VOLVO 850
UNIVERSAL WATCH REPAIR
LARGEST FACILITY IN MICHIGAN
SPECIALIZING IN ROLEX REPAIRS
TWO YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL MAJOR REPAIRS
A Quick History
Of Pesach Foods
ARNOLD R. GLICK
SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS
REGULAR
WATCH
BATTERY
Coupon Expires May 12, 1995
L
WITH SIDE IMPACT AIR BAGS.
SEIKO, WITTNAUER & CITIZEN AUTHORIZED MATERIAL DISTRIBUTORS
Experts in repair & restorations of all repeaters
multiple chronographs & antique time pieces
1 Yr. Warranty - Estimates on request
'399/M0*
UWR is not an Authorized Repair Facility for any of the companies listed above
28411 NORTHWESTERN HWY.
AT BECK RD. SUITE 250
SOUTHFIF1D, MI
36 MONTH LEASE
810) 358-2211
• 10% of MSRP CAP COST REDCUCTION
• $250.00 ACQUISITION FEE
• $425.00 SECURITY DEPOSIT
• 154 PER MILE OVER 36,000 MILES
• PURCHASE OPTION $18, 629.00
VOLVO
Drive Safely
DWYER
AND
SONS
VOLVO/SUBARU
Family Owned Since 1959
OPEN SATURDAYS!
Wishing All Our
Friends and Clients
A Happy and Healthy
Passover
Maple Rd. West of Haggerty
6240400
'Offered by Volvo Car Finance, Inc. through DWYER AND SONS VOLVO through 5/15/95.
Subject to credit approval and availability from existing dealer inventory. Customers must take
delivery by 5/15/95. CCR may be comprised of dealer and/or term may affect monthly payments.
Customer responsible at signing for CCR, list monthly payment, $250 acquisition fee, $425
refundable security deposit, totaling $4145, plus insurance, taxes, title and registration fees. Lessee
responsible for maintenance and repairs not covered under warranty. Totd of payments, $15,225.84.
Purchase option does not include any official fees and taxes. See Dwyer and Sons Volvo for details.
ILIEC
uslcurr
MASrER
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2 65 71 W. Twelve Mile • Southfield • 352-7030
(Closed Mondays)
Give your heart
an extra helping.
Sam's Detail Shop
Say no to high-fat foods.
-
•
.
"The Ultimate in Automotive Appearance Care"
(810) 855-5600
• Automotive Cleaning • Customizing • Pre Sale Preparations
• Pick-up and Delivery • Bonded and Insured • Acessory Sales & Installation
116
32671 Northwestern Hwy. • Bet. Middlebelt & Orch. Lk. Rd. • Farmington Hills
Sam Rozenberg
°
4
.
,
Heart
Association
American
And on the 15th day of the first
month is the feast of unleavened
bread; seven days ye shall eat un-
leavened bread." This is the bib-
lical directive instructing us that
during the week of Passover no
bread is to be eaten. The reason
for this is easy to understand. As
is stated in the Haggadah, "The
dough of our forefathers did not
have sufficient time to raise ...
for they were driven from Egypt
and could not linger."
That explains the matzah.
But, as any Passover food
shopper knows, there is much
more to Passover foods than
matzah. Indeed, even in all of its
many forms. — as matzah farfel,
matzah meal, matzah crackers,
matzah balls — matzah is not the
primary filler of supermarket
shelf space. That is because in re-
cent years many other food items
have become part of the contem-
porary passover tradition.
Let's start with the holiday's
No. 1 non-matzah food item:
Passover candy. It's everywhere.
You can't avoid it, even if you try.
In college I had a friend who —
convinced that the Israelites fled
Egypt without fruit gels or
caramel cashew clusters — was
determined that she was like-
wise going to survive the week
without candy. It was impossi-
ble. She broke down less than
four hours into the holiday as the
second box of assorted chocolates
was being passed around the
seder table.
Of course, passover candy is
nothing new. I remember, as a
young child in the 1960s, accom-
panying my mother when she did
the Passover shopping. At that
time the Jewish community of
my city was well along its way of
moving out to the suburbs; and,
as a result, there was but a small
remnant of Jewish storekeepers
in what was once a bustling
neighborhood of Jewish com-
merce.
Every year before Passover my
mother made sure that we visit-
ed each of the Jewish grocery
stores that still remained, so that
we could help them, in our small
way, by giving them our Passover
business. I remember anticipat-
ing our annual trip with a mix-
ture of melancholy and
excitement. The sadness came
from seeing the poor Jewish
storekeepers struggling to hold
on to their anachronistic busi-
nesses. The source of excitement
was knowing that in these old-
fashioned grocery stores there
Arnold R. Clock is a lawyer, free-
lance writer, and cartoosist in
Brookline, Mass.