MEET COUSIN BARRY He's a dentist who's looking for a tall, blonde, athletic girl with good oral hygiene who shares his passion for Golden Blintzes. Other brands of blintzes try to copy our secret recipe and great taste. But smart people know there's only one original. For over 40 years we've been making blintzes with the best fresh cheese and whole fresh fruit. And Golden Blintzes have up to 40% more filling than some brands. So anytime you want a great low fat (not including potato blintz) meal or dessert with as little as 80 calories per blintz, get Golden. Because nobody makes a better blintz. MMI GA len. 6 CHEESE BLINTZES Get real. Get Golden: voents...Are You Prepared t o Rry o e t cornell The Industry Leader in Ballroom Dance Instruction has added Spectacular classes to our Summer Line Up FREE DANCE CLASS* GLASSES INCLUDE Dance Mix Unlimited • Strictly 13allroom - One Singular Sensation MEN & WOMEN WELCOME! 1st Session Begins Week of June 26, 1995... Held at our STUDIO. We focus on Individual Attention *Offer ends 7/1/95 THE BEST MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT, KEEPS GETTING FETTER! (8101626-1100 MIRIA1VI JERRIS, the first ex- ecutive director of the Society for Humanistic Judaism, will retire to pursue a graduate degree in clinical and humanistic psychol- ogy. She will continue to serve the movement as the director of the Rabbinic Program of the In- ternational Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism. Amy Marks AMY MARKS of Farmington Hills has been elected president of the National Federation of Temple Youth, Michigan Region. Past activities with NFTY in- clude the Regional Programming Committee. Amy is the immedi- ate past president of Temple Is- rael's Youth Group, the Youth Federation of Temple Israel (YVFI). She has worked at Tem- ple Israel's Religious School as an aide and served as a member of the Temple's Board of Trustees; she has also assisted JARC residents at special events. The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) made DR. MYRON GINSBERG an "ACM Fellow" in honor of his outstanding achievements in high-performance computing and his significant contributions to the ACM; he was cited for "pi- oneering and sustained contri- butions to supercomputing research and its applications to the automotive industry in ad- dition to distinguished teaching and service in high-performance computing." He is the first and only ACM Fellow so far to be recognized for his contributions to the automotive industry. Dr. Ginsberg is a consultant sys- tems engineer in the High-End Computing Section of the Elec- tronic Data Systems' (EDS) Ad- vanced Computing Center at the General Motors Research And Development Center in Warren. MARINA POLISHCHUK, a seventh grader at Norup Middle School in Oak Park, is a schol- arship winner to the Lyric Chamber Ensemble's Summer Music Camp. She immigrated last year to the United States for Harkov, Russia, where she was attending the Beethoven Music School. MATTHEW HARRISON EDER received a pin and a cer- tificate of merit from North- western University for scoring very highly on the SAT exam. He is in the 7th grade at Green Hills Middle School in Ann Arbor. ERIC ROSENTHAL of Farm- ington Hills has been named First Runner Up, State of Michi- gan, Student Teacher of the Year for 1995. The annual contest, sponsored by the Michigan As- sociation of Teacher Educators, was open to the state's student teachers. Mr. Rosenthal did his student teaching at Farmington Hills Harrison High School. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan and obtained his teaching certificate in secondary education, Spanish and history, from Wayne State University. Eric Rosenthal SUSAN SCHREIBER has been appointed to the principal- ship of Maple Elementary in Walled Lake effective with the 1995-96 school year. Ms. Schreiber, has been with the dis- trict since 1990. DANIEL LEVI and DANIEL HONIG, eighth grade students at Hillel Day School, have been named to the Michigan Honor Roll for placing in the top five percent of Michigan participants in the 10th Annual America Ju- nior High School Mathematics Examination. Publicity Deadlines The normal deadline for local news and publicity items is noon Thursday, eight days pri- or to issue date. The deadline for birth announcements is 10 a.m. Monday, four days prior to issue date; out-of-town obitu- aries, 10 a.m. Tuesday, three days prior to issue date.