To Do!

Trays Available for Mother's Day!

• Ti

* Potato Latices
* Handcut Lox
* Our Regular
Tuna &
Fat-Free Tuna
Can't Be Beat!
* Vegetarian
Chopped Liver
* Homemade
Potato Salad
& Coleslaw

STAR
DELI

• Ti

• TI

• Ti

• TI

• TI

• Ti

Hours:
Mon-Sat 7-9:30
Sun 7-8

• Ti
• Ti

• Ti

• Ti

COMPARE OUR
LOW PRICES
WITH ANY
DELICATESSEN
IN TOWN!

MEAT TRAY

$7.49 per
person

SALAD TRAY

$8.99 person
Per

IR
IR
IR
IR
IR
► R

IR

IR
SALAD TRAY W/
LOX & CREAM CHEESE
41.99 per

• Ti

person

DAIRY TRAY
46.99 p person

IR

STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR*STAR*STAR*STAR

• T4

STAR'S TRAYS CANT BE BEAT FOR QUALITY& PRICE!

• T1

ON STAR'S BEAUTIFUL
ALREADY LOW-PRICED
MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS

R
R

R
R
• TI
R
• Expires 05/1 5/1 0 • One Per Order • Not Good Holidays • 10 Person Minimum
ST1
R
WITH THIS COUPON
• Ti
R
DELIVERY AVA LABLE
• Ti
R
STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR *STAR*STAR*STAR*STAR

• TI

• TI

$5 OFF

. 1* *

4****

24555 W. 12 MILE ROAD

2484.352..7377

just west of Telegraph Road • Southfield

antilom

yik; Ji.yrey!'"

GI AND OPENING OF OUR ORCHARD MO

Breakfast Specials

111‘

Mon-Friday 7a.m.-11a.m. Starting At $3.29

Three eggs, choice of bacon, ham or sausage links
toast and jelly

Eggstra Big Breakfast $3.79
Three eggs, choice of meat, hash browns or pancakes,
served with toast and jelly

30005 Orchard Lake Rd (between 13 &14 mite on the west side) • 248-851-8200
Open 7 Days A Week For Breakfast Lunch And Dinner • Kids Menu • Carryout

$4.99 lunch specials
Monday-Friday 11a.m.- 4 p.m.
Including
Pulled pork sandwich
Pulled chicken sandwich
Boneyard yard burger for 2
Turkey Burger
Mini Greek salad

All come with coleslaw and
potatoes, except the salads

ORCHARD LAKE RD. SOUTH OF 14 MILE

Farmington Hills • 851-7000

•

10% OFF

TOTAL BILL

Excluding tax, tip and beverages • With this ad

Dine in only • Expires 05/31/10 JN

Catering fo
Carry-Out
Our Speciality "Low Carb
Ribs & Chicken & Lamb Ribs'

Send your college student news from home!

College kids love news from home - the JN will help keep them in

touch with everything that is happening while they are away!

Call us today and we'll take care of the rest

800.875.6621

SPECIAL COLLEGE PRICING $20

per year

10 months • In-state only • Call for out of state special rates

62

April 29 • 2010

CALENDAR

The Good In Us

Holocaust center hosting symposium
exploring religious roots of altruism.

T

he Holocaust Memorial
Center Zekelman Family
Campus in Farmington
Hills will host its sixth annual
International Symposium on
Altruism beginning at 9 a.m. Friday,
May 7. The center is located at
28123 Orchard Lake Road.
Co-sponsored by the Holocaust
Educational Coalition, this year's
forum will focus on religion and
altruistic behavior. Altruism is
defined as the unselfish regard for
or devotion to the welfare of others.
The symposium
is free and open
to the public.
Reservations are
required for lunch,
which must be
pre-ordered at $10.
Complimentary
Jeffrey Kluger light refreshments
will be served prior
to the start of the
event. Dietary laws
will be observed.
The forum will
feature Jeffrey
Kluger, senior edi-
tor and writer at
Time magazine, as
Everett Fox
commentator. He
is the author of the 2007 article on
altruistic motivation, "What makes
us moral?" and co-author of Apollo
13, the book that served as the basis
of the 1995 movie.
Keynote speakers are Archbishop
Allen Vigneron of Detroit, Dr. Saeed
Khan from Wayne State University,
Dr. Everett Fox from Clark
University in Worcester, Mass., and
Professor Martin Shichtman from
Eastern Michigan University. Local
radio and television personality Jim
Berk, a second-generation Holocaust
survivor, will serve as event modera-
tor.
"We are honored to have such dis-
tinguished guests join us at such a
critical time when socially responsi-
ble behavior and the role of religion
have become, once again, the focal
point of public discussion," said Guy
Stern, director of the Center's Harry
and Wanda Zekelman International
Institute of the Righteous.

Rene Lichtman, Ph.D., president,
Holocaust Educational Coalition,
said, "We are proud to be involved
in such a worthwhile gathering,
which brings together major faith
communities looking at a topic that
affects everyone — the potential for
good in all of us and how various
religions look at altruism."

Varied Keynoters
Archbishop Vigneron was installed
last year as the fifth Archbishop
of Detroit. He grew up in the Mt.
Clemens area and served as bishop
of Oakland, Calif., and was an aux-
iliary bishop for the Archdiocese of
Detroit. He is a leading theologian
on Christian ethics and will speak
on "Motivations for Righteousness:
The Christian Perspective."
Giving the Islamic perspective
will be Dr. Saeed Khan, an expert on
Islamic scriptures and a lecturer at
WSU's College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences where his research focused
on ethnic identity politics and the
history and development of Muslim
communities in the U.S. and Europe.
Dr. Everett Fox, the Allen M. Glick
Professor of Judaic and Biblical
Studies at Clark University, will
present the Jewish perspective. He
is director of the program in Jewish
studies and is affiliated with the
programs in race and ethnic rela-
tions and comparative literature. Fox
has published books on the rheto-
ric and internal coherence of the
Hebrew Bible.
Professor Martin Shichtman of
the EMU English department and its
director of Jewish studies will act as
the forum's historian.
Jim Berk is a sports journalist,
having worked in the Detroit media
market since the mid-1970s. He is in
training to become a docent at the
Holocaust Memorial Center. ❑

Founded in 1992, the Holocaust

Educational Coalition is made up of 13

Jewish and non-Jewish local organizations

including the Jewish Community Council,

Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit,

Anti-Defamation League, Archdiocese of

Detroit and survivors groups with a focus

on Holocaust education.

