Introducing Luminettem Privacy SheersT" L Lj j r , Terao/FoL__IQ -- All the light of classic sheers. All the privacy of soft draperies. All the possibilities you can imagine. Iiunterpougias Window Shadings 11 Months And Counting k'wes,, qua/4p The MINI) SPOT 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, MI 48076 $25 OFFon Each Luminette Ordered with this ad. Previous orders excluded. COMPETITIVE PRICING & EXPERT INSTALLATION All other Hunter Douglas Products Silhouettes, Duettes, Vertical Blinds & Wood Blinds. Free Professional Measure at No Obligation. Free in Home Design Consulting Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5 352-8622 ®A Registered Trademark of Hunter Douglas Inc. U.S. and foreign patents pending. Anybody Can Sell Jewelry... But Nobody Provides Services & Discounts Like Weintraub. There is a Difference. Rochester Hills 651-5009 We Service Everything We Sell... and Everything Anybody else Sells! Summer flouts Closed Mondays for June, July, August & September Open Tues. - Sat. 10-5 WEINTRAUB JEWELERS In Store Specials Everyday Sunset Strip • 29536 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield • (810) 357-4000 10% Savings on all Pella® Window Products. 9/12 1997 14 A Window of Opportunity is Awaiting You .. . Detroit prepares to welcome the world again for the 1998 JCC Maccabi Games. . LONNY GOLDSMITH StaffWriter I n 1984, Detroit volunteered to host the second JCC Maccabi Games, an athletic competition for Jewish athletes 13-16 years old. The opening ceremony for the 1,000 athletes and 225 coaches, train- ers and staff was held at the football field at West Bloomfield High School. In 1990, Detroit got another chan c e to hold the annual games, drawing what was then the largest attendance of athletes for the games (2,200), and in the process, setting the current standard for how the games are put on. Those opening ceremonies were held at the then newly built Palace of Auburn Hills. Next year, from Aug. 16-23, Detroit gets a chance to raise the bar even higher as the community again welcomes athletes, coaches, and fami- lies from Jewish communities around the world. "We're expecting that 3,300 ath- letes and coaches will be coming into Detroit for the games," said Maccabi Club President Alan Horowitz. To put that number in perspective, the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, hosted 1,800-2,000 athletes. With 11 months to go until Detroit's opening ceremony, again at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Horowitz is confident that the venues for the athlet- ic and social events are almost set. "We've been working on putting the venues together since January," he said. "The big task is putting housing together, and that starts now. Implementing everything is much larger than planning." According to games director Beth Kellman, approximately 1,300 homes will be needed for the incoming athletes. Kellman has been involved with Detroit Maccabi since 1984. Her father, Jay Robinson, was the general chairman the first two times Detroit was host. This year he shares that title with Horowitz. "The games in 1990," Kellman said, "were very successful thanks to the host families, and the individuals who ran the games." According to Horowitz, the 1998 games will be similar to 1990. "There will be some differences, but most things planned will be pretty similar," he said. "But we will have room for more Judaic content," including a theme centered on Israel's 50th birthday. "We are going to try and expose all the participants, not just athletes, to some history and what the modern state is like," Kellman said. "It will be historical and cultural content, not just religious." Shabbat will be observed during the games, thanks to the help of area syna- gogues. Kellman and Horowitz have been meeting with rabbis to discuss what their role can be in planning Shabbat events for the athletes. Putting on an athletic event this large doesn't come cheap, according to Mort Plotnik, the executive vice presi- dent of the Jewish Community Center. "The games have a budget of $1.25-1.5 million," he said. "Our job is to raise $750,000 in cash and in- Want To Help ? To volunteer your time or housing, contact Games Director Beth Kellman at the JCC, (248) 661-7722.