Ulm Wouth AWONE WANT To Buy LEATunts..
FROM ANYWHERE FINE BUT HARPER?
our own research more seriously
— if a day school is an excellent
predictor of future involvement
in Jewish life, then let's make
sure that every family that wants
to send its children to day school
can do so. If Jewish young people
enjoy participating in social jus-
tice organizations, then let's make
sure there are plenty of them in
which to participate. One way to
break down barriers is to form
coalitions with groups that al-
ready attract people.
Jews are an extraordinarily
creative group of people. In a
sense we are too creative to re-
main completely unified. The
Jewish community is like a
stained glass window — differ-
ent colors, different shapes, dif-
ferent sizes, together combining
into a beautiful whole.
It is the interplay between con-
tinuity and discontinuity that has
kept Judaism a vibrant, living or-
ganism. ❑
Three piece sectional
as shown
Compare at
'5450'
NOW
$2,495°°
Compare at
'1490"
NOW
$75000
Film World
Loses Malle
Los Angeles (JTA) — Film di-
rector Louis Malle, whose works
included two searing portrayals
of the Jews' fate in Nazi-occupied
France, died at his home in Bev-
erly Hills, Calif.
Mr. Malle, who reportedly died
Nov. 23 of complications from
lymphoma, was 63. He was born
Oct. 30, 1932, in Thumieres, in
northern France.
A pioneer of the "New Wave"
of European directors, Mr.
Malle's films included 1987s Au
Revoir Les Enfants, based on
childhood experiences in wartime
France of Carmelite monks at his
boarding school who secretly shel-
tered Jewish boys. The monks
and the boys were betrayed by
a kitchen worker, and none sur-
vived the war.
The dramatic presentation of
friendship, betrayal and guilt is
considered Mr. Malle's finest and
most personal film.
In an earlier film, Lacombe,
Lucien, in 1974, Mr. Malle was
the first to break the unwritten
national taboo on any examina-
tion of French collaboration with
the Nazi occupiers.
Mr. Malle, the son of a wealthy
French industrialist and a sugar
heiress, was part Jewish, the Los
Angeles Times reported.
Mr. Malle came to the Unit-
ed States in 1975, eventually
marrying actress Candice
Bergen, the star of television's
"Murphy Brown."
Mr. Malle, who never won an
Academy Award, was associated
with more than 100 films, in-
cluding Silent World, Pretty Baby
and Damage.
• Living Room • Family Room • Dining Room • Bedroom
Natuzzi
LEATHER
*Prices may vary depending upon
grade of leather selected; matching
loveseat & chair available
HARPER
FURNITURE
The Comparison Shopper — Buys At Harper
545-3600
Whatever the size,
angle or dimension of
the room you want to
furnish, Natuzzi offers
any number of options
to make that space
your "special place."
916 N. Main, Royal Oak, N. of 11 Mile Rd. • HOURS: Tues., Wed., Sat. —10-5 • Mon., Thur., Fri. —10-8
Studio in Harvard Row Mall
151
&put, quahoirs
gints
. ng goucit
The
1204 S. Woodward, Royal Oak (Just North of 696)
Furniture
FREE In-Home Estimates
Refinishing,
Upholstery
Fabrics,
and Restoration Custom Paints,
Wall Coverings
and Window
Treatments
SPOT
50`)
/0-70°/0 OFF
ALL NAME BRANDS
• Vertical Blinds • Pleated Shades
• Levolor Blinds • Wood Blinds
21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd.
Harvard Row Mall
Southfield, Ml 48076
810-548-9515
)
•
Free Professional Measure at
No Obligation
Free in Home Design Consulting
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5
wrivil
352-8622
New Rochester Hills
P MosterCard
651-5009