There's no finish line... The Big Story ...until we find a cure. A TlIABA WYE NT TO FIGHT CANCER More people than ever before are surviving cancer. Here's your chance to recognize those survivors and honor the memory of friends and loved ones. We invite the whole community to reach out and get teams together for this celebration of life. Sign up today for the American Cancer Society Relay For Life! June 23-24, 2001 Novi Middle School, 10am-10am West Bloomfield High School, Noon-Noon 1.800.ACS.2345 / www.cancer.org / Hope.Progress.Answers. 2001 LEGACY L SEDA AUTO TRANS ALL WHEEL DRIVE $305FE* di( 1,k9 • ,,,,,, • • •• 3 year lease 12,000 miles a year 'Due at signing 1st payment $323.52, refundable sec. $350 lease, administration fee $450 plus title, plates, due at signing $1182.52. Includes plate transfer fee, etc. !DWYER ANDS° 111 S SUBARU 248-624-0400 On Maple Rd., West of Haggerty - OPEN SATURDAY If WIARAG dwyerandsons.com BATHTUB LINER & WALL SURROUND SALE! FACTORY DIRECT PRICING TO THE PUBLIC Cut Out The Middleman ... Save Up To 50% Off Retail Prices! ONE DAY INSTALariNe -0,N ASS NO INCONVENIENCE SALE 5 ft Acrylic Tub Liner Use ander:I/by your bathroom the same day!' One Week O,,Ir Complete line of • Bathtub Liners • Shower Base Liners • Wall Surrounds • Custom Vanities and Countertops We will custom make and install a brand new acrylic bathtub liner to fit properly over your existing tub . . . and walls too! 7N 5/18 2001 66 --Atudget FREE • Large Selection of Colors and Styles • High Impact Acrylic • Won't chip, crack, dent or discolor • Financing available DECORATIVE CURVED SHOWER DOD WITH EVERY COMPLETE SYSTEM — $ 69" VALUE TM BATHTUB LINERS Special Senior Discounts =le; FREE Estimate - Call Toll Free 1-800-BATHTUB 3387 Fort Street, Lincoln Park (Show Room) 313-382-8100 25170 John R, Madison Heights (Show Room) 248-546-8300 Grosse Pointe Dearborn 313-882-4454 313-561-7789 Maureen Schiffman, puppeteer, will perform. another hurdle that the organ- izers faced. They felt that by combining the two events, past festival-goers will find a comfortable, interesting mix of activities that will appeal to young and more mature par- ticipants. "The two events seem to have a perfect fit and, hope- fully, we will see more people turn out for it," Kappy said. "The two programs mesh nicely together," added event co-chair Sharon Lipton. "They flow well together." At noon Sunday, the walk- ers in the Solidarity March for Israel will begin lining up on the campus grounds with the walk starting half an hour later. One hour after marchers of all ages take their first steps, the Israel Celebration Fair will open for business (rain or shine). For families with children, the fair promises a whirlwind of activities, said Allison Rabinovitz of Federation's Michigan/Israel Connection. JEFF, also part of Federation, plans a number of stops, including a model of the Western Wall and a station where children can make get-well cards for patients in Israeli hospitals. Israeli singers and dancers will perform and local artists will display their wares. The entertain- ment includes the local band Klezmer Fusion, Los Angeles folk singer Julie Silver, local storyteller and puppeteer Maureen Schiffinan and local talents Shelly Jackier and Avi Zechory. For fair-goers who work up an appetite, Southfield's Jerusalem Pizza and Oak Park's Meyer Cohen and Taste of Class will supply kosher food items. Parents and other adults who hunger for art will have something of interest to appease them with the display of works by local artists. A program coordinator of Jewish Life and Learning at the JCC, Katie Marcus said she and chair of the arts committee, Halayn Kaplan, have gathered a number of artists, whose works range from jewelry and magnets to Raku pottery (featuring a brownish, iridescent glaze) to custom ketubot and water- color paintings by Shawn Stearn. "We wanted to give an atmosphere that you would find in a shuk, a little bit of Julie Silver, folk singer, is on the entertainment bill. everything," Marcus said. "There will be singing and dancing, activities for kids everywhere, good food and things to buy" Kappy looks forward to the event, mostly because of the energizing com- munity spirit it generates annually. "It will be fantastic fun," he said. ❑ Entertainment Klezmer Fusion, 1:45-2:45 p.m. Julie Silver, 3 p.m. Shelly Jackier & Avi Zechory, 4 p.m. Maureen Schiffman, 430 p.m. Shelly Jackier & Avi Zechory, 5:15 p.m.