L \\I Wholesale Dishibutoi WAREHOU OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FRIDAY, May 11- Noon to 9a to 6p 8p SATURDAY , May 12 - Don't miss this rare opportunity ,S A. E Growing from page 9 •• • r.;1 •"". fib ;47; U-LINE zE pa • PROFESS OVAL a Grand Hall Grills BUY BELOW WHOLESALE! *REFRIGERATOSI *RANGES *RANGE HOODS *WALL OVENS__ •COOK TOPS • ISLAND HOODS *REFRIGERATORS *DISHWASHERS *DISPOSERS *BBQ GRILLS • WARMING DRAWERS *►CE MACHINElog •REFRIGERATED BEVERAGE *DISPENSERS -1"u * UNDERCOUNTER REFRIGERATORS * WINE COOLERS I This is One Sale that is Too Good to miss! It's worth the drive from wherever you live! 2 DAY WAREHOUSE SALE i FRIDAY, May 11• Noon til 8p SATURDAY, May 12 -10a to 6p This is your rare opportunity to purchase top of the line Major Kitchen Appliances, many priced BELOW WHOLESALE COST! Over Half a Million dollars in showroom samples, discontinued models, open crate and over-stocked appliances must go! Bring your car, truck or trailer to save the most... but don't miss it! Or delivery & installation arranged by third party cartage company. 1-96 Meijer, Distinctive Appliances Distributing INC. GRAND RIVER AVE. 51155 Grand River Ave. Wixom, MI 48393 10 May 10 . 2012 \13 NM -4— Distinctive gJIM Varsity Lincoln Appliances Distributing l or Nocash Checks Please complex owned by the school across from Mishkan Israel. The purchase of the building was enabled by a donation and interest-free loan from Sheldon Yellen of Bloomfield Hills, CEO of Belfor USA. Until that time, students boarded with families in the community. The future use of the building has not yet been deter- mined. The educational building will be large enough for 180 students and will include a large study hall, where daily and Shabbat prayer services will be held as well as eight large classrooms, a dining room, teachers' lounge and staff offices. The outdoor area will include bas- ketball courts and a courtyard. The hope, according to Stein, is that once the campus is complete, the school will attract more students. "We already hired two new staff members at the beginning of this school year in preparation for our future growth:' he said. "Next year, we will hire an additional two and con- tinue our growth slowly" The campus was built with the space option to add 20 dorm rooms for 60 students and a second level to the main building. There is no fund- ing yet for this phase. An endowment campaign has been launched to raise $10 million for the campus upkeep. The new Lubavitch Yeshiva Educational Center is being built on land on West Ten Mile Road in Oak Park, between Coolidge and Greenfield roads on the former sites of Machon L'Torah, a vacant home and land owned by Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. "Both structures were torn down in preparation for the new building;' Stein said. A Dream Come True Stein's parents, Rabbi Bentzion and Chana Stein, principal of the school's girls elementary division, came to the Detroit area as shluchim from Brooklyn, N.Y., to teach at the school in 1973. After nearly 40 years here, Stein, a director of the school, looks forward to moving to the new cam- pus. "It is unbelievable; a dream we didn't believe would ever come true he said. "Now the students will have a spacious, modern campus with every convenience they can dream of. This will surely impact their daily studies and help give them a rich Jewish edu- cation to become the future Jewish ambassadors to the world." There are 75 Chabad-based schools in the U.S., not including the many preschools, with about 35 with high school and rabbinical school divisions. The Lubavitch Yeshiva Educational Center has one of the highest rates of graduates who go on to become Chabad shluchim. Stein said, "We are registered with the Department of Education as are all Michigan private schools. The old- est grade just over high school is reg- istered as a branch of the Michigan Jewish Institute, an accredited college in the state of Michigan!' The school's girls division, the Lillian Schwartz Education Center,