FIRE page 101
CADILLAC LEASE SPECIALS!
1994 Seville® SLS.
STK 1H008
$477
• New 270-hp Northstar System V8
• Real-time Road-Sensing Suspension
• Full-range Traction Control
99
A MONTH / 24 MONTHS
SMART EASE
WITH $2,000 DOWN"
• Anti-lock brakes
• Dual front air bags*
1994 Eldorado
$44900
• Anti-lock brakes
• Dual front air bags*
• New 270-hp Northstar System V8
A MONTH /y24 MOTES
LEASE
WITH $2,000 DOWN
'Always vecar rainy bats, even air bags.
"Based on $2,000 down. Lease based on 24 month approved credit, plus first month & security & tax, title, destination, plates. Subject to 4%
use tax. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at predetermined price at deal inception. All applicable rebates assigned to dealer. Photos may
not represent actual sales vehicles. Prices good thru 11-31-93. Mile limitation of 12,000 for Seville, 24,000 for Eldorado. 15( per mile excess
charge over limitation. To get total payments, multiply payment by number of months.
CABILLAC...CHANGING THE WAY YOU THINK ABOUT AMERICAN AUTOMOBILES
Suburban
HOURS: Monday & Thursday 9.9, Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 9.6
1810 Maplelawn in the Troy Motor Mall 64341070
nas been especially good), es-
tablishing "listening times"
when a child can speak freely
about his feelings, and offering
constant, positive reinforcement
to help children be happy and
secure.
A mother of three, Ms. Kreid-
man also is the author of Light
His Fire: How To Keep Your
Man Passionately and Hope-
lessly In Love With You and
Light Her Fire: How To Ignite
Passion and Excitement in the
Woman You Love.
In his new book,
Paul Robeson
Jr. Speaks To
America (Rut-
gers University
Press), the son of
the famed entertainer and civ-
il rights leader discusses every-
thing from issues of race in
America to university admis-
sions policies for minorities. He
also includes an extensive chap-
ter on black-Jewish relations.
Mr. Robeson, a lecturer on
American and Russian society,
traces the reasons for recent
Jewish-black tensions, and ad-
dresses black anti-Semitism
and Jewish racism and the rea-
sons the two groups should
reaffirm their alliance. Among
these, he says:
An irrevocable split between
Jews and blacks, combined
with the collapse of the anti-
conservative coalition in Con-
gress, would invite an upsurge
in WASP expressions of bigotry
against Jews and blacks alike.
Racial and ethnic discrimina-
tion would then tend toward a
dangerous merger as the sup-
pressed WASP "master-race" in-
stincts, revealed during the
Manifest Destiny period of the
nineteenth century, returned.
Childhood in a
Shtetl (Ganton
Books, Cupertino,
Calif.), by A.P.
Gannes, combines
a personal memoir
with a broader historical pic-
ture of World War I and the
Russian Revolution.
Mr. Gannes, whose work is
filled with photographs and
hand-drawn maps, recreates
the world of the shtetl where
family and Jewish observance
was everything. It was a world
of warmth, courage and stoic-
ism.
At the same time, Jewish life
in Winograd in the Ukraine
was often harsh and painful.
Mr. Gannes recalls the terror
and trauma of the pogroms, the
unrelenting persecution of Jews
and the gradual destruction of
an entire way of life. ❑
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-
Project Olzma
Sends Delegates
Detroit has sent its eighth an-
nual delegation on Project Otz-
ma, a volunteer service and
leadership program in Israel for
young adults.
Project Otzma (Hebrew for
strength) is designed to
heighten Jewish identity and
commitment and strengthen
the bonds between North
American communities and
Israel. Participants are
spending the year working
and studying in Israel. On
their return, they will fulfill
a commitment of service to
the Detroit Jewish communi-
ty.
The program is coordinat-
ed by the Council of Jewish
Federations and adminis-
tered locally through the Is-
rael Desk of the Jewish
Federation of Metropolitan
Detroit.
Detroit's 11-member dele-
gation is made up of univer-
sity students and recent
graduates. They will learn
firsthand about Israel's his-
tory, language, culture and
lifestyle. The young adults
will live on a kibbutz for three
months, dividing their time
between intensive language
study (ulpan) and integration
into all aspects of kibbutz life.
Afterward, they will tutor
and work with Israeli and im-
migrant teens for six weeks
at a Youth Aliyah village or
absorption center. Partici-
pants will spend three weeks
either living on a religious
kibbutz, pioneering in the Ar-
ava Desert or assisting in en-
vironmental work in new
industrial sites in developing
areas.
The program will conclude
with a three-month residen-
cy working on community
projects in Detroit's Project
Renewal neighborhood in
Yavne.
This year's group includes:
Jennifer Auster of West
Bloomfield, Elliot Cosgrove of
Aim Arbor and Los Angeles,
Lynn Gumenick of Farming-
ton Hills, Stacey Hoffer of
Southfield, Lynn Kantor of
Rochester Hills, Noah Krugel
of Bloomfield, Amy Lavetter