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DESIGNED
WOODWORK

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Seminars for Active, Recovering
and Recovered Cancer Patients

9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Cranbrook House
380 Lone Pine Road • Bloomfield Hills

Monday, April 27

Tuesday, April 28

Keynote Speaker:

Keynote Speaker:

RENA
BLUMBERG

BELLERUTH
NAPERSTEK

Author, Headstrong A Story of
Conquests and Celebrations ... Living
Through Chemotherapy, broadcaster,
lecturer and civic activist from
Cleveland Heights, Ohio.

Cleveland Heights, Ohio
psychotherapist and author of
Health Journeys audio tapes
specializing in guided imagery
to help the body heal.

9:30

Registration/Coffee

10:00 And What of Tomorrow?
Veronica Decker, R.N., M.S., C.S.
Founder of Cancer Counseling, Troy

How To Get Your Degree in Creative

9:30

A classic chair rail...

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A special room for the
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Uncommon woodwork and
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Timeless design...
Installation that endures.

Registration/Coffee

10:00 The Wonder of Guided Imagery for
Relaxation and Healing
Belleruth Naperstek

Noon Lunch

Independence

Phyllis Band Seel, Ph.D.
Psychologist, Bloomfield Hills

Confrontation
Is Threatened

7@ARAPIP/Or

12:45 And What of Tomorrow?
Veronica Decker, R.N., M.S., C.S.
Founder of Cancer Counseling, Troy

Call Bruno Trentacost to view
our portfolio. 10 years of
designs and installations.
From one-of-a-kind pieces to
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(313) 628-1406

Noon Lunch

2:00

12:45

Health Alert: Conquests and

Celebrations Rena Blumberg

2:00

Getting Through It - And Going On
Joanne Zuroff,
President and founder of
Recovery & Discovery, Inc.

Getting Through it - And Going On
Joanne Zuroff, President and founder
of Recovery & Discovery, Inc.

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Watch for upcoming seminars in May!

For reservations, call 313/626-1985.
Seminar Cost: $90 per person (includes lunch).

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Local & Nationwide Delivery

Jerusalem (JTA) — The
continued detention of
Israeli furniture - importer
David Ovitz in an Egyptian
jail became a domestic polit-
ical issue here this week
with the potential to explode
into a diplomatic confronta-
tion with Cairo.
Foreign Minister David
Levy sent a message to the
Egyptian foreign minister,
Amre Moussa, demanding
the immediate release of Mr.
Ovitz, who is suspected of
espionage.
Although he has been held
in custody for more than 60
days, no formal charges have
been brought against the
Israeli.
The Givatayim resident
was remanded for an addi-
tional 45 days by an Egyp-
tian court last week and is
not expected to be released
in the immediate future,
despite Mr. Levy's tough
note.
The Israeli foreign min-
ister seemed to favor quiet,
behind- the-scenes diploma-
cy. But he was spurred to
more visible action by
criticism from his political
archrival, Ariel Sharon, and
by mounting public pressure
generated by Ovitz family
members.

First Passover
For Immigrants

Jerusalem (JTA) — On a
warm, sunny day in early
April, a group of senior
citizens takes part in a
ceremony that few have ever
seen first-hand: a Passover
seder.
Seated around long tables
filled to the brim with salads
and gefilte fish, the par-
ticipants chat about apart-
ments and rent subsidies,
their grandchildren and the
"old country."
Dressed in their holiday
best, they have come from
all over Jerusalem to take
part in a model seder and to
learn about the holiday of
Passover. Equally impor-
tant, they have come to see
their friends.
Until recently, these peo-
ple were part of what Leesha
Rose calls "the forgotten
immigrants."
The participants, mostly
elderly Jewish immigrants
from the former Soviet Re-
publics, "are the left-overs of
our aliyah." They cannot get
work because of their age.
The young children go to
school; their parents go to
ulpan in order to advance
and stand on their own.

