Historians Eye Preservation Of High School Yearbooks 3 011 Marc Leathe nd Women's Off Original Price bQUNO QICCI Somerset south • 18t, bevel (248) 649-4433 Previous sales excluded We carry a large selection of leather coats and jackets. SILHOUETTE WINDOW SHADINGS There's only one Silhouette, and there's i only one place to find it. Nothing comes close to the magical beauty of Silhouette® window shadings. Sheer fabric facings filter light, soft fabric vanes adjust for privacy. All in an array of colors, glorious fabrics and a choice of vane sizes. There's no other window fashion like it. Come see for yourself. No ON The Jewish Historical. Society of Michigan (JHS) is building a collec- tion of yearbooks from Detroit area public and private high schools attended by Jewish students. "Our parents' and grandparents' yearbooks from Northern, Cass Tech, Central, Mumford or other schools are valuable historical docu- ments to us today," said president Joan Braun. "Years from now," she said, "peo- ple will thank us for also preserving yearbooks of the current younger generations, right up to the 1999 books from Oak Park, Southfield, Berkley, Birmingham, Farmington Hills, Bloomfield Hills, Walled Lake and other public high schools, and from private schools like Akiva, Hillel, Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and Beth Jacob, Cranbrook and Country Day." "The history of Jewish Detroit is not only about charitable organiza- tions, synagogues and political activism," Braun said. "It includes teenagers' everyday lives, school clubs, dress and hair styles, influen- tial teachers and much more — all contained in the yearbooks." The JHS also wants to collect the booklets distributed at high school reunions. These can help people seeking old friends while serving as a historical record about students and staff listed in the books. Other books and documents dealing with the history of Detroit's Jewish com- munity are welcome for the society's collection, she added, along with yearbooks from middle schools and K e Q 4444.14.4 The SPOT 11/5 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, MI 48076 1999 52 Defroit Jewish i\lews on COMPETITIVE PRICING & EXPERT INSTALLATION AB other HUNTER DOUGLAS products Luminette • Duettes Vertical Blinds & Country Woods Blinds Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5 352-8622 Rochester Hills 651-5009 (248) 661-8515, detroitmdm@aol.com ; or Gerald Cook, (248) 851-0517; cookfoot@aol.com . Survivor Recounts Wartime Shtetl The Jewish Genealogical Society of Michigan is co-sponsoring the Jewish Book Fair talk of Yaffa Eliach, author of There Once Was a World: A 900-Year mice • Free Professional Measure At No Oh!! junior highs (intermediate schools) and elementary schools. All donations will be labeled with bookplates acknowledging the donors. Their names will be listed whenever yearbooks are used in exhibits sponsored by the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan. Donors will receive free admission to the first exhibit of the yearbooks. The yearbook and reunion book col- lection will be kept safe and secure (accessible for inspection and copy- ing) in the society's office at the D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building of the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Donors may bring their year- books or reunion books to the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building of the JCC in Oak Park 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 8, when the Historical Society of Michigan co- sponsors author Bea Kraus at the Jewish Book Fair. JHS also needs volunteers to help collect the yearbooks and reunion books and to create a computerized" index of people pictured and named in the books. The organization seeks additional funding to finance the maintenance and utilization of the collection. Donors may name all or a portion of the collection. For information on any aspect of the JHS project, call or e-mail one of the project chairs: Marc Manson, Chronicle of the Shtetl of Eishyshok. Eliach, a professor in the Judaic stud- ies department of Brooklyn College, will speak 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14, at the D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building of the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Eliach was born in Eishyshok, Lithuania. In September 1941, the Germans killed the almost 5,000 Jews living in her small town. The few who survived, including the author, stayed in hiding until their liberation in July 1944. Eliach spent 17 years document- ing the life of the town's Jews. A for- mer member of President Jimmy Carter's Holocaust Commission, she created a Tower of Life at the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington, a display of 1,500 photographs depicting the people of Elishyshok. Her book was a nonfiction finalist for the National Book Award.