Because we always make time for you. moved to Louisville, Ky., in. 1967, and Ted died there last year, several months before his son's election. Richard's brother and sister-in-law, Mickey and Carol, were co-presidents of the Detroit AZA and BBG councils at the same time. Carol's father, the late Morrie Zeiger, was a vice presi- dent of B'nai B'rith District 6. Richard and his wife, Phyllis, who is from Washington, D.C. and Rhode Island, met at a BBYO international leadership training conference in Starlight, Pa., in 1963. They married in 1968. Both have been involved in B'nai B'rith all their lives. She is the administrator of his law firm. Heideman, 52, is a graduate of Bagley Elementary, Post Junior High and Mumford High School in Detroit, the University of Michigan "Most people don't realize it, but B'nai Kith is the conscience against those who try to bash Israel." — David Bittker and George Washington University Law Center. After law school, he served as a B'nai B'rith lodge presi- dent, district president, international and senior international vice presi- dent, and chair of the BBI Center for Public Policy. He also chaired the BBI Young Leadership Committee and the BBI Political Action Network. The Heidemans' three daughters were active in BBYO. Phyllis Heideman chairs the B'nai B'rith Klutznick National Jewish Museum in Washington, belongs to the BBI Executive Committee and will chair the BBI convention next August. Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush accepted Richard Heideman's invitation last month to speak at the convention. All major candidates will be invited. Asked how he juggles his law prac- tice and B'nai B'rith International, Heideman quotes his late father: "Hard work pays off." Seedlings To Grow In Rev. Lyons' Memory The Jewish National Fund will plant 4,000 trees in Israel, thanks to sup- porters who at a recent dinner hon- ored the memory of the Rev. Dr. James R. Lyons, founder and long- time head of the Ecumenical Institute for Jewish-Christian Studies. The Nov. 8 dinner drew 150 patrons, who paid $180 each to watch Rabbi Norman Roman of Temple Kol Ami, on behalf of the JNF's Greater Michigan Region, present the 1999 Keter Shem Toy (Crown of the Good Name) Award to the family of the late Rev. Lyons. JNF officials said the dinner, at Congregation Shaarey Zedek, should net about $20,000, which will Rev. Lyons go toward trees in the envisioned James Lyons Peace Project near Jerusalem, said Priscilla Smith, JNF senior campaign associate in Southfield. Beloved by Jews and Christians alike, Rev. Lyons died last year at age 63 from complications of diabetes. He was an executive board member of the National Christian Leadership Council for Israel. The Southfield-based Ecumenical Institute strives in a non-conversional way to shatter barriers of prejudice and indifference and build bridges of understanding and tolerance between Jews and Christians. MONDAY AND TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 AND 23 Michael Casey IN PERSON 10 to 4 Couture Salon THE SOMERSET COLLECTION 248.643.3300 FOR STORE EVENTS CALL TOLL-FREE 1.888.NM EVENTS. www.neimanmarcus.com Robert A. Sklar, Editor Correction The film Train of Life (see "The Holocaust Goes Hollywood" on page 75 of this week's Arts & Entertainment section), original- ly scheduled to open Nov. 24, has been tentatively rescheduled to open Dec. 10 at the Maple Art Theatre in Bloomfield Hills. For more information, call (248) 855-9090. , * * * * *STAIRWAY LIFTS* * * * * THE CAREFREE WAY TO CLIMB STAIRS When you're disabled, or just not able to move around as freely as you once could, stairs can be a real prob- lem. But there is a simple answer. The powered stairway lift. Easily installed to fit curved or straight stairs. They give you back the ability to move around your own home. Folds back-gets in nobody's way. CALL OR STOP BY FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION ACTON RENTAL & SALES LARRY ARONOFF (313) 891-6500 I love my Stairway Lift! It takes me up and down the stairs with the push of a but- ton. Call for details! (248) 540-5550