TEENS JUST ARRIVED...BRAND NEW STYLES! NICOLETTI & NATUZZI IMPORTED LEATHER 0,. 50 -OFF SAT. & SUN. ONLY • MAY 6 & 7 !WW2 =7 1mi 71, i1 . ‘ P • tpx / -N 1. - 1 '. direMal ffAl fill, - ' •. - 4,;r - ■ I A COMPLETE SHOWROOM OF THE FINEST LEATHER FURNITURE - SHERWOOD ,:)/WAREHOUSE A // FARMINGTON HILLS INDUSTRIAL CENTER N . 8flerWCI)d. 411C1108 CLEARANCE CENTER 0 ' DAYS OF SALE 476-3760 PRIOR 354-9060 HOURS: SATURDAY 10 - 5 SUNDAY 12 - 5 TEN MILE ROAD IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - NOMINAL CHARGE SPRING/SLIMMER VACATIONS E a n ad ian'li crd1 1.-- $2999° COMPLETE PACKAGES FROM 499• DEPARTS EVERY SAT. fiend° NEW STARTS MAY 27 AM, 7 Nights Fr. $1139 9° STARTS JUNE 15 tom ancorde/gE2 4 voTto Continental Charters Non-Stop From Detroit 3 or 4 Nights $19990 From COMPLETE PACKAGES FROM $259. DEPARTS EVERY THURS., FRI., SUN. MON. Crxvinental Charters s229 90 L-1011 Widebody/Air America Hotel Packages Canc tlantic City Fr. $34990 DEPARTS EVERY MORNING Non-Stop L-1011 Widebody/American Trans Air Charters :530 Quart ter s, $15 Food, n990 $20 Future re Coin, $10 Future Right. .24. net .34. net .44. net From ZIP : • ..,4990 00 AUGUST 12-20, 1989 Las Vegas ( Charters 3/4 Nights Fr. 814990 •COMPLETE PACKAGES FROM *259. DEPARTS EVERY THURS. P. SUN. INCLUDES 3 NIGHTS ENGLAND • • ( oiltittentiti One-Day Fun Trips MON, TUES, WED, FRI, SAT April 28; May 1, 2. 5, 6, 8, 9 Special Arrangements For Groups Overnight Trip $15990 May 18-19; Includes Airfare • Hotel • $795$ Bonus Pak • A Positive Point About Breast Cancer. Now w•can see it before you can feel it. When it's no bigger than the dot on this pa e. An d when it's 90% cur- able. With the best chance of saving the breast. The trick is catching it early. And that's exactly what a mammogram can do. A mammogram is a sim- ple x-ray that s simply the best news yet for detecting breast cancer. And saving lives. If you're over 35, ask your doctor about mammography. Give yourself the chance of a lifetime:" Al above rates are capacity controlled Supertares and may not be avaAable on all dates. Operatodparticipant contract mewed for all trips. Special Reductions For Groups — Reserve Early! RESERVE EARLY 108 Hamilton. Miller. Hudson & Fayne Call Your Travel Corporation Travel Ag ent the 'Lo.v-Cost r-avel Pe )0/e' or (313) 827-4070 'MPAINSg SoLdt.theqJ MI NW FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1989 AN9 L 11 1\ Students representing more than a dozen area high schools in the tri-county area will gather for the 14th semi- annual Interfaith Youth Sym- posium on the Holocaust Wednesday at the Holocaust Memorial Center and the Maple/Drake Jewish Com- munity Center. The symposium's par- ticipants will tour the HMC accompanied by docents, meet with Holocaust survivors who will share their personal ex- periences of the Holocaust and also hear eyewitness reports from Marcus Bass, a member of the U.S. armed forces at the liberation of Dachau concentration camp. In addition, the par- ticipants will hear Prof. Henry W. Meyer, professor of violin and chamber music at the College-Conservatory of Music of the University of Cincinnati, who was a member of the Men's Or- chestra at Auschwitz- Birkenau from 1943 to 1945. Conveners of the event are the Greater Detroit Interfaith Round Table of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit and the Holocaust Memorial Center. Cooper- ating with them are the Jewish Community Center and the Shaarit Haplaytah (organization of Holocaust survivors). Dr. John Mames, a member of the Jewish Com- munity Council's Holocaust subcommittee, will corrdinate the survivors' presentations. Closing ceremonies will feature student participants reading poetry selections written in the Terezin concen- tration camp. A candle- lighting ceremony will memoralize the victims of the Holocaust. For information about the symposium, call the HMC, 661-0840. USY Teens Win Awards At Their Convention r 8 24734 CRESTVIEW CT. FARMINGTON HILLS Youth Holocaust Sympsoium Nears AMERICAN SOC At the recent United Synagogue Youth (USY) Regional Convention, Beth Abraham Hillel Moses USY (BAHM USY) received several awards. It received the "Best Ongoing Social Action Pro- gram" award for ongoing Ongei Shabbat held with the JARC and Fleischman residents. The "Best Overall Religious Event" award was given for the chapter's "regressive dinner." For hosting the pre-Shabbat portion of the Western Area fall kinnus, the chapter received a special award. Special recognition went to Stuart Shiland as overall kinnus co-chairman and to Mary Koukab for social programming. Mike Weiss received the "USYer of the Year" award. It is the second time in four years that a member of the synagogue's USY has won the award. The award is given an- nually to the USYer who best demonstrates the attributes of USY. Weiss also was honored as a co-winner of the "Polster Award" which recognizes his volunteer work on the chapter and regional levels of USY for his involve- ment with the Jewish com- munity. Next year he will be the international USY co- chairman of Israeli affairs. David Tessler was honored as outgoing Central Region United Synagogue Youth president. The Beth Abraham Hillel Moses USY will host a Detroit area Shabbaton May 12-14 on the theme "The Jewish Perspectives on the Disabled." To attend the con- vention, contact Marc Blackman. 851-5944. m l LOCAL NEWS hi Workmen's Circle Marks 50th Workmen's Circle Branch 460 will mark its 50th an- niversary with a banquet on Saturday at the Furniture Club in Southfield. The Workmen's Circle focuses on issues such as discrimination and legisla- tion to feed and house the homeless, Soviet Jewry, Ethiopian Jewry and Israel. Yiddish Vinki Plans To Gather A Yiddish vinkl, sponsored by the Workmen's Circle, will be held on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Workmen's Circle Center, 26341 Coolidge, Oak Park. The vinkl gives Yiddish speakers an opportunity to meet. The public is invited. There is no charge.