DETROIT Affording the best is not the question...finding the best is. NrM ApencanenT2 Mng: SW Nurehg- Fecn o , Fov ithedocrdnransUng pemoh vsquIrjng an s scgaM onArronmsci4 Boaz Health Care Family owned and operated for over 33 years Medicare approved 363-4121 See the Flanders Mansion located in a beautiful residential neighborhood overlooking Green Lake. 6470 Alden Drive, Orchard Lake NOW . . at your service SONNY BRASS - • • • • • • • Senior Continued from Page 18 can reporter visiting the or- phanage wrote about three children who lost contact with their mother in New York. The story was published in the New York Times and a relative who read it contacted Mrs. Eichelbaum's mother. A few weeks later, an agent was hired to accompany Elizabeth and her sisters to New York. Elizabeth was reunited with her mother— already remarried— in 1921. The family lived together in New York and then Detroit where they worked together in a family-owned restaurant. Mrs. Eichelbaum com- pleted ninth grade, but wasn't able to take school seriously because of the demands placed on her at home. "I was really expected to work and not go after an ed- ucation," she said. "My mother was embarrassed that she worked, but hoped I'd work as long as was necessary to marry well. It's ironic, really, that both of us worked all our whole lives anyway." Elizabeth married Martin Eichelbaum in Detroit short- ly after her 18th birthday. Together they started The Bagel all-night restaurant on Woodward near Vernon It was considered by many to be a Detroit institution, she said. When her husband died about 17 years ago, she sold the restaurant but stayed on three days a week to help out the new management. What started as a part-time com- mitment lasted 15 years. When she wasn't working, Mrs. Eichelbaum took art classes at Oakland Com- munity College. Her children suggested she study for the high school equivalency exam and fur- ther her education. That was in 1975. Two of her four sons are in the art field today. One is a commercial artist with his own advertising agency in Knoxville, Term., and one is an art-therapist in New York City. They are all in Detroit this week to help their mother celebrate her new degree. They have also planned a party for her at the Novi Hilton. What's next for Elizabeth Eichelbaum? "Well, I've been looking into the psychology Ph.D. program at Wayne State," she said. "I should be hear- ing from them in a few weeks." ❑ Zeidan Atashi Independence Day Lecture Set Zeidan Atashi, a former member of the Knesset, will give an Israel Independence Day lecture 3 p.m. May 5 at the Agency for Jewish Educa- tion, Southfield. Mr. Atashi will speak on "Israeli Challenges for the 90s: The Prospects for Peace and Electoral Reform." The lecture, sponsored by the Jewish Community Coun- cil, Labor Zionist Institute, B'nai B'rith Hillel Founda.- tions of Metropolitan Detroit and Detroit Zionist Federa- tion is free and open to the community. KING HEART PRODUCTIONS 27040 EVERGREEN RD. LATHRUP VILLAGE, MI NE Corner of 1-696 / Evergreen Exit. AN that the name implies: . Draperies Bedspreads Blankets (cleaned or laundered) Window Shades Lampshades Pillows Venetian Blinds (cleaned, retaped & re-corded) FREE, II estimates pick-up delivery Any other items you may have - if it can be cleaned, we'll clean it and clean it properly OPERATING THE NEW Phone for 'till that the name implies"r; - . --- serct..4 A ----A AND IMPROVED SERVICE 891-1818 20 FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1991 WE PRINT ANYTHING ON ALMOST ANYTHING! 569-2288 ■ ••1011 At a reception and dinner in the home of Jane and Larry Sherman in support of the Israel Bond Diamond Trustees Society and Prime Minister's Club, $3,127,000 was raised in Israel Bond Purchases and commitments. Attending were Meryl Podolsky, Nancy Jacobson, Alice Peerce, Rabbi Daniel Polish and honoree Bernice Gershenson.