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Contract Required. 1st day free car rental in HAMILTON Las Vegas and all Florida destinations upon MILLER initial booking. Rates vary with dates. All seats are capacity controlled. Fares are HUDSON non-retroactive. & FAYNE TRAVEL CORPORATION 29566 Northwestern, Southfield, MI CALL YOUR TRAVEL AGENT Company Ar "r14 ains HOLOCAUST MUSEUM DAY TRIP $175.90 August 24, 1993 Airfare, Transfers, Museum For insurance call SY WARSHAWSKY, C.L.0 7071 Orchard Lake Road Suite 110 In the J&S Office Bldg. W. Bloomfield, MI 48322 626-2652 Office Phone See me for car, home, life and health insurance Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there. West Bloomfield T HE D ETR O IT JE WIS H N EWS 6400 Farmington Road North of Sinai Building With a Recent Increase in Occupancy, This is an Ideal Opportunity for a 3000 sq. ft. General Office User to Own a 21,000 sq. ft. Building. 474-3855 33290 W. 14 MILE ROAD WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322 (313) 7374111 W E Jonathan Brateman Properties COMPUTERS 'N MORE Robert Naftaly ile working in Lansing als the state budget director under the Blanchard administration, ROBERT NAFTALY developed a rep- utation as one of the media's best friends. His forte is helping reporters gather information — with one critical condi- tion: Keep his name out of the headlines. He hates too much attention. "I'm just an accountant," he routinely says. "I'll help you. But please, quote some- one else." His request is usually hon- ored. And so Mr. Naftaly has successfully avoided publici- ty. But in October, every- thing will change. The chief financial officer and treasur- er for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan will be honored with the coveted Champion of Liberty award of the Anti-Defamation League. Mr. Naftaly is ADL's financial problem solver. Formerly the ADL's national budget chairman, he now serves on several ADL national boards. Among them: treasurer, board of commissioners and executive committee. Mr. Naftaly, who is involved in many commu- nity organizations, also is a former president of the Michigan Regional board of the ADL. UGENE SHERIZEN has run his business so well that the Lighting Supply Co. of Ferndale has become one of the largest lighting distributors in the Midwest. Now Mr. Sherizen is also doing his part to help protect the environment. Recently, the company became one of 100 lighting distributors in the United States to be awarded the U.S. Environmental Protec- COME SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF COMPUTER PRODUCTS We Service, Buy & Sell New & Used IBM Compatible Computers. tion Agency title of Green Lights Distributor Ally. As a participant, Lighting Supply will encourage other businesses to install energy- efficient lighting. Companies that make the commitment to the voluntary, non-regula- tory program will profit by seeing lower electric bills and improvements in light- ing quality. Participating companies will help reduce air pollution caused by elec- tricity generation. To help educate the com- munity and to make other Detroit area corporations more energy efficient, Lighting Supply has hired JEFF IVEY as an outside commercial account repre- sentative in charge of on-site energy audits. Richard Victor ICHARD VICTOR, an attorney specializing in R child custody, was thrust onto center stage in 1983 when he founded the Grandparents Rights Organization. Long before the advocacy group for grandparents was founded, Mr. Victor was a child advocate. And last month, Mr. Victor was awarded the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges highest honor for meritorious service to the children of America. Also receiving the award was Circuit Court Judge EDWARD SOSNICK, who co-founded the Start Making It Livable for Everyone (SMILE) program with Mr. Victor in 1989. The program provides educational infor- mation to parents going through divorce or separa- tion on the needs of their children. Today, Mr. Victor's name may be best associated with the DeBoer-Schmidt custody case that has rocked the L_ IF -1- 401 ■ 1 nation. Mr. Victor took a pro- bono case on behalf of 2Y- year-old "Jessica DeBoer" last April after she was thrust in the middle of a messy custody case between Jan and Roberta DeBoer, the Ann Arbor couple who raised her, and Dan and Cara Schmidt of Iowa, her biologi- cal parents. Last week, Jessica was sent by court order to the Schmidts. Mr. Victor, who became Jessica's personal represen- tative because "no one was considering the best interest of the child," said this case is over. But, he said, he will continue to work within the legal profession to get laws changed to better protect children from these situa- tions. "They both made mis- takes," he said of the DeBoers and the Schmidts. "And the child is a victim." LIDS SERVICES, a 27- Ilyear-old Farmington Hills-based food service and hospitality management firm, is feeling at home in kosher kitchens. Recently, the company — with accounts scattered throughout the Midwest, New England, Florida and Arizona -- acquired food ser- vice contracts for Borman Hall in Detroit and Prentis Manor in Southfield. JEFF YAUCH of HDS will serve as food service director for the 212-bed Borman, and LOU HAWKINS of HDS has taken the position of food services director for the 100- bed Prentis Manor. The company also recently signed kosher dining service contracts with Kinneret, a 300-bed senior apartment community in Orlando, Fla., and with the 103-bed Willow Wood Home for Jewish Aged in New Orleans. In addition to these new dining partnerships, HDS manages kosher dining ser- vices at Menorah Manor in St. Petersburg, Fla., and the Home for Jewish Aged of Rhode Island in Providence. IN BRIEF K EVIN TAYLOR, former j udicial clerk to the Michigan Court of Appeals and practitioner in the areas of insurance, litigation and appellate practice, has joined KUDOS page 34