Aim, Arbor comes to West Bloomfield! One of Michigan's finest A-Irt Festivals! Free Admission 2nd Annual Presented by: West Bloomfield AIRToticir Paging Art Festival ' Featuring 250 high caliber artists and contemporary craftsmen from over 35 states They Say It's Your Birthday JULIE YOLLES ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR -5 MEADE L-EXUS . Sponsored by: West Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce (Observer Eccentric June 29 & 30 Sat. Sum. • 10 am - 6 pm Ara CELLULARONE Located outdoors at the Henry Ford Medical Center FIRST USA. On 15 Mile &adjust opposite the .Kt ' Iloward .H a in Lvents, mwducing.tmerica's Finest .111 restirwls p.:07- 74:1 tur,414 810-539-3332 kt).1 1 ,i cionatiort to- • 01" „%toievk feroice ct donation/ to 0 Your Tribute Gift helps the agency serve people of all ages, lifestyles and circumstances. To phone in a Tribute Gift or for convenient Tribute Order Forms, please call (810) 559-1500. —4111 )FS Program and Name Funds are also available to support specific agency services. Please call 559-1500 for additional information. Minimum Tribute Card donation remains only $5.00/card. JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE 24123 Greenfield Road • Soufhfielcl, MI 48075 • (810) 559-1500 6960 Orchard Lake Road • Suite 202 • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 • (810) 737-5055 Between "Tonight Show" tapings, Jay Leno manages to be the maven of antique cars and will serve as grand marshal for the National Auto100 Parade in Detroit on Sunday. at's all the hoopla about? In 1896, brothers Charles E. and J. Frank Duryea es- Vta blished the Duryea Mo- tor Wagon Co. in Springfield, Mass., and the first automobile company in America was born. The company manufactured 13 identical machines, the first in- stance of serial production of American cars. Today, the only surviving one of these little horse- less-carriage wonders is on exhibit at Henry Ford Museum as part of the "Automobile in American Life” exhibition. But what if the Duryea broth- ers, on that immortal day in 1896, hadn't come out with the first car, the Duryea? What impact has the car had on American life and cul- ture? The American Automobile Centennial Commission (AACC) wants you to know. "One in seven jobs in America is related to the automotive in- dustry," says AACC President Jeff Smith. So, throughout the country, communities are host- ing parades, festivals, exhibits and displays in a week-long cele- bration as part of the year-long 100th anniversary salute to cars, cars, cars. Here's what's happening in the World's Motor Capital: Friday, June 21, 7:30 p.m. — The Contours Concert — Mo- town's own will perform a pre- Corel Great Race concert at the Southfield Civic Center Pavilion. $10. Doors open at 7 p.m. (810) 353-6444. Friday, June 21-SUnday, June 23, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. — The 24th Annual Sloan Museum Summer Antique Auto Fair — More than 1,000 antique, clas- sic and special-interest cars are brought together on the grounds of the Flint Cultural Center. (810) 760-1169. Saturday, June 22, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. — The Great American Cruise-In — Car collectors from around the country are making the national road trip to create the largest gathering of antique and classic cars in history. Michi- gan State Fairgrounds. (313) 832- 1996. Saturday, June 22, 6:30 p.m. — Centennial Gala Dinner — A historic tribute to America's love affair with the automobile and special remarks by "Tonight Show" host Jay Leno. Detroit Cobo Center. (313) 832-1996. Sunday, June 23, 1:00 p.m. —