I DETROIT WALL-TO-WALL CLEARANCE ALL NEW MERCHANDISE Walk Continued from preceding page EVERYTHING MUST GO! SAIWURD O 1/0., /f aft, , a. FAO Mit 0 AM • 5 PM 4.1 II _ 11 4 r. 11 - FABULOUS SELECTION OF LEATHER ON SALE FOR UNBELIEVABLE PRICES! .11 , .1 ff • SECTIONALS • SOFAS • LOVESEATS • CHAIRS • DINING ROOMS BEDROOMS • WALL UNITS & MUCH MORE! Large Selection of ALPA LEATHER at UNBELIEVABLE PRICES! CENTURY & STANLEY BEDROOM & DINING ROOM SETS ALL AT ALL DINETTE SETS 50% OFF 50% OFF S H ERWOOD WAREH O USE 24760 CRESTVIEW CT. FARMINGTON HILLS 476-3760 - Day of Sale 354-9060 - Prior to Sale IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NOMINAL CHARGE ALL SALES FINAL GROUPS SOLD AS COMPLETE SETS SHERWOOD WAREHOUSE / 8 0 cc a; 0 O 3 cc c3 o 2 u.1 0 0 < . ■ 111 FARMINGTON HILLS INDUSTRtAL CTR. 0,2,1 lio 6, „, \ ,.:?. o cc as u.1 i-- U) _1 < , 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.