I ANNIVERSARIES I
CPRIRJPX
INCORPORATED
• Frame Straightening
• Glass Replacement
Mention this ad and save
• Pin Striping
'50® off
• Custom Painting
DEDUCTIBLE
• Trim Repair
(Repairs over $500, Restrictions may apply)
• Body Repair
• Mig. Welding
• Uni-Body Construction
`File The Claim And Leave The Rest To Us"
Free Loaners and Life Time Warranty
23235 Telegraph, Southfield
356-6888
356-6889
358-4085
INSTANT SLIDE SHOW
M-F 10-4
SAT 10-3
Enjoy watching your party
while it's happening. We
photograph your party and
present an INSTANT slide
show. When the party's
over, it's still happening with
your videotape of all pic-
tures taken.
Icsocitso.
•
O
1 0 0
440 cite°
20 Years of Smiling Customers
29107 NORTHWESTERN
2ND DOOR FROM 12 MILE RD. • REAR ENTRANCE NEXT TO CAPITOL DRUGS
Sam
Barnett
VIDEOTAPE TRANSFERS
Open Mon. 9-5
• Precision Haircuts & Blow Dry
by Michael . $15 Mon.-Sat.
• 1/2 Off Manicures by osi
Sandy and Lissa customers w only)
• Acrylic Nails and Wraps
by Lissa
$25
American to European
System
and
European to American
System
SAME DAY SERVICE
Call or Visit
Complete line of
Paul Mitchell products
30878 Orchard Lake Road
Farmington Hills
BOMBAY DIGITAL VIDEO
28695 Ryan Rd.
851-3590
CUSTOM MADE TO YOUR
SIZE AND SHAPE
SAVE $18 ON ALL SIZE PADS
8 42" "
x 64"
2 WEEK DELIVERY
F.O.B. FACTORY
Vinyl top, felt bottom washable, heat resistant
WE WILL COME OUT
AND MEASURE
YOUR TABLE
re9
*Ial•
LEAVES PRICED SEPARATELY
CUSTOM TABLE PAD CO. 557-4108
FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1989
Music by
968-2563
'0. Our experienced staff is
trained to listen first .
then cut."
116
851-2765
Big or small, we custom
the music to your needs
t, JUDITH'S HAIR & CO.
$ 4
Greenblatt 50th Anniversary
Joseph
and Lillian
Danielle Radin, Sheila and
Greenblatt of Southfield
Neal McPherson, Jackie and
recently celebrated their 50th
Larry Taffel, Mickie and
wedding anniversary at a
Steve Schneider, Tim Hillock
family dinner given by their
and David Greenblatt.
children, Ernest and Joan
Other family members in
Greenblatt and Esther and
attendance were Janet
Harold Radin.
Rosenberger, Belle and Al
Also attending were their
Selter and John and Rena
grandchildren, Jeffrey Radin,
Anstandig.
PHOTOS BY GILBO
INNOVATIVE
KNIT DESIGNS
CREATED WITH
YOU IN MIND
TABLE PADS
Joseph and Lillian Greenblatt
Warren, MI 48092
751.0411
Certified
MOHELim of Detroit
Cantor S. Greenbaum
855-0628
Reb. Hershl Roth
557-0888
Cantor Sidney Rube
358-1426
Rabbi S. Zachariash
557-9666
I LOCAL NEWS I
Auschwitz Musician
To Speak For HMC
Holocaust survivor, Henry
W Meyer, professor of vio-
lin and chamber music at
the College-Conservatory of
Music, University of Cincin-
nati, will be the final speaker
in the Holocaust Memorial
Center's spring lecture series
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Maple/Drake Jewish Corn-
munity Center.
His topic will be "Did There
Have to Be Music . . . The
Men's Orchestra at
Auschwitz-Birkenau .. .
Henry Meyer Remembers!'
Interned initially in his
own community of Dresden,
Germany, in 1938, Meyer was
subsequently interned in
various labor camps before ar-
riving at Auschwitz-Birkenau
in 1943. There, he was forced
into the men's orchestra.
Meyer was born and raised
in Dresden and received his
early education in German
public elementary and high
schools until the process was
suppressed by the Nazi
government in 1936. As a
child, he appeared as a soloist
with the Dresden Symphony
Orchestra and performed
countless duo-recitals with
his younger brother, Fritz, a
pianist.
When the appearances with
the symphony were halted by
the Nazis in 1933, ar-
rangements were made to
allow him to study as a
special student at the
Academy of Music in Prague,
Czechoslovakia, where he
won numerous prizes.
In November 1938, he was
imprisoned in Dresden,
followed quickly by transfer
to Buchenwald. In 1939 he
was released and began to
pursue emigration. From
1940-1942, Meyer was part of
forced labor and was moved
between camps in Berlin and
Dresden.
Early in 1943, he was
deported to Auschwitz-
Birkenau where he remained
until the approach of the Rus-
sian Army dictated that
prisoners be moved to
Buchenwald and Orhduff. In
April 1943, Meyer escaped
from camp and was inter-
rogated by Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower in Paris.
Nine years after his initial
attempts at emigration,
Meyer arrived in the U.S. He
has been a member of the
LaSalle String Quartet. He is
a member of the quartet-in-
residence at the University of
Cincinnati.
There is no charge and the
public is invited. For informa-
tion, call the HMC, 661-0840.