Now Open Fridays for Lunch
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Yom HaShoah
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(MON-THURS. ONLY)
Fine Italian Dining in a
Casual Atmosphere . .
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Monday-Thursday
4pm- 10pm
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3pm-9pm
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NEW
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33210 W. 14 Mire Road
In Simsbury Plaza
Just East of
Farmington Road
West Bloomfield
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OUR NEW HOURS
Saturday
4pm I I pm
SPOSITES
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(248) 538-8954
9683.0
Open 7 Days
for Lunch
Dinner
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Visit our 2nd Livonia location at:
37273 W. Six Mile Rd. (in Newburgh. Plaza)
(734) 464-5934
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FEATURING AUTHENTIC CHINESE/ASIAN
COOKING, SUSHI BAR & DIM SUM
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DINE IN OR CARRYOUT
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Szechuan Empire Restaurant
Szechuan Empire North
525 N. Main St., Ste 150
29215 Five Mile Rd.
39450 14 Mile Rd.
Livonia
(corner of Haggerty
in the Newberry Square Plaza)
(734) 458-7160
(248) 960-7666
Milford
(just N. of Commerce
in the Valley Plaza)
(248) 684-0321
Dim Sum Available
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Dim Sum & Sushi Bar Available
All
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Kids
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Lunch M-Sat, 11-3:30
Dinner M-Th, 4-10
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starting at $999 for adults
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TOTAL BILL
Expires 6-12-05
Dine-in Only
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Lunch
starting at $5" for adults
20`) /0 OFF
41-
214-4::
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Fri-Sat, 4-10:30 • Sun 11-10
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968370
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Across from Hebrew
26855 Greenfield Rd. • Southfield
248-557-9898 • Fax: 248-557-2038 Memorial Chapel 970230
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THAI CUISINE
from page 57
I PLEASE RESENT THIS COUPON 1
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TO RECEIVE DISCOUNT!
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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEB(' . -
Friday
I 1 am- 11 pm
10 YEARS
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27903 Orchard Lake Rd.
1
(NW corner of 12 Mile)
Farmington Hills
(248) 553-4220
Open 7 days a week
Mon-Sat 11 am-10 pm • Sunday 4 pm-9:30
pm in
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Quality footage of Jewish life
and get to be 20, I'll travel the world
before the war was hard to find,
of plenty — to space, into the sky."
museum officials said. What was
Inbar shakes her head even as she
filmed was often taken by visiting
sees the letter again.
American family members during
"You see he is a talented boy, with
their trips back to Eastern Europe.
knowledge and dreams," said Inbar,
Counterposing the life that came
who speaks and moves with great
before with the atrocities that fol-
energy. She said creating the muse-
lowed, visitors confront enlarged
urn has become a mission she and
photographs of the aftermath of a
her staff take very personally, and
mass shooting of Jews. Pictures of
sometimes it is hard to find distance.
bodies lying in unrecognizable heaps
Near the end of the museum, visi-
are contrasted with
tors reach the new
photographs found in
Hall of Names,
the pockets of those
where Yad
same Jews, along with
Vashem keeps
some of their belong-
information on
ings. In one picture, a
individual
young couple tilt their
Holocaust victims
heads together; in
submitted by rela-
another, family mem-
tives and friends.
bers gathered around a
The hall's cen-
dinner table smile for
terpiece contains
the camera.
two massive
The display is an
cones. One
example of what
extends about 30
Shalev, sitting in his
feet into the air
cream-colored office
and is covered
in a building about 50
with photographs
yards from the new
and names of
museum, describes as
Holocaust vic-
his vision to tell the
tims; the other,
larger story through
plunging deep
The Hall of Names at Yad
personal details.
into the ground,
Vashem's New Holocaust
"We want to give
was excavated
History Museum
back the faces," he
from underground
said of the decision to
rock. At its base is
focus on the visual,
a pool of water.
including paintings by Holocaust
The higher cone was meant to give
victims. Whereas in the older muse-
light to those victims with names
um the subjects of photographs were
and photographs, to testify that they
meant to symbolize the greater
were once here, Safdie said. The
event, he said, here they are meant
lower cone is a symmetrical shape
also to "look into your eyes," to
for "the memory of those whose
make the visitor think.
names we will never know."
An effort was made to put names
The museum's focus then is ulti-
to faces and to artifacts whenever it
mately pulled toward its end — a
was possible. One of the exhibits
balcony cantilevered over the edge of
shows a typical 1930s German
the mountainside, providing a
Jewish living room, re-created from
panoramic view of the pine forest
the actual belongings of various fam- below and the stone buildings of
ilies, including a heavy wooden desk, nearby Jerusalem neighborhoods.
books and a Kiddush cup.
A visitor breathes in the crisp
Much of it, including a glass chan- Jerusalem air, hears the singing of
delier, was donated by the family of
birds and can take in the last pinky
Herman Zondek, a prominent
smudges of daylight.
Jewish doctor who once served as
"One of the unique things about
personal physician to top German
Yad Vashem that sets it apart from
government officials.
other Holocaust museums is that
Excerpts from poems and diaries
you emerge to views of Jerusalem
line the exhibit's walls.
and forest," Safdie said. "The forest
Words from a poem by Abramek
and the renewal it represents is a
Koplowitz, a 14-year-old in the
statement that light prevails in spite
Lodz Ghetto who was later killed in
of it all." El
Auschwitz, read, "When I grow up