DANIELLE PELEG GALLERY Special Summer Sale PAVILION page 101 From the following famous artists: Charles Fazzino Ken Keeley David Schluss Dan Partouche Itzchak Tarkay Alexander Kanchik Lea Avizedek Calman Shemi Rene Gruau Bracha Guy Romero Britto Itzchak Maimon Zjawinska Jiang Sarit Rubin Ben Avram Don Hatfield Amram Ebgi KAURO SAITO ems "Young Woman In Snow" Mezzotint TROY ART GALLERY 515 S. Lafayette At 6th, Royal Oak, Hours: 11:00-5:00 Tuesday - Saturday Or By Appointment (810) 548-7919 109 N. Center Downtown Northville (810) 349-4131 HAPPY HOUSE FURNITURE ROBERT AND TAMMY CRENSHAW HOURS: M-TH 10-6, FRI. 10-7, SAT. 10-5, SUN. 12-4 August 1 8 - September 2 4301 Orchard Lake Road at Lone Pine Road Crosswinds Mall • West Bloomfield (810) 626-5810 Hours: Monday-Saturday 10:00-6:00, Sunday 12:00-4:00 You can't enjoy jewelry if it's sitting in your safe deposit box. Sell or bor- row on it for immediate cash. We deal in jewelry. watches & gemstones. ANAPIOL \1171 A Service to Private Owners, Banks & Estates 29203 Northwestern Hwy. • Southfield (810) 356-5454 Gem/Diamond Specialists Fine Jewelers 02 Photographic Art Program Set 'When Image Is Everything: In- vesting In and Collecting Photographic Art" will be the subject of the next program in the Bank of Bloomfield Hills' 1995 Alternative Investment Se- ries on Thursday, Aug. 24, 7- 8:30 p.m. at the Townsend Hotel. Tom Halsted, of the Hal- sted Gallery, will be the featured speaker. There is no charge to attend, but reservations are necessary. For information or to make reservations, call the Bank of Bloomfield Hills, 540-6224. Ancient Nubia Exhibit Mounted TWO WEEKS ONLY! If you are not wearing it... sell it!... or BORROW on it! pottery, jewelry and painted chi- naware. This event recognizes the achievements of local arti- sans and offers the public the opportunity to meet the artists and purchase Michigan original art. For informaiton, call the Southfield Cultural Arts Divi- ison, (810) 354-4717. AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY G1A IN GRADING & EVALUATION Lawrence M. Allan, President 30400 Telegraph Rd. • Suite 134 Bingham Farms 642-5575 Daily "Til 5:30 Sat. 'Til 3 _ EST. 1919 Africa's diverse and sophisti- cated Nubian civilization, 3100 BCE to 400 CE, is the subject of a major exhibition, Ancient Nu- bia: Egypt's Rival in Africa, to open Sept. 29 at the Kelsey Mu- seum of Archaeology at the Uni- versity of Michigan. It will run through Dec. 15. The exhibition places ancient Nubians and their civilization in a new historical context, offering visitors a compelling well-founded perspective on this little-known African civi- lization. The exhibition was curated by Dr. David O'Connor while he was curator-in-charge of the Egyptian section of the Univer- sity Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology and professor in the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. In Ancient Nubia: Egypt's Ri- val in Africa, a wide variety of artifacts, including ceramic ves- sels, jewelry, statuary, and fu- nerary inscriptions, document the rise and fall of a series of Nu- bian kingdoms, the richness and variety of their indigenous cul- tures, and the complicated re- lationships they had with the pharaonic state of Egypt. Exhi- bition artifacts span a 3,500- year range, and come from different regions of the cultur- ally diverse Nubian civilization, which extended over 1,400 kilo- meters (868 miles) along the Nile Valley in what is now southernmost Egypt and the Su- dan. N (