• . : • Nth I ana and Austin Brooks are Hip Hop in their New Fall Fashions from Koochie Koo! • 44, TEITEL page 119 A"; ■ 4 k; l t 4\1 +EY 4■1 : tS. -V• \ p 1 a 4, . fr 17; rfr 1,„ I II *4 a license plate for his con- vertible. It read: IOU 00. He also framed a letter from the Internal Revenue Service, which informed him he had been audited and owed nothing. A friend, Harold Haas, remembers Mr. Teitel as someone "who always met his obligations." Mr. Teitel's sense of pride and self-sufficiency extend- ed into his final months of life and plans for death, friends say. "Ben was a handler," Mr. Cook says. "He even wanted to handle things when he was dead. He said, 'I'm not going to be any more sloppy in giving the money away than I was in making it.' " Under the auspices of Mr. Cook, the Ben Teitel Charitable Trust gives money to Jewish, but large- ly non-religious, organiza- tions that primarily assist programs for youth, elderly and education in metropoli- tan Detroit and Israel. Beneficiaries include: The Harriett and Ben Teitel Day Care Center in Yavne, a preschool for children in Detroit's sister city; and the Harriett and Ben Teitel Jewish Federation Apartment Building in Oak Park. The Teitel Charitable Trust contributed $250,000 to fly 190 Soviet Jews to Israel and in 1990 and another large sum of money to establish the Harriett and Ben Teitel Oncology Day Care Unit at the Children's Medical Center of Israel. "It seems that there isn't a day or a week when I pick up the newspaper and don't read something that's being done with Ben's trust," said Jeanette Cook, Mr. Teitel's sister. Mrs. Cook relates a story about her brother — a story that, perhaps, demonstrates the message of the poem, Mr. Teitel kept in his wal- let: "When Harriett was dying and the doctor said, live each day as if it were Saturday night, Ben's and Harriett's response was: We've always done that." Now is the time to work, to live, to do with a will; Place no faith in tomor- row, for the clock may then be still. ❑ er In Orchard Mall • 855.8818 • Orchard Lake Rd. At Maple 0. K onbou Room of Hair Fashions CUSTOM WIG SPECIALISTS ATTENTION • For Men & Women with thinning hair. Beautiful Wigs - Hair Pieces. • Natural Looking • Comfortable • Affordable Your children's charm connection... wswie serl iny,,404. (Only Your Hairdresser Will Know) Personal Service by Barbara (APPOINTMENT NECESSARY FOR PRIVATE CONSULTATIONS) E ',W C131 31219 Five Mile Road UVONIA Across from Merri-5 Plaza 427-4264 Completely charming! 141ct. peasant charms Very Specially Priced... $39.00 each • Clinical Teaching • Testing/Evaluation • Therapeutic Tutoring 545-6677 • 433-3323 120 25201 Coolidge, Oak Park 4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills Diamonds and Fine Jewelry 26400 W. 12 Mile Road Southfield, MI 48034 (313) 357-5578 Campaign Units To Hear Hoenlein Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice-president of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- tions, the coordinating body of international Jewish con- cerns for almost 50 national Jewish organizations, will ad- dress a luncheon on behalf of the Allied Jewish Campaign 11 a.m. Sept. 13. The gathering, at the home of Meryl Podolsky, is for women contributors of $5,Q00 or more to the 1993 Cam- paign and their daughters and is sponsored by the Jewish Federation Women's Division Ruby and Lion of Judah sections. Mr. Hoenlein previously served as the founding ex- ecutive director of the Jewish Community Relations Coun- cil of Greater New York, and was the founding executive director of the Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry. A writer and lecturer on international relations, Israel and Middle East Af- fairs, he is frequently con- Malcolm Hoenlein suited by public officials, as well as civic and communal agencies. For reservations by Sept. 5, contact Sally Krugel at the Jewish Federation, 642-4260. ❑ All our exercises in piety are only introductory to our union with God. —Rabbi Jacob Katz