiro Women Plan To Meet Charles Shapiro Auxiliary will have its meeting on Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the home of Frieda Sherman, 14670 Labelle, Oak Park. For information, call Ms. Sherman, 542-6826.