Gtzterbitr oittizekke LIFE Are you concerned about retirement housing and healthcare for your Parents? So are we. Canterbury on-the-Lake understands your concerns. We are creating a wonderful place for your parents which will include: • Gracious independent and assisted living apartments • Five spacious floor plans • Fine dining in an elegant setting • Healthcare center on the campus • Educationallsocial facilities • State of the art security/fire alarm systems • Park-like setting with nature trails and water views All for an affordable monthly fee Call or visit Canterbury on-the-Lake marketing office today. 5601 Highland Waterford, MI 48327 1-800-554-0613 HAVE YOU MET THE NEW JEWISH DOCTOR IN TOWN? HAVE YOU BEEN TROUBLED BY • NUMBNESS, TINGLING, SLEEPING SENSATION IN YOUR LEGS OR FEET? • NUMBNESS, TINGLING, SLEEPING SENSATION IN YOUR ARMS OR HANDS? • DIFFICULTY RISING FROM A SEATED POSITION QUICKLY? • HEADACHES BY THE END OF THE DAY? • ANY BACKPAIN BROUGHT ON WHILE SITTING TOO LONG? • HESITATION ABOUT PLAYING GOLF OR TENNIS BECAUSE A BODY PART HURTS? THESE ARE WARNING SIGNS! MAYBE IT'S NOT "ARTHRITIS" OR "OLD AGE." To Introduce You To Our Office YOU SHOULD SEE DR. HOLLAND Gary J. Holland, D.C. t°' Family Chiropractic Center 32522 Northwestern Hwy. Farmington Hills 855-4900 so 00 Special 1. A Health History and Consultation 2. An Orthopedic and Neurological Examination of the Spine 3. Initial X-Rays of the spine if Required (Limit two if indicated) 4. Report to Patient CALL: FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT LOCATED IN THE COURTYARD PLAZA, NEXT TO TAMARA'S INSTITUTE DE BEAUTE SILVER COINS ANTIQUE JEWELRY GOLD COINS POCKET WATCHES TIFFANY COIN COLLECTIONS FRANKLIN MINT ROLEX WATCHES STERLING SILVER STICK PINS SILVER DOLLARS BROACHES ANTIQUE SILVER HUMMELS FLATWARE SETS SILVER BARS CANDLESTICKS DIAMONDS PAPER MONEY GEMSTONES PATEK PHILLIPE SCRAP GOLD VACHERON OBJECTS D'ART TEA SERVICES BOWLS & TRAYS CARTIER COIN WATCHES VAN CUFF RINGS PIAGET POSTCARDS PENDANTS 10-24 KARAT GOLD CHAINS ROYAL DOULTON EARRINGS We are interested in serv- ing you or your client in the appraisal or liquida- tion of your coins, jewelry. collectibles or an entire estate. PLEASE CALL OR STOP IN! A $150 value new patients only. Expires On Jan. 31, 1993 HOURS: MON.-WED.-FRI. 9-6 TUES. & THURS. 10-4 1393 6. WOODWARD AEC. HIRMIAIONAM, MI 48009 (31 3) 644-8565 Monday to Saturday. 9 am to 6 pm Metro Dealer for Over 35 Years page 31 palpable, not only to those who perpetuated it, but to those who study it. As an example, he relates an incident that occurred during an in-service with teachers being trained to teach the curriculum. At one point during the "trial" which the teachers were reenacting just as their students would, one of the teachers suddenly stopped to address his colleagues. "We're all on trial here," he blurted out. In a study conducted by the Center for the Study of the Child required for its federal grant application, students from 15 high school history classes throughout Oakland Coun- ty were introduced to the Life curriculum. The students, along with 14 other regular history classes at the same schools, were then given an essay test. The essays were scored by "blind" trained scorers who were Oakland University faculty members. The study showed the students who studied Life were, among other things': better able to express consequences of indifference' toward the mistreatment of others. At Ferndale High School, Barb Demlow's class on th Holocaust is an elective class, not a required one, ba it has proved to be one of the.. most popular classes at the high school. Holly Monro, a senior taking the class, is not Jewish. Few at Fer-2dal High School are. ShP that the course has'dfrep enlightened her about ti, - Holocaust. "The course has made m less judgmental of othE races. And it has answerc , a lot of questions, like 1— numbers (of Jews killed.' and how horrible it was. didn't think they kille- almost all the Jews (in Gel many and Poland)." ❑ Burial Caves Raise Concern Jerusalem (JTA) — Archae- ologists unearthed two Se- cond Temple burial caves in Jerusalem's French Hill neighborhood, triggering fears of renewed unrest in the haredi, or fervently Or- thodox, community over pro- fanation of the dead. This latest find came less than a week after an earlier controversy surrounding such graves was resolved with the reinterment of bones and coffins as demanded by the haredim and Jerusalem Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Kolitz. In his eulogy at the burial ceremony last week at Har Hamenuhot cemetery, Rabbi Kolitz asked forgiveness from "our sainted forefathers," the unknown persons whose bones and coffins were being unearthed and reinterred. The controversy led last week to three straight nights of mass street violence in the Jerusalem haredi neighborhoods of Geula and Mea Shearim. At issue was whether the sarcophagi would be buried with the bones within, as the rabbis insisted, or kept for scientific study, as the ar- chaeologists demanded. In the end, the head of the Israel Antiquities Depart ment, reserve Lt. Drori, gave in to strong pc litical pressures. He wa, strongly criticized for doing so by the newspape Ha'aretz as well as archac ologists. Regarding the caves ri cently found, the archaE ologists said it is up to the municipality to deci&- whether an overpasi., planned for the area woul' be built over these caves. 1 , the construction is to go for ward, the Antiquitie:,‘ Department is required by law to excavate the area first. Another possibility would be to redesign the overpass., moving it away from the I controversial area. Meanwhile, residents of the outlying suburb of Pisgat Ze'ev have warned that any delay in building the overpass will trigge massive demonstrations by since they a rr adversely affected by cons- tant rush-hour traffic jams in French Hill.