Erhard IT'S HOT...IT'S AFFORDABLE AND...AVAILABLE NOW! Moving Pictures An ADL board member videotapes "women of achievement." JULIE WIENER STAFF WRITER W AY, ERHARD BMW MA LE 4065 Maple Just E. of Telegraph Bloomfield Hills 042 ■ r6.565 OPEN SATURDAY SALES 10 A.M.-4 P.M. Michigan's Largest and Most Experienced BMW Dealer Family Owned and Operated Since 1964 SERVICE/PARTS/SALES Mon. & NIL 'hi 9 p.m. "36 month closed end lease subject to approved credit with BMWFS. $2500 non-refundable down payment required. Title, license and use tax addi- tional. A security deposit of $600.00 for 528ia. 10,000 miles per year limit, 15 cents per mile over limit. Option to purchase at lease end of $28,136.65 for 528ia.. Total payments equal to ad price + 6% x 36. Vehicle subject to availability and may need to be ordered. Scheduled Maintenance provided by BMW of North America for a period of 36 months or 36,000 miles. Offer ends April 30, 1997. Urology Specialists of Michigan, P.C. Donald F. Moylan, M.D. William F. Spencer, M.D. Howard J. Korman, M.D. Larry T. Sirls, M.D., F.A.C.S. are pleased to announce the opening of a new office Staffed by Howard J. Korman, M.D. Beaumont Medical Building 6900 Orchard Lake Road, Suite 213 West Bloomfield, Michigan 48322 (810) 855-5635 one knows Jews have horns. It made me realize that while I felt like everyone else, to them I was —/ different. I guess I feel like I have to do this work so that no one touches my children's heads." Ms. Yorke, who is vice presi- dent of Temple Israel and serves on the national board of Hadas- sah, is being honored for her work both in the Jewish community and with intergroup initiatives. Through Temple Israel, Hadas- sah and the Ecumenical Institute, she has initiated numerous in- tergroup dialogues, social action activities and leadership de- velopment. One of the projects she helped start is the Ecu- menical Institute's Church- Synagogue Tour, an event she likens to a "progressive dinner." Over the course of three hours, participants vis- it two churches and a syna- gogue, meeting with their religious leaders and con- gregants. The 1997 Greater Detroit Women of Achievement awards takes place Thurs- day, May 1, at the Radisson Plaza Hotel in Southfield. In addition to Susan Yorke, honorees are Brenita Craw- -/ ford; president and CEO of Mercy Hospital; Dalia Gar- cia, manager of training and de- velopment at Mexican Industries; and Jane Thomas, assistant dean at Wayne State University School of Medicine. In addition, a lifetime achieve- ment award will be presented to Mildred Jeffrey, governor emeri- ta of the Wayne State University =\ board of governors. ABC News Senior Correspon- dent Bettina Gregory will be the guest speaker. According to Nancy Bechek, ADL's director of development for the Michigan region, ADL plans to make the Women of Achieve- ment awards an annual event. "The response has been very pos- itive," she said. "Our goal is to C point out the wonderful and nu- merous efforts that are made by many people in the metro Detroit area toward building bridges of tolerance and understanding." Funds raised from the $125- per-ticket event will "help support the many programs of the ADL, and its fact-finding research which we are well known for," said Ms. Bechek. PH OTO BY B ILL 1-IANSEN hen Susan Bonin volun- teered to produce a video for the Anti-Defamation League's first Detroit Women of Achievement benefit, she wasn't expecting the experi- ence to change her life. A professional documentary video producer and ADL board member, the West Bloomfield res- ident thought a video in which the honorees got to tell their own sto- ries might be more powerful than the usual speeches. However, in talking to the five women from di- verse backgrounds whom the Susan Bonin interviews Women of Achievement winner Susan Yorke. ADL has named "women of achievement" for their communi- ty efforts, Ms. Borin found herself becoming personally moved. "It was incredible finding out about the common ribbon in their pasts and the incidents of dis- crimination that spurred them on to be activists," she said. "It was an angle that I didn't even realize was going to happen when I start- ed." She was pleased with the hon- esty and openness of her subjects. "People were really going within themselves," she said. Among the women being hon- ored is Susan Yorke of West Bloomfield, whose commitment to community activism stems in part from early encounters with bigotry. Ms. Yorke, who is Jew- ish, and her family moved to what was then called Bloomfield Town- ship in the 1950s, before most oth- er Jews had left the city, and she attended Bloomfield High (now Andover). "I was one of the only Jewish students in a school of 500," she recalled. "One day one of the kids came over to me and put his hand on my head. When I asked him what he was doing, he said he was feel- ing for my horns, because every- ❑ For ticket reservations for the Women of Achievement event, call the ADL, (810) 355-3730.