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.