DETROIT I High School Yearbook '92 The Jewish News will honor the area's brightest Jewish high school seniors in our annual "yearbook" in May. Area high school prin- cipals have been asked to distribute our form to their five Jewish students with the highest grade point average (minimum 3.6 required). If you feel you qualify but have not been con- tacted, please check with your principal. Deadline for submission to The Jewish News is April 24. It's time for your Spring check-up this Saturday at Beaumont's Rochester Hills Medical Building. Come join us between the hours of 9-AM and 2-PM, April 11. In cooperation with Project Health- 0-Rama, we will offer health screenings — most tests are free, others for a minimal charge. You are also welcome to tour the new Beaumont Medical Building located at 6700 North Rochester Road (north of Tienken) in Rochester Hills. During your visit, you'll also have the chance to learn more about the Beaumont-affiliated physicians near you who repre- sent the following specialties: • • • • • • • • Cardiology Dermatology Family Practice Fetal Imaging and Obstetrical Ultrasound Internal Medicine Obstetrics/Gynecology Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Rheumatology Just opened! Now available at Rochester Hills, complete physical and occupational therapy services, in- cluding full immersion hydrotherapy. We look forward to seeing you. Beaumont Medical Building Rochester Hills 6700 North Rochester Road Rochester Hills, MI 48306 Temple Beth El will celebrate Passover with a morning family service 10 a.m. April 18. A Passover Experience will follow at 11 a.m. with fun, food and activities. For information, call Ruth 'Palmer, 851-1100. Ivan Marcus The more you know, the better you feel. William Beaumont Hospital The Perfect Ending For Your Seder A Beautiful Tray Filled With Special Passover Candy, Dried Fruits & Nuts. 73 7-8088 33020 NORTHWESTERN • W. BLOOMFIELD Outside Of Michigan 1.800-752-2133 _ 16 FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1992 • The sixth annual Morris and Sarah Friedman Lecture on Yiddish Language and Culture will feature Aaron Lansky, founder and director of the National Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, Mass., 2 p.m. April 12 at the United Hebrew Schools building. Mr. Lansky's lecture, delivered in English, is titled "In Search of Yiddish Culture: Adventures of a Book Collector." There is no charge. Temple Beth El Passover Program SANSABELT Special Candy & Sugarfree Available Aaron Lansky Gives Lecture For more information, please call at 650-1500 GET YOUR NEXT PAIR OF MosICard Aaron Lansky Local & Nationwide Delivery slacks at a sensible price. Why pay more when we offer them at discount? We even include FREE tailoring. Discount prices start at: - $ 36ple:gy of free parking behind our store sizes 32-60 JOHN R MEN'S WEAR 543-4646 . M-Th 9:30.6:30, Fri. & Sat. 9:30-8, Sun, 11-5 9 mile & John R Take 1-75 to 9 mtie JTS PlanS Study Session Rabbi Ivan Marcus, provost of the. Jewish Theological Seminary, will speak at the JTS Detroit Friends Young Leadership breakfast study session 7:45 a.m. April 8 at the Federation building, 6735 Telegraph Rd. His topic will be "Clannish or Vanish: The Jewish Community in the Majority World." A continental breakfast will be available starting at 7:15 a.m. in the first floor con- ference room of the Jewish Federation building, 6735 Telegraph Road. The study session is open to the com- munity at no charge. Dr. Marcus is professor of Jewish history, and author of Piety and Society: the Jewish Pietists of Medieval Germany. The third in the JTS Young Leadership Breakfast Study Series is scheduled for May 27 with Rabbi Burton Visotzky whose topic will be "Word of God or Hand of Moses? Fun- damentalism and the Rab- bis." For information, call the Detroit JTS office, 258-0055. -1 ANN ARBOR 1 1 °' Memorial Observed The 1992 Community Ob- servance of Holocaust Remembrance will be held April 26 in Ann Arbor. It will coincide with the United States National Days of Holocaust Remembrance, established as April 26-May 3. The Ann Arbor observance will take place 4 p.m. April 26 in the Residential College/ East Quad Auditorium. Featured will be a greeting by the mayor of Ann Arbor, Elizabeth Brater; a violin solo performed by Gabriel Bolkosky of the University of Michigan School of Music; remarks by the Reverend Kenneth Phifer of the First Unitarian Church and by Rabbi Robert Dobrusin of the Beth Israel Congregation; and a reading of the winning essay on the Holocaust in the Olga Hern essay contest.