I DETROIT
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Walk
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EVERYTHING MUST GO!
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FOR UNBELIEVABLE
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24760 CRESTVIEW CT.
FARMINGTON HILLS
476-3760 - Day of Sale
354-9060 - Prior to Sale
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TEN MILE ROAD
The metro area's largest selection
of watches, bands and batteries!
For the area's largest seiection of watches.
Keeping Detroiter.
right on time ',ince 1927
SOUTHFIELD: (Southfield & 12 Mile) 552-0080
PONTIAC: (Voorheis & Telegraph) 333-2263
FARMINGTON HILLS: (Orchard Lk. & 13 Mile) 851-0440
16
FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1991
at 10:45 a.m., the walk will
start at 11:30 a.m. at the
Maple-Drake Jewish Corn-
munity Campus. Refresh-
ments will be served during
a rest stop at Temple Israel.
Mrs. Rosenthal expects re-
cent events concerning
Israel, including the Persian
Gulf war and the subsequent
peace attempts, have in-
creased awareness of the
challenges that lie ahead.
"It's important to show our
support with Israel," Mrs.
Rosenthal said. "It is a very
critical time in Israel's
future."
"This is the one day during
the year that the Detroit
Jewish community can dem-
onstrate its solidarity to
Israel," said David Gad-
Harf, executive director of
the Jewish Community
Council.
With the influx of Soviet,
Ethiopian and Albanian
Jews into Israel during the
past year, Israel has much to
celebrate, he said. "At the
same time, there are many
challenges ahead. We should
both reflect on past ac-
complishments and look
forward to the challenges in
the future."
Although the • walk is a
popular way to show sup-
port, the celebration of
Israeli Independence Day
continues until 3 p.m. at the
Jewish Community Center.
"Faces and Places of
Israel" encompass the chil-
Full service watch and jewelry repair.
WATCH BANDS
MT. CLEMENS: (Canal & Garfield) 263-7700
MADISON HEIGHTS: (12 Mile & Dequindre) 541-0808
dren's activities at the
Center throughout the day,
said Barbara Cook, who
along with Bob Shapiro, is
co-chairing the day's events.
Children can make puppets,
hats, Israeli flags, pictures,
lamps, mosaics and jewelry
as they pretend to travel
throughout Israel.
For adults, there will be a
showing of the award-
winning Israeli movie
Beyond the Walls and a talk
by author Eran Preis on the
Jewish identity of a sabra.
The movie will begin at
noon, with Mr. Preis speak-
ing at 2 p.m.
Other activities include an
Israel trade and travel fair,
singer Julie Auerbach, a
B'nai B'rith Youth Organ-
ization basketball tourna-
ment, pony rides provided by
Fresh Air Society and a pet-
ting farm sponsored by
Hadassah. The entire event
is sponsored by the Jewish
Welfare Federation, the
Center and the Israel In-
dependence Day Committee.
A shuttle bus will take
participants who park at the
Henry Ford Medical Center
on Maple Road to the
Center. Bus transportation
will also be available for a
small fee at the Jimmy
Prentis Morris Jewish
Community Center in Oak
Park and the United Hebrew
Schools building in
Southfield.
❑
Arab-Jewish Friends
Annual Dinner May 5
The annual awards dinner
of the American Arabic and
Jewish Friends of Metro-
politan Detroit will be 5 p.m.
May 5 at Kingsley Inn.
Under the auspices of the
Greater Detroit Interfaith
Round Table, the fifth annual
awards dinner will highlight
the strength of the relation-
ships formed here in the
Detroit area.
Two area residents will
receive Community Service
Awards. They are: Michael J.
George, president of the
Chaldean-Iraqi Association of
Michigan and President and
C.E.O. of Melody Foods, Inc.
and Paul D. Borman, presi-
dent of the Jewish Communi-
ty Council of Metropolitan
Detroit and chief federal
defender for Detroit.
Proceeds from the annual
dinners provide grants and
scholarships to area Jewish
and Arab students who com-
pete for the honors through
written essays. This year's
theme is "What It Means to
be an American of Arabic or
Jewish Descent."
Dinner co-chairs are Roger
Winkelman and Kamal
Shouhayib. The dinner is co-
sponsored by WKBD-TV 50
and the Hexon Corporation.
Tickets are available from the
Greater Detroit Interfaith
Round Table, 150 W. Boston,
Detroit, Mich. 48202. For in-
formation, call the Round
Table, 869-6306.
Group Exhibit
At Civic Center
A group exhibit of Water-
color Monoprints will be on
display through May 10 in
the Civic Center Gallery,
26000 Evergreen Road. This
group of professional artists
has been exploring the con-
cept of the "painterly print"
in the Art of Monoprints class
offered at the Southfield Art
Center. This is the premiere
Monoprint showing.