Of Farmington Hills INFINITI OF FARMINGTON HILLS IS RANKED NUMBER 1 NATIONALLY FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IN SALES & SERVICE wise, Air, Dual. Air Alarm, Leather, • er $3 6 912%. ury cars around $30, 000 are missing. ..."...,...„:. „...: .......„. ... • :: ....,„ , ..,, . „.„,, , ,,• ,, .... ",, „,,...............„.......,•:,....„, , , . . . , v , , . . .i...i.. - . . , 4..,,,,,,f.,,,A.....i.,....' ,!.....; . . , .„::: , , ,. ik *2864 mo. The late Evan Shapiro. ' 24 amawamumwagmAig*toisem...:. (1:A) FREE SERVICE LOANER, FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY INFINITI Of Farmington Hills OPEN SATURDAYS, SALES AND SERVICE 24355 HAGGERTY ROAD • (810) 471.2220 • BETWEEN 10 MILE & GRAND RIVER '24 & 36 mo. closed-end lease. All leases require 1st mo.pymt. doc., title,license, ref. sec. dep., cash dn. S450 acq. fee, $490 for G20, plus applicable taxes at lease inception. total of payments for J30, 0, 45 is pymt. x term. J30 12,000 miles per year. 045 15,000 miles per year. 10c per mile overage at lease inception. G20 15c per mile. Lessee has option but is not obligated to purchase at lease end. All vehicle availability. Standard Guaranteed, auto protection included. Prior sales & leases excluded. Cji- Eartfiy nio9 Renew body and mind with KNEIPP Herbal Shower Gels and benefit from six different healthy showers. KNEIPP uses only the purest natural herbs, in high concentrations, to interact effectively with the natural healing and soothing powers of water. The Herbal Shower Gels gently and effectively cleanse and deodorize, leaving skin silky smooth. I.7,2/2E L.11.012E famoul / nEt.1212 - KNEIPP51" and lac E. For more information call: 1-800-378-4585 LAVENDER ATM. SEHASTIAN KSI-111 . IMO IA:1 KNEIPP® CORPORATION of AMERICA 11111111111 2 mimmiiiiiing GSGIATE (912E .Offart, on 16 012E 200112f I2E11.212 CA7SCIL_Sf2OWE'l gEf Dealer: If you allow a consumer the face value of this coupon toward the purchase of one of our specified products, we will pay you the face amount plus 8c handling. Any other use is fraud. Proof of sufficient stock must be furnished on request. Void where licensed, prohibited or restricted by law. Consumer must pay sales tax. Coupon cannot be assigned or transferred. Cash value 1/100th of 1c. Mail to: Kneipp Corp. of America, 675 Jaycee Drive, W. Hazleton, PA 18201. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE. MANUFACTURER COUPON L EXPIRES 05/01/96 Cranbrook Memorial For Evan Shapiro ALAN HITSKY ASSOCIATE EDITOR hen 18-year-old Evan Shapiro died last fall of cancer, scores of teen- agers attended his fu- neral and comforted his parents at the shiva. The Shapiros will never forget their kindness. The couple es- tablished several funds to help teens in Evan's name. A B'nai B'rith Youth Organization $1,000 scholarship was awarded in De- cember to help Gregg Finegood of Oak Park attend BBYO lead- ership and Judaism programs in Starlight, Pa., this summer. The University of Michigan is considering establishing an Evan Shapiro cancer-research fund. And on June 10, Cranbrook Kingswood school will hold its an- nual memorial service, honoring Evan and other alumni who have died in the last year. At the ser- vice, the Evan Shapiro Award for Academic Excellence will be an- nounced. The $500 award will be given to a 10th-grader, said Ar- lyce Seibert, head of Cranbrook Kingswood's upper school, be- cause Evan always helped un- derclassmen. "This is very unusual, but Evan had a tremendous legacy at this school," Ms. Seibert said. "It was a deep loss. The students and faculty were so close to him. He was so bright, so charismat- VV ic, so kind and sensitive to every- body." Eva Shapiro, Evan's mother, is administrator at Temple Israel. In addition to the projects estab- lished by Eva and Ray Shapiro, the temple's Couples Club creat- ed a college scholarship in Evan's memory. The June 10 ceremony at Cranbrook will stir different emo- tions for the Shapiros: the bitter memories of Evan's death and the recollections of the lives he touched. "Our family's coming in," Ms. Shapiro said. "We view this as a nice way to remember Evan." The memorial program will be held 3 p.m. June 10 in the Alum- ni Courtyard at Cranbrook Kingswood. Students Say lye' To School JILL DAVIDSON SKLAR STAFF WRITER o Temple Israel's high- school students, the last day of school meant more than "No more teachers, no more books." It also meant saying good-bye T