Lake laps at top of Pointe seawalls
Document Sample


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rosse Pointe ews
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VOL 47-No 3
Grosse POinte, MichIgan, Thursday, January 16, 1986
30 cents 38 Pages
for your mformation
Lake laps at top of Pointe seawalls
fyi
By Tom Greenwood
By Nanc)' Parmenter
On a scale from annoyance to
disaster, Lake St Clair high water
levels rank as a nUIsance m the
Powtes, thredtemng to break sea
cItIes are conSIdering ralsmg their
docks, the Yacht Club has Installed
deVIces aimed at preventmg and
controlling Ice bUildup, and the
\\ ood~ 1<, \\ arnmg boa t 0\\ nel s to
above the current level of the lake
and It IS common for streets to
flood
The lake also floods the sewer
system A hve-year-old Corps of
when the lake water washes over
the seawalls and enters the clty'~
combIned sewer system, It can
cause an overload The result IS
that untreated Se\\dge dumps mlo
manent Improvement!> along the
shore that would ehmInate the
flood plaIn," he said
Ellmmatmg the flood plam I!>..l
lall order mvolvIng lmprovemenh
walls and flood backyards No- look tOi another moormg EngIneers study addressed the the lake to seawall!> and some dlkmg ami
where have there been evacua- The Park taces the potentially problem of mterceptor sewers Although the Park refu!>ed the landfIilmg The city IS now con
Out of Africa tions or massive property damage blgge~t problem VII'lually all of along the lake "One of the Issues Corps offer to bUIld a ~v~tem of sldenng fIihng along the shore of
Every once In a while, when as have occurred further norlh the land ~outh of Jl'fler!>on I~ des- of the draft was whether our pump- cnbs to break up the \\ave actIon, Patterson Park, 100feet back from
I'm feeling fat and !>assy and oh- along Anchor Bay Ignated c1~ d Hood plalll b) the :'\a ing !>tatlOnWdSadequate to pump some actIOn does need to be taken, the \\ater, to a depth of four feet
so-pleased with my hfe, 1 need It's Just an aCCIdent of tlOlMI Flood In~ul dnce PI Ogl <1m back Lake St Cl,m," !>ald Park Crawford said . (We refu!>ed The ~hore dlong the tormer :'\Ike
something to come along and geography that protects the \lthough lhe hOll&e,>don totten Clt) Mandger John Crawford because) It wa~ ae!>thetlcally unat- !>Ite I!> 10.... and hned now v,lth
put things back In perspective Pomtes They are less exposed to end up under \\dler lhe Idnd ell' The pumpmg station has d gate lrdctlve and nol dppedllJ1g but \\ e blOken concrete Almost 800 feet 01
That happened Monday \ <ltlOll J dllgp~
the lake and less vulnerable to on I) Ollp to tll () fed vdlve to keep the lake out, but ~tated thdt we were mfdVOl 01 per fence at the site was lost thIS jear
morning, on my fIrst day back wmd-drIven high water than St to wave actIOn, accordmg to Cra\\
from vacatIOn On my desk was Clair Shores Probably more Im- tord
d letter trom Pat and Vh'ginia
Patten, of Manchester Road
portant, the Pomtes are not pene-
trated by a network of canals Last ...-.. ,
~'~f-.a.~.j - ....-J•• ;.1!r"""
The park at "IndmIlI POInte pi 0
Jects mto the lake, so that lIttle can
They're the parents of Father
Pat Patten,
miSSIOnary
a flY10g medIcal
sta tlOned
spnng when the Army Corps of
Engmeers contacted the Pomtes - ~- ~
(Continued 011 Page l"IAl
along With all governments along
Park plan
In
Olkokola, Tanzama the lake - about constructmg a
You ma) remember Father system of dIkes to hold back the
Pat I wrote about him two water, all fIve declIned
years ago when he returned to
the U S on a quest to raise
enough funds to buy a good, us-
ed airplane to bnng medical re-
But the nUIsance ISreal With the
lake already 34 Inches above Its
long-term a verage for November
(the latest month for which
to merge
hef to the nomadic Masal liVing
In hiS 23,OOO-square-mlle parish
m AfrIca
statistics were avaIlable)
threatemng to add another SIX m-
and
ches by spring, floodIng remains a
police, fire
Through hard work and with
the help of prIvate and pubhc
donatIOns, Father Pat got hIS
plane The work 10 Tanzania IS
concern. And officials refuse to
take a rosy VIew, saYIng any
flooding or lack of It depends en-
tirely upon the weather
approved
By Pat Paholsky
hard and he doesn't have much Although most of the waterfront
tIme to WrIte The Pattens sent m the POIntes is protected by sea- Il's all systems go for the con
me a photocopy of hIS last letter, walls, many of them date back to ~ohdatlOn of the polIce and fire de-
which covered a lot of ground the 1920s and '30s Some are In pal tments In the Park mto a pub!1l..
It wasn't what he saId that im- crumbling condition and many !>atety umt The counCil adopted cI
pressed me, but more what he were built With an ornamental resolutIOn :'IIonday mght mstrucl-
dIdn't say brickwork on top that is not strong II1gthe adminIstratIOn to begm the
Father Pat IS tired Very, enough to fend off the lake when It proce~s The vote was unammou::.
very tIred. Mostly from the hec- IS high The council dbo approved an 01
tIc schedule he keeps, but also Much of the property, especial- dmance amendJl1g the eit) (hariel
III reference'> to the chlCf of polIce
because part of hIS staft IS leav- ly In the Park and the CIty, IS 10\\
mg, whIch pIles more work on where It abuts the lake Land along 01' fire chlel, !>ubstllulIng dlrectOi
hIS shoulders. I also suspect he the Detroit border of the Park, of public safet) a~ head of the com
Isn't eatIng propel'ly He said it bounded by Fox Creek, ISalso low bmed deparlmenls The ordmanre
was a very good crop for corn According to the Army Corps of \\ III tdke e!feel Juh I
and beans thIS year and that Engmeers, however, most of the The operdtlOnal plan ~ubmltte<.J
some places don't even need
tood aid for a change
senSItIve property IS eIther
mUnICIpally owned park land or
Looking back PhOlu by EI"'n Fronnn \ b) the admllll!>trdtlOn prOjects that
the department'> wIll be fully con
I talked to hiS brother, Mike, marInas ~ohdated by July 1. 1988
Ernest Scanes of the Farms compares a photograph he took to the painting he is making from City Manager John Crawford, III
who vIsIted him recently, and he Public and prIvate dock owners
it. Scanes has been a member of the Scarab Club, a local artists' group, for more than 50 years. lIlllOduClllg the plan, said It \\a::.
said Father Pat eats mostly along the lake are faced with mak-
beans It's prepared dIfferent Cars have always been a favorite subject for his paintings. He was a technical illustrator for Gene-
ing expensIve Improvements to dN'overed that there would be a
ways, but mostly it's beans ral Motors for nearly 40 years. Scanes reflects on his half century In art in the Pointer of Interest
keep the docks out of water and co!>1 savll1g::. to the commumty
column on Page 12B.
+ morning, noon and night Oc-
casIOnally there'll be sotne WIld
serVIced, With utilIties Several \\ Ilh con::.ohdatlOn The !Irst obJec
live, hesaJd, was to deVise the best
game, but not much plan and dfter that determIne the
Father Pat said there's abso-
lutely no gasoline, cooking or
dIesel fuel available at all Any-
Watet; sewer rate changes proposed
By Mike Andrzejczyk
lo~l
'We belle\ e Ihl~ operational
plan has met both Ob]l'ctlves," he
where He's hmlted to buymg 25 get decreases m the pl'Oposed rates The water department gave ~dld
Although city offiCIals say it's of about 8 and 1 percent respective- The proposed rates may change
gallons of gasolme a week for several reasons for the Increase, because of yesterda~.!> publIc l'o~t proJelllon~, ho\\ ever, do
stIli too early to know for certam ly, the Shores Will be hit \\ Ith a 15 Kenyon saId The department said
the aIrplane My car holds more hearing and they have to be ap- not mclude 1:1 o::.~-trallllllg and
than that what WIllhappen, two of four com- percent lIlcrease and Hal-pel that, although the Shores' peak equipment, ~Illl:e the) dre COli
munitIes locally receivmg water Woods would have ItS rate hiked 13 period usage had dropped, proved by the Board at Water
He was very grateful to hIS It CommiSSIOners and the DetrOlI ~Idered to be non-recurnng ddmlll
from DetrOIt have been socked percent I,,>trallve expense~ Legal and pro
parents for the supphes they hadn't dropped as much as sur- City CounCil
WIth rate mcreases of more than 13 The rate the city charges the feS&lOnaJ fees are also not lOc!udeJ
sent, He saId the soap and can- roundIng commUnItIes In addi- As proposed the decreases ma)
percent by the DetrOit Water and Shores for 1,000cubIC feet of watel III the proJectlOns
dles would really be appreciat- Sewerage Board tIOn, the dIstance the department not be slgmhcant enough to mean
ed, as well as the dental floss, IS proposed to Increase to $4 42 must pump the water to the Vil- The fll e contract, \\ hlCh expired
The proposed rates, which take from $3 85 Harper Woods Will pay a change m the rate the Park
pIzza mIxes and granola bars, lage's center has been recalcu- charges Its reSident!> and busl J ul) 1, 1:JH5 I!> l urrenlh bemg
effect 10 July, are set by the city $3 10 per 1,000 cubiC feet under the lated, he saId
whIch help supplement his dIet nesses for wa tel' and sewage treat. negotiated Abo the polIce con
board based on a complicated for- proposed new rates, up from $274
when he's on long airplane The water department at one ment, OrtIs I added tract will expire June .10and the
mula of use, tImes of peak usage The Woods rate per 1,000 cubiC time applIed a cre'dlt to the vil- acll11lfilstratlOn I~ negotl8tlllg the
fhghts or motorcycle safarIS to and dIstance the water must be feet of water \\ould drop as of Ju- lage's rate because It was pump- The city's water and sewer fund
VIllages needmg medical care pumped, ly to $2 19, down from thiS year's IS out of the red, however OrllSI pubhc sdfely concept \\Ith the
He said he really enjoyed mg water downhIll to the VIllage, said the fund IS no\~ well off police umon
Four communities, Grosse $2 21 The Park's rate would fall to Kenyon saId That credIt has been In the plan, PolIce Chief Richard
read10g an old Time magazme Pomte Woods, Park, Shores and WhIle the water rate I!> schedul-
sent hIm, comparmg the dress $3 06, a near 9 percent cut from the ehmlllated, he added Cdrettl recommends cross-tram
Harper Woods are among the current $3 31 per I.UOO cubiC feet ed to decrease, the Woods won'l
styles and pnces of that time The proposed water rate m- start calculatmg a reSidentIal ra te Illg police otllcers IIr::.t III teams ot
more than 100cities and townshIps VIllage offlclals have already crease that the city charges the
WIth no\\ He also saId It was until after confIrmatIOn of the pro thl ee offIcers and d !>upervlsor
that receIve water from Detroit m met once \~Ith representatives of Shores Will be offset partIally by a The two-week Ill-hom>e traming.
sad to see that the trouble spots southeast MIchIgan The City re- posed rates, accordmg to City Ad
of years ago are the same as to- the water department and were to proposed se ..... rate decrease of er proVIded bj Fire Chief PhIlhp
ceives water from the Farms, mmlstralor-Clerk Chester
day have a representative al ye!>ter- about 33 cents, accordmg to the
whlchs pumps and punfIes lake Petersen The city Will dbo have to C(}~td,!>hould!>allstv b{j hour">of m
A speclallreat was a six-pack day's publIc hearing lo formdlly chart of rates The rate for Harper -;tJ'uctlon reqUlred'!or ba..,lc fir£'
water wall and !>eewhat happen~ to the
of Vernor's, a box of GIrl Scout appeal the hike, according to Woods, Grosse Pomte Woods and fIghllllg
While the Park and Woods Will Supenntenot'llt sewer rate, he added
cookIes and autumn leaves ?>Ilchael Kenyon the Shores may drop from $6 55 to Cdrettl then recommend" that
WhIle the Wood!>, Shores and
pre~sed In book!> I guess gold, $6 22 under the proposed rates Harper Wood& are part oj the the firefighters beglll their cros~-
red and orange maple leaves Se\\er rates for the Farms, Park Northeast Dlstnct Sy~tem thl' trdlfilng al lhe pohle dcademy In
can do a lot to bnng Grosse and City are also slated to de- propo~ed !>ewerrate decrease mdY tedm~ of !>IXAll oflJceJ'~ \~II! also
Pomte to Tanzama crease under the proposed rate end up bemg swallowed by the ad- be trallled as emergenc) medIcal
So far, he estimates the plane schedule mlllistermg agency for the sy~lem, techmclans
has another 240,000 mIles on It The City and Farms are to have Petersen added "The cornerstone for successtul
sll1ce It was purchased It's easy their rates fall from $6 55 per 1,000 DetrOit and Wayne County functional consolidatIOn rests on
to see how In a typical week, cubIC feet of sewage treated to charge cItIes throughout southea"t trdmlOg,' PolIce ChIef Hlchard
Father Pat vlslb more than 400 $6 22 for the same amount startmg JlvlIchlgan for the water and sewer l'drettl wrote m the plan 'We III
people \\ ho are trea ted for res- July 1 The Park's rate ISschedul service they prOVide Cltle!>m lurn tend to concentrdte on lotatmg
pIratory InfectIOns, malana, ed to drop from $4 33 to $4 28 for must calculate their mamtenance ever~ ::'lOgle officer through the
paraSites. bUl ns, snake bItes, 1,000 cubiC feet of sewage treated constructIOn and other costs and be~t tralOlOg program~ d\ allable
TB, spear wounds, diarrhea, Whether the proposed double de add that mto the figure before de "It should be pOillted out that III
malnutntlOn hon attacks and crease Will mean lower rates III the cldmg what to charge reSident'> achlevll1g thl!> lev!'! 01 excellenCE'
leprosy Park IS unclear, accordmg to and busme~~es for water and a
thel P 1<., prICE' to pa) he con
HIS presence there has made Clerk-Comptroller NunzIO Orllsl sewer use tlOlIed . thelt price 1&the amount
a difference More and more of service \~e \\ III be a ble to deliver
people are beIng helped \\hIle the trdll11ng IS laklllg place
What Impre~sed me was hIS
attitude He \~asn't complaIn-
Four youths suspected II h my llltention to ma Il1tam ad€'
quate level'i of service. mcludmg
mg, nor \\ d~ he askl ng for more
help It \~as Just a compilatIOn
of credit card fraud the dblhtj to respond to eXlgell1
Clrcum&tance">thaI might occur L\
of facts It's the ..... lIfe IS III
ay Wood'i pohce suspect four the prudent use of overllme ..
much of the Third World, mom lance, Woods Detecllve Cdll In the case of police or fire pel
IOCdl youths of slftmg through Schuster said
and dad, so ho\~ are you? How garbage for credit card receipts ho
::.onllt'l..... are unable to complet •.
was ChrIstmas back home" A car With three male youth~ uos,> tra Illlllg beca U&l' of aCd
and ordeflng merchandise
Was there a lot of snow? DId pulled up and one boy got out demlc flgor" or a ft'ilr of height-.
charged to an account on the
evervone receive some mce and \~alked up to the hdu<.,e for example City :\Ianagt'1' Cra\\
dl'icarded slips The case was
presents? \\hen he spotted the sun'ell- ford ~aJ(l those emplo) ees \\ IlIbl
uncovered when a resldenl
,
Anyho ..... I'm gomg to try and lance team He got back In the de!>lgnated a~ speCIalists, a PO~I
alerted polIce to a note on a va-
cant house car and drove off The police got tlOn that WIll be phased out OW'l
remember Father Pat the next the license number
time I bItch because m} steak the VE'ars
The note on the front door In- One boy admitted to the "i v.ould draw a dl,,>tInctIOnbe
as
..... cooked wrong, or I have to
'>tructed that all package~ be de scam and durmg the Investlga- t\\ een the employee \\ ho has at
hoof It two blocks to the local
Lawson s for a gallon of mIlk 11\ered to Ih(' rear and I,\oasdiS- tlOn, police learned three other tempted to qualify and has not Ix
covered In 1 hI prospeclI ve name", Schuster said The m- ">uccessful and the employee who
But I'm human, and I'm sure
buver of the hll... on Ford vestlgatIOn IS contlnumg says, 'I WII! not try, 'he said
after a whIle I'll convemently
forget Court which has bE'cn hI ml for The package conSisted of Cra wford added tha t the ope I'd
the past four months three Video diSCS totaling $l4.'i
Father Pat can be reached
through the Flymg Medical Ser-
Vice, DIOcese of Arusha. Box
A hill, a sled Pho'( If'" .., .... u
~
Pohcf' put out an area broad
rhey had heen ordered b)-'
fIll I'll', according to a company
tlOnal plan did nol cOllslder dl..,
ml'ismg or demotmg any persOIl
nel
, . , and thou. It doesn't take much to bring a smile to the face cast to UPS drivers, one of rcprc~entiltlve The merchan-
3044. Arusha, Tanzama, East whom responded that he had About a half-dozen reSIdent'>
Africa of a little one. Shown coming down the hill Sunday morning near dIse wa~ charged to an em- spoke for or agamst consolidatIOn,
JU&ldelivered a package from ployee In the Wayne Counly
I beheve I'll send him a letter Morass and Lakeshore is 3-year-old Laura Zoufal and her Instant Replay, a Video com- however. the effort was almost
Or maybe a six-pack of sister, Natalie, 8, of the Farms. Their babysitter, Jennifer Prosecutor's Office. who told anti-climactic after two years 01
pany In Waltham, Mass The pohce he had not oJ'dererl the
Vernor',,> Thomas, 16, of the Park, is hitching a rrde with Laura house was put under ">urvell- movmg m that directIon The en-
diSCS tire proceedmgs took about 10
lTIlllute'i
,
Page Two-A
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
Grosse Detroit man dies in Park
Pointe News
(USPS 230.400)
HELP InvestigatIOn continues Into the
Published every Thursday WANTED death of a Detroit man Sunday
nved mmutes later. He was taken
to Bon Secours Hospital where he
8, ,\ntet'bo Pubh!>her!> Part or "ut "0 mght, who collapsed on CharlevOiX
9'9 Kerthe\ aJ henlll'
(,ro!>se POinte, '11 4l!216 Full-TIme. ~'-JtL}; ... ~
at Maryland m the Park.
Accordmg to repOl ts. Gregory
was pronounced dead on arnval
seven minutes later, reports said
r------------------, Phone 882-6900
SeCOnd Class Postage pa d at
Remees.\
welcome
• Cross, 38. of BeWick In DetrOIt, was
Cross' body has been turned over
to the Wayne County Medical
I FRESHCUT I owo t M en goo
S ubscnphon Rate 5 $15 per \leaf Call before A\
dnvmg hIS 1975 Ford two-door
along CharlevOIX when he stopped
Examiner for an autopsy, police
said No cause of death ha~ yet
! DAFFODIU i
VIA ma I $17 out-of slate
Change 01Address Forms 3,79 to 99
Kerene laJ Grosse Po n1e Fafms
Mch
Address all Ma I S\,Jbscr pIons 3pm ~
Mrs Mehr
885.0800
the car, got out and collapsed,
police said HIS29-year.old passen-
ger was able to flag down a Park
been determmed
One of the ambulance techni-
cians reported suffenng a poSSible
II $2.99 iI The ejeadllne lor ne\o\'s copy s pollce offlcer, who called for an
Monday nOOf\ 10 InSure ~nsert on ambulance lower back stram while attendmg
Bunch All advert S "1g copy mt,JS1be In lhe to Cross, who was 6 feet tall and
New", 01'~ce by , 1 a m Tuesday Cross had no signs of life when weighed more than -too pounds, ae-
CORRECTIONS AND AOJUST
2 Bunches For $5.00 Park ambulance techmclans ar. cordmg to police
,-------------------
FULL SERVICE FLORISTS
MENTS Respons b,lly 'or d ,pl.,
and class 1ed ad ..en 5 ng ellOf ~
hmted to e her a cancel d on cf In£>
charge lnr or a fe run 0' the pan (j'l
m error f',olllcahon must be 9 en
Cottage plans cancer care classes
n t ml? lor correct Families and fnends of cancer problems are presented by experts
399 FISHER RD 885 - 8510 Isst,...e N~ assume no respons 1)
(; fne samf' alee 1ne f ,,1 nser on
I,
u-r n the fol 0 Ii 9
H..,. you DPtMd &/lIRA? patients who want to leal'll more In these fIelds
Ate you l,jndtc~ -.boY1 ~ OM
GROSSE POINTE about the disease, as well as mdl-
You"llWOrll RHd.
lochoose1'
t:rytol.a.l bAll to Nlp)'O\J
Hospice volunteers are !>peclal-
chooM OUt IF<A. vlduals who are mterested m be- Iy tramed to prOVide phYSical,
(OJ II[S ~ ... ~ .. n ... I(IRA
...~..;:", e ~ fOo,J '" ~~ "'''''''Y c:o-me.. .... >01'1 coming hospice volunteers, are m- emotIOnal and spmtual support to
cIS U mc-"'Ia<: c"~ •• ..,... "".e,
A 1 ... 4 ..,~_ l'Ofln910Ij.%
"'11:11:01>'"
vlted to attend the Carmg Person the terminally III person and hiS or
SENIOR-DENT "..vs, f()JJIl:\I ...lU.e~l ACCOUNT'S
_"_11W~.a.:(~
.... COII".-
.... '1~ .....
SlcJc:l A.:e- I fblo.>I tN~ 'LO(ul
S\.QC~""=(O<>ftlIWQOriJlotr9'l
Program at Cottage Hospital The
tree four-week wmter sessIOn be-
her famIly through the Illness,
death and a perIOd of bereave-
REDlTCED-FEE DENTAL CARE
WC\lt1 ...
J, 11"'-6<1
~r'l •
""co;- .... I ,IQ(:U w.<ll ~, gln~ Monday, Jan 20, at6'30 pm ment
Ho~plCe volunteer training con- There currently are over 80 Cot-
tinues an additional four weeks, tage hospice volunteers helpmg pa-
Complete Dental Care for Senior Citizens through March 10 tIents and their famIlies In the hos.
b) Licensed ~f.ichigan Dentists pital and In their homes, but more
The Caring Person Program of- are needed to assist patients III a
For f:ligibility Requirements Call . -
Toll-Free 1-800-292-4708
---- ..---------
~ -,
ters instructIon m many aspects of
pdtIent care and comfort Chemo-
therapy and radiation therapy,
vanety of neighborhoods
For more mformatlOn and to reo
gister, call Julia Arango, hospIce
pre~cnptlon management, nutn- volunteer coordmator, at 884-8600,
a service of the tlOn, pam control and respiratory ext 2464
~ichigan Dental Association
WSU dance lab classes to begin
The winter term of the Wayne plicatIOn should be made at least
State Umverslty Dance Lab clas- two weeks before the start of the
~es for children and adults is term. Family discounts are avail-
ANOTHER BIG
scheduled to begm Saturday, Jan aWe J
18, In Old Malll on campus. Clas- For informatIOn and registration
ses Will run every Sa turday materials, call 577-4268
through Apnl 26, With a spring Dance Lab students wIll be mtro-
break on March 29 The cost of the duced to the fundamentals of
CUT IN PRICES!
14-week sessIOn is $49, payable be- movement - time, space and
fore the first day of class. energy - and encouraged to de-
Classes are offered for 3- and velop new movement skills They
4-year-old beginners at 10am, for WIll experience movement as an
4- to 6-year-olds at 11, and for 7- to art form, and as a form of
lO-year.olds at noon. Eleven- to self-expressIOn, USing Imagery,
15-year-olds meet at 11, and 16- to music, poems, stones, art, props,
ON EVERY ITEM IN OUR STORE FOR 18-year-olds at noon An adult class
IS offered at 10 a.m
A parent lounge IS available, as
games, the 3 R's, good exerCIse
and lots of fun as springboards for
LAST DAYS
THE STORE CWSING SALE
creative exploration
well as free parkmg In the lot be- There ISnow an extension of the
hind Old MaIn off Warren west of University Dance Lab at the Lake-
Casso Some scholarship money IS shore Y m St Clair Shores For In-
avaIlable for needy students Ap- formation, call 778-5811
OF OUR ,
,
->it: ~'.t-;YW~;~A$.t~<~~ '"¥J~ /)~~~,(>~",,~.y::;. .~ ... t'Y .... ~
",.$ ... (' ..... ",«'" ... (><, ".co,<
picQl'd--71ol'ton ANNUAL WINTER SALE FOR
Fine Quality Men's Clothing and Furnishings MEN - BOYS - lADIES
THREE DAYS ONLY-THURSDAY, JAN,16THROUGH'SATURDAY, JAN. 18
LOCATED AT OPEN 9.30 to 9:00 THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, SATURDAY 'T1L 5 30
92 KERCHEVAL AVE. SUITS - Selected group from our regular slock of H Freeman, Oakloom and 5t Clair clothing
ON THE HILL IN GROSSE POINTE FARMS Were 27500 NOW 21000 Were 350 Db to 35500 NOW 28000
Were 32500 to 33000 NOW 250.00 Were 36500 to 395 00 NOW 290 00
., Were 47500 NOW 37500
PRICES CUT ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK IN A ••• /
HICKEY.FREEMAN SUITS - A selectIOn of hand tailored
finest makers
SUitS from one of the country s
GREAT STORE
I) Were 53500 NOW 425.00 Were 56500 to 58000 NOW 465.00
Were 59500 to 600 00 NOW 475 00
COLLEGIAN SUITS
A speCial group of sUlls styled to fit the young
man who needs a smaller waisted SUit With a
CLOSING SALE
trimmer fitting trouser
Were 21500 to 23500 NOW 17500
SPORT COATS - Shetlands, camels. Hams Tweeds Models for men and young men
Were 13000 to 13500 NOW 9500 Were 20500 10 22000 NOW 160.00
Were 16000 fa 17000 NOW 130.00 Were 22500 to 23000 NOW 17500
Were 190 00 to 19500 NOW 150.00 Were 27500 to 28500 NOW 21500
INVENTORY STORE FIXTURES, EQUIPMENT Were 34500 NOW 265.00
TO BE SOLD OUT TO THE BARE WALLS OUTERCOATS - Erllire stock of
weather coats
topcoals and overcoats and selected Zip Irned all
NOW 25% OFF
We Have Been Marking PRICES AT NEW LOWS BURBERRY ZIP COATS - Single and double breasted
We lIave again cut pflees on every Item In our store for tile last Were 370 00 NOW 300.00 Were 465 00 NOW 37500
Down Prices On liars at our stare closing sale. We must and will sell out every Item,
store fixture, office fixture and all eqUipmentto the bare walls with. SLACKS - Selected group of fancy wools and corduroys
In tile next 'ew liars. Time is shart - buying must be last. we have Were 3750 to 4500 NOW 30.00 Were 6500 to 70 00
Every Item For left no stone unturned to make this store closing sale complete. Were 5000 to 6000 NOW 37.50 Wpre 7500 to 8000
NOW 4750
Come these last dars 'or bargaIns a lifetime.0' Were 9500 to 100 00 NOW 6750
NOW 5750
The Last Days SANK CARDS WELCOME DRESS SHIRTS - Selected group of Hathaway and Hickey shirts
Were 2850 to 3500 NOW 1950
SELLING CONTINUES 9 A.M. TO 8 ~M. THURSDAY SPORT SHIRTS - Group of long sleeve shirts
Were 2250 to 2650
Were 2750 to 3250
NOW 15.00
NOW 22.50
both knits and wovens
Were
Were
3500 to 4250
4500 to 5250
NOW 2750
NOW 35 00
,
,
DAILY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. - TUESDAY AND THURSDAY 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. OUTER JACKETS" CAR COATS - Selected group
V, PRICE
TO $350.00 TO $155.00
Selected Groups
SUITS SPORT COATS
$12888
GLOVES MUFFLERS NECKWEAR
V~ PRICE
Outof a group - Ihesewill
sell out at the low price of
only -
ALL SALES FINAL -
While these lasl - one IDt
10 sell out at the low price
01 only -
ALL ITEMS ADVERTISED SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE
$8999 HATS" CAPS -
SHOE DEPARTMENT
English Cuffley caps Suede caps assorted
Walkers Were 25 00 to 2750 NOW 1999
Assortment of wool caps NOW 999
- Selected group of Cole Haan French Shriner Nunn Bush
Sperry Top Siders. Rockport and Walkover shoes
wool hats including Irish
Sebaqo
NOW 1990 to 89 90
E'ntlre stock 01 hand crafted Allen Edmond shoes
TO $45.00 TO $45.50 , NOW 15% OFF
l
DRESS SLACKS DRESS SHIRTS J.
I
100;. DISCOUNT ON BALANCE OF STOCK
$1788
THE BOYS' SHOP THE HICKEY LADYS
Out of a grouptheseWillsell
Dul fast at the low price of
only -
- SORRY NO ALTERATIONS
Entlrpslacks of dressshirts
to be sold out at only -
_
$1788 Selected Groups
SPORT COA TS . OUTER JACKETS
KNIT AND FLANNEL SHIRTS
GLOVES SWEATERS
Va 10 lf2 OFF
Selectpd Groups
SLACKS
JACKETS
BLOUSES
SKIRTS SUITS
TURTLENECKS
SWEATERS
'13 10 '12 OFF
TO $18.50 UP m TO $45.50
NO PHONE ORDERS • NO LAY.AWAYS NO EXCHANGES ALL SALES FINAL
TIES SWEATERS
Outof a groupthese
Will not last long at
only - ~~88 60% off ~";,::,~;:,':::v'"'~1188
SINCE 1900
1
t
STORE AND OFFICE FIXTURES ,j
17140 KERCHEVAL AT ST, CLAIR • GROSSE POINTE
AND EQUIPMENT FOR SALE Vl~a OPEN 9,'30 to 9:00 Thursday and Fnday, SalUiday '1,11 5:30
,
,,4
,
'. ,
~
*'y t
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Three.A
Photogmph.lJ classes unsafe, union says
Board denies teacher grievance
B) Mike Andl'zejcz) k teachers said they didn't reqUIre teachers may be called away,
The BOdrd of EducatIOn l\londay "tudent!> to wear safety glasses or leaving behind an unsupervl!>ed
mght demed a teachers' umon lab coats The glar:.ses obstructed class, he added
gl'levance thdt claimed Idck of VISion whlie working on certam Summmg up, Tonks said there
!>upel\%lOn III photogrJphy cia sse!> equIpment m the darkroom, both was no grounds to uphold the
at North High School endangered "aid Marche!>1 added he asks hiS gl'levance Also, the teacher!>
!>tudents dnd VIOlated the umon'!> studenb to bnng lab coats and rub- hadn't done all they could to UTI-
contract ber gloves to protect themselves prove safety in the classroom
The board voted:> 2 to deny the from the film developll1g chemi- "There are steps they can take
gl IC\dnce af tel' an hour-long hear-cals to lessen these hazardous &Itua-
mg, but I eque!>ted the admIJll!>trd- Although there have been no tlOns," he saId "When you thll1k
tlOn to fonlard mformdtlOn next ~enou!> Il1Junes to students m the safety, It usually results '
\1eek about the (o!>t of the photo c1d!>",Marche'>l added he !>uffered Trustee Joan Hanpeter reque!>t-
grdph~ progrdm at the "chool and thu'd degree chemical burn!, to hi!> ed the admll1lstratlOn for\\ arc! In-
\1 hdt the dddltlOn of aIde!> l\Quld ldce when he wa!> splashed With formation about the cost of the
co~t. altel native mean!> of !>uperVI-undIluted chemicals photography program and con-
..,Ion and \\ hat other dl~tnct!> do to , It", my concern that !>tudents Sider alternatives to allo\\ betel'
:>upen I~C,>tudent~ III photograph} Men t ~dfe," Hayei> saId "I've superVISIOn One POSSlblhty may
c1a~se~ \\ hlJe tedcher!> al e occu- never had to face thl" kmd of !>Ilud- be elImlllatlllg photography cla!>-
pied 111 the ddl'kroom \\ Ith other tlOn, wa lklllg mto another room ses at North and havmg them at
!>tudcnt~ dnd lea vmg ~tudents III a cla!>!>- South only, where the phySICdl
The gllevance. filed edrlIel thl!>room \\ It/1 thmgs \\ hlch they can plant IS different, she added The
~ehool ycar, center~ 011 photogI'd hurt them!>eh Ci> with" !>ystem run!> ltS dental aide pro
ph\' tedchel <.,c1dllll<;that change<., The vanetv 01 cuttmg and heat- ~ram that way
I 111 the Iall lone them and theil' 1m
mediate !>upervl~or~ to bear the
brunt 01 legal dctlOn should a "tu-
lIlg equipment III the room posed
celtam dangers, both teachers
!>dld l\ldrche"l saId that m one Ill-
Trustee Carl' Anderson who With
Carol Marr, voted to uphold the
gl'levance, told trustees that the
A Sunday morning stroll Plotn 0, (I;at rl' 1J1"r u l
( ... u"" G il U ~l t'(
dent be InJUIed 111 c1as~
AddItIOnal ~ectlon!> and larger
cldent, dlter returl1lng from the
ddl'kroom he lound mark!> made
heanng raised some vahd con-
cern!> about safety and supervI-
. , . on the Ice at Farms Pier Park is what this Farms family is enloYln9. Kathy and Jeff Jensen cld!>~~ILe~mdke !>upelVISIOndilfl- b) cutllllg kl1lve!>on photographs sIOn Unsupervised students can do
get some exercise while 2V2-year-old Michael gets a ride. cuJtbecdu"eteacher!>cannotbeln on d \Idll It appeared three stu- Silly thmgs, he said, addlllg. "We
the cla!>~1oom and ddrkroom dents \\ ere throwmg their cuttlllg are dealmg With a different kmd 01
'>lmultdneou!>l} The vanety 01 toob at the photo!>, he added al1lmallll the 1980s and I thmk \\t:'
Cities get few park queries dangerou!> chemicals and eqUIp
entel her room from the adJolmng
ment Illcrea!>e the P0i>Slblht\ of 111-
Jury to student!>
Hdyes said she ha!>had students
cla!>~room When a substitute took
over the cldss, thl ee "tudents left
have to recogmze that"
lVIaklllg the motIOn lor demal
was board Vice PreSIdent Vlllcent
LoCIcero, seconded by Secretary
B~ Pat Pahol!>k) that he hasn't I'ecel ved any cdlls m ul1l1.wdby I eSlden!':> the !>t,ltement The GI'o!>!>ePOlllte EducatIOn the room Without superVISIOn, she Fred Adams
The I('cent vote 111 Dearborn the past two weeks ('onclude;' A!>soclatIon asked that, were the added The umon had failed to show the
IUTIltmgcel tam parks to resIdents Gro,,!>e POll1te ('Ity Manager gnevance upheld. additIOnal !>afe- In both case!>, diSCiplinary actIOn contract was violated by the i>ltua-
The mterest prompted Park of- Thoma!> Kressbach said thIS 1& the ty equIpment dnd teacher dlde~ be \\ a~ taken, supported
onl~ and the resultmg controversy fiCials to ask city attorney Herold by the tIOn, LoCIcero told trustees
has generated !>ome Illterest III Cd"e at Nell I\lemonal Pdrk whIch prOVIded for the clas"c!>
McC Deason to prepare a state- "choo!'!> admll1lstratlOn Votmg to deny the gnevance
Gro!>'le POll1te !>park system The hd!>a total of !>IX dcres and that 111- Photography teachers Renato The addition of aides to the
ment The four-paragraph state- cludes the parkll1g lot The green were Hanpeter, LoCicero, Adam~.
park!> here have alway!> been re- ment reads that the parks "have Mal chesl and Eileen Hayes testi- classes .'\1 ould be wonderful," board President Jon Ganelot and
!>tncted to re!>ldents' and theIr space I!> about half of thdt or ahout fIed at the heanng that the set-up MarcheSI said Aides could cut the
been developed and mamtamed at 10resIdential lots, Kre!>sbach said board Treasurer Dorothy Kennel
gue!>ts l\lo!>t of the mterest, how all times smce their mceptlOn by of North's photography room caus- amount of \York the teacher now "WhIle the board had demed
ever hd~ been bv the media Lake frontage of the park ISabout ed certdlll pi oblems It I~ a room does, help cla!>sroom superVISion
the !>oleuse of funds generated by the \\ Idth of 212 resldentldllot!>. he your grIevance, we have heard
OtllcJals ot the Woods, Shores, taxation of Grosse Pomte Park \\lthlll a room. Illth a !>eparate and enhance currIculum your problems," Gandelot told the
Farms and CIty report that the on- "did darkroom as well as a fire door Aides are used III other depart-
re!>ldents or user fees ,. Ul1lon offiCials and teachers
ly mqUlne!> they've receIved ha ve Cltv Admllll!>trdtor Chester leadlllg to a courtym'd, they said ments at the school, m sCIence and The Idea of addmg aides mayor
been from newspapers and radIO Il also says that the two parks Petel:sen !>ald the situatIOn 1ll the When thev are III the darkroom other classrooms, to help teachers, may not come back before the
and televl!>lon statIOns totahng 28 acres service a popula- \\;L1ods IS dIfferent than the other \llth studellb \1 hlch happens at GPEA Vice PreSident Richard board, depending on what comes
tion of 13,600or a ratIO of two acres Grosse [-'omte cltle!>, slllce Lake led!>tthree day !> week. the rest of Underwood pOinted out
a out of the mformation the admll1ls-
Pal k OfflCld!!> say they were re- the class IS left unsupervIsed, the John Kastran, North pnnclpaL
per 1,000reSIdents, less than the 10 Front Park IS !l1 St ClaIr ShOl'es tratlon IS passll1g on to the board,
celvl11g ahout a cdll a day after the teachers saId testified that he has VISited the
acre!> per 1,000 people recom- The Woods Den <; tdX!:."to ~t Clair school offiCials said
conlrovers\ first arose III Dear- \Nhile both teacher!> Said thev photography classes on several oc-
mended bv the NatlOnal Recrea- Shores and -It; school dl~tnct
bol'/1 In No'vflmber About half of tIOn A!>soc'latlOn instituted safety rule!> and expect- casIOns and found them to be well
the call:, were from local people
and some from DetrOIt and Dear- Restncted to reSidents only
Petersen SaId that years ago the
Woods attempted to have the tax
ed students to be \\ orki ng on class orgal1lzed and well-behaved The
dS!>lgnments whIle they \\ ere cl"e- addition of 3ldes for superVISIOn
Uncover them
born reSident!>, \\ lth the other half smce 1931, the pohey contmues waIved on the ba"ls tha t CitIes are \\ here acce!>s from another class- purposes IS not done In other de- Fire departments m the
cllmll1g from the media CIty Man- because the parks qre at theIr non-profIt orgam7atlOn!> The at- room and to out~lde the bUlldlllg partments and could set a costly Pomtes urge reSidents to clear
ager John Crawford saId. addmg maXll11Um capacity dnd fully torney general ruled that the only mdde thdt lack of supervI~lon dan- precedent, he added snow away from fire hydrants
way the Wood" can mamtam a gerow, Aides III classes such as com- Snow 10 some locatIOns IS al-
Board creates position pn,'ate pdrk ISto pay taxes, Peter-
sen said Otherwl!>e. the park
would have to open to the public
Under cros!>-examlllatlOn
Director of Pel sonnel and Labor
RelatIOns Ronald Tonk~
by merCIal foods help students With
the
pi eparatlOn of dlshe!>, Kastran
~ald Also, 111 some cases, all
ready startmg to pIle up and
cover the hydrants Shoveling
may avert a disaster
of drug abuse counselor
,d- The Board of Education Monday after an arbitrator's rulmg 111
mght establIshed a new pOSitIOn, December upheld a Ulllon gnev-
Age
counselor/coordll1ator of student
HOW"lo~can
ance filed last year regardll1g the di~crimination
assistance programs filling of a school SOCial worker
The new person Will coordmate vacancy at South High School The Age Dlscnmlll-
and expand the student substance The arbltra tor upheld theatlOn 111 Employment
abuse support group program at Act of ]lJ67,as amend-
umon's argument that the school
the hIgh schools and help the dls- ed. pI OhlbltS dlscnm-
aJanuary SaIelast?
system Ignored Its own postmg by
tnct prepare ItS master plan to hll'lng Gall Enckson for the South lnatlOn on the ba"ls of
deal With chemIcal dependency age agall1st any pel'
SOCIal worker post, although
The board acted unammously on another school SOCialworker, who son bet\\ een the age~
the admll1lstratlOn's recommenda better met the reqUIrements, also of -10and 70 There IS
tlOn to create the new pOSItIon, apphed no upper age Jlmlt
which was posted for applicants \\ Ith respect to em
earlier thiS week and should be fill- ErIckson has esta bhshed a ployment In the feder
ed to serve the balance of thIS number of support groups for- ael government ThE'
school year students at the high school About
two dozen students appeared
la\1 applIe!> to all pub
IIc employers, pII\Jte
Two wonderful things will happen for you
"ThIS \\ III enable us to keep our
support group programs at South
fI1gh School, extend those groups
before the board Jan 6 to ask that
some provIsIOns be made to keep
employers 01 20 or
mal e emplo~ ee" em
when you come to the January Sale at The
Enckson at the school to contmue pl()~ ment dgellClc ...
to North fhgh School and WOI'kto
support one of the board's her work m aldmg students \\ Ith servlllg covered em Campus Mens Shop.
goals for thiS school year," Super- substance abuse problems player!>. and Idbol
Il1tendent John Whntner saId While the pOSitIOn appears
umon!>of morE' than 2) First of all, you'll save 40 percent on
The new coun!>elor/coordmator memhers. accordlllg
taIlored for someone of Enckson 's
\\11l !>pend t\\O days at each high quahflcatlOns, she has no lock on
to A \\ 01 klllg Wo
man'!> GUIde to Her
clothing, sportswear and accessories-all
school and one da\ on dlstnet-wlde the pOSitIOn Like other openmgs,
plannmg, Whntner ~ald There Will
be a tranSitIOn penod for the
the new one will be posted and can- .Job RIght!>. pub
iIi>hedhy the \\ omen '> from our regular, in-season, in-stock
didates mtervlewed Should a
Bureau of t!w V S Dr
counselmg ~tatf until the pOSitIOn
I" fIlled and the coordmator has
more qualifIed candidate come
along, the school system Will be re-
partment 01 Labor collections.
taken up hi!>or her dutieS qUIred to Ime that person or face
The admml,>trdtlOn deCided on the pos'llbli.ty of another unIOn And, second, when you come to our
po'l'>lhle creatIOn of the POSition gnevance
January Sale you'll have an oppor-
tunity to fill out an application for 6~
The TelTificClub. As a member of ~
this exclusive Campus Mens Shop group,
you'lI receive special benefits and savings
0ppol1unities month after month.
ON All SPf CIA! CI' ARANCf SHO,<;
So come to our great January 40% OfF!
BUY ONE PAIR Sale and save on terrific things.
AT 20% OFF And join The Terrific Club and nlake our
SECOND PAIR * January SaJe last as long as you like.
FIT ~t qua Ir tv
FREE
/Hell ~ & lI'OflU'!I <; ~h O(',~ & booh
The Cll/Tl'flt ~('(f~()n <;(V{('8 (rom
~~~g~~H~fR .Nkkels
h.m-PK.'OllC. 8ffOOJ)Q selby
'Buv on!' at 20% OFF regular price get a second pair of equal or less value FREE
19483 Mack Ave.
G.P.W. 884-2447 We're going to help you look terrific.
New Hours
M-T.W, 10:00-6:00
Th.-Frl., 10:00-8:00
'l"1 , 10:00-5:00 Woodward ,md Maple, Birmin~halll 642-1%.') Kercheval, in the Villa~c. GrO'>'ie Pointe RR4.0701
•
---~-~---------------;'-------- __ l"'IIIIIf_"'" ...
Page Four-A GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
Local architects honored
Park reSident Robert C Wakely an architectural study that re- Roberto Clemente Center for the
Jr , AlA, receIved one of 15 honor sulted m the "DetrOIt Hlstonc Dls- CIty of DetrOit RecreatIon Depart-
award~ from the DetrOIt Chapter tncts Style and Color GUide" ThiS ment;
of the Amencan Institute of Archl' gUide, produced a~ a Jomt venture
- and 10 the unbUllt category,
tects recently, He was honored for by Schervlsh, Vogel, Merz, Car-
awards were presented to Gunnar
IllS adaption of the Grosse Pomte doza, PC, and E B H DeSign,
was developed to prOVide home- Blrkerts and ASSOCiates, Leonard
Shores MUniCipal Building
owners and the Hlstonc Dlstnct P Marszalek, AlA, Argonaut
He was also the recipient of a
CommISSIOn a usable tool for Architecture, and TMP ASSOCiates
Michigan Society 01 Architects
III associatIOn With Aros and Gold-
Honor Award for hiS project The choosmg color schemes appropri-
ate for DetrOIt's ~even IHstorlc blatt ArC'hltectc;
bUilding had been deSIgned In 1918
by Albert Kahn, but had gone dlstncts Two, 25-year awards for build-
through at least SIXalterations that Others honored were lOgs whose deSign were considered
had erased much of Kahn's deSIgn - Smith, Hinchman & Grylb' by the Jury to have "Withstood the
Replacmg the ongmaI13-foot-hlgh deSIgn for the U S Customs & Im- test of llme" were the General
arched wmdow~ that had been mlgratlOll IIlspectlOn FaCIlity at Motors Techmcal Center designed
altered to accommodate 9-foot ceil- the DetrOll/W1I1d~or border, by Eero Saarinen In association
Ings mdke the bulldmg look more - Straub As~oClates/ Architects' With Smith, Hinchman & Grylls
like Kahn's onglnal deSIgn deSign of the Oakland/Troy Air- and the Wayne State Umverslty
Other reSidents honored mclude port Terminal,
McGregor Conference Center de-
Wilham Kessler & ASSOCiates who - Rossetti Assoclates/ Archi- Signed by Mllloru Yamasaki and
received two awards for hlstonc tects Planners for the Traveller~
ASSOCiates
preservatIOn/adaptive re-use proJ- Tower~ expansIOn 111 SouthlJeld,
ects The firm was honored for the - Lockenbach/Zlegelman and The awards were presented by
Kresge FoundatIOn Headquarter~ Partners, Ioc for the Handleman Herbert McLaughlm, F AlA of San
In Troy ThiS pr01ect preserved Company 01 TI'OV, Francl<;co chaIr ofthe jury, at the
and adapted a claSSIC 1852 farm- - TMP ASSOCiates, Inc lor a DetrOIt Institute of Arts Dec 7,
~tead m toe midst 01 the Big college dormitory at Suomi College
Beaver Road bUlldmg explOSIOn m the Upper Pemnsula,
ttt a The re~ult IS a three-acre farm - Jlcklmg Lymdo & Powell A man in Bristol, England, re-
amid several hundred acres of ASSOCiates [nc lor a techmcal cently was fined for dehvering his
Grosse Pointe Shores Municipal Building wife's baby, That nation's Mid-
mirror glass center at Oakland Commumty Col-
Another wlOnmg J Irm was lege, wives Act of 1951 makes such Il-
honored not for a bUilding but for - Robert Margerum Inc for the legal without medical help.
lfyoJ'l want to win
a Il:iP to ail,
CASUAL SHIRTS • • • •• FROM$1 "')99 ve got no time to lose.
OUTERWEAR ",.1. FROM$4999
BLAZERS $11000 I •••••• I •• FROM
SPORTCOATS FROM$99
00
S U ITS FROM$149
00
SWEATERS FROM$14
99
1.'
ALSO SLACKS, JEANS AND MORE
DETROIT
20535 Jamn CllIlzenl HIghway
Hear Nor1hland SIloppl"9 Center
EAST DETROIT
20929 Gratlcl Avenue
Nur 8 MIIe'Road
YOU CAN WESTLAND
CHARGE IT
7040 Wayne Road
Near Walland SIlopping Center
, ~.
')fl/II ~radl'
", \lltdl'l//~ (I/}{I ,!Ielr I('(lt her III (III IIrtheofof!,ICllf dig si/e Dill' of
Ihe 11/(/1/1 '1/{lIId\ Oil" le{// III//~ ('\f)(lfll'//( 1'\ of ollr Middle .'It hoof
Come to the
You've only got 2 weeks one of 10 two week HawaIIan triPS for two, worth
UNIVERSITY LIGGETT to send in a losing TIC mc TOE $5,000 Trip Includes round-trip airfare, seven
nights each at the Hyatt Regency Walklkl and the
instant lottery ticket. Hyatt Regency MaUl, free rental car. $500 spending
Middle School Simply fill out the entry form below send It in With a
money; and rnore Or you can choose a cash prize
of $5.000 instead For more details, see your lottery
lOSing TICTac Toe ticket It must be receIVed at the
VISITORS' DAY address listed below by January 31 You could win
agent So play TICTac Toe Somebody's
going to Hawall, Why not you? ~
~
Friday, January 24
8:15 a.m.-3:15 p.m. r----------------------------------.
I Send in a losing Tic Tac Toe instant lottery ticket, I
I and you could win a trip for two to Hawaii. I
!-or students currently enrolled In grades 5 6 & 7 I rntry rulE'S I
I 1 y" I "YJV er 1(', os c>,l('n as you WIsh but eoch enlry musl be moiled separately 2 ';end a los,ng
11 1( r 10f' In tnnllotle,y ticket WIth an offICial entry 101m0' copy Or InslPOd at on entry form
I
• Altend classes WIth a ULS student. Meet our teachers r" t vour nome mdross and telephone number 00 a plain pIeCe of pape' 3 Entoes musl be
I I
j • D,scover what makes our school a speCIal nlace
I
'Thll('(j n 1 plo ...(nv('lope no larger lhan 4",10- 4 Do NOT use the sweep,'akesoddress
'r, ( 'V I 011"11' CCHiPsponden,e or pnze claims EnvelOpes WIllnot be opened It not selected os a
'we' , Ilok", W nner 5 rntnes must be recerved by Joruory 3\ 1'186 6 All ent'l(,s become the
prr ~(',ty ,/ thp M chtgan Lollerv and cannot be r('tu'ned 7 A p,!:'1m,no,y drowlng may be
below
I
('onn Jc!('(J / 0fTl among entnes receIVed 8 The setectlon at WInners Will "* cOflducted on
I
I r ( t>runry \-1 !OM 'n accordance wlIh Lollery procedures and drrectrves 9 lhe 10Wlnners WI'l Ix>
pH'\('nlf',j Wile S'J 000 by the MichlgOn Stale Lollery Winners can k<>epIhe $5000 and nol take
Please let us know you will be our guest by .January 22 I Ihf> Inp Or Ih0 Wlnne's can use the tnpotferand poytOllhe Inptrom Ihe$5000 Tflpmu;1 be loken
t I' 1)(>,(>mtJP' 3t 19M tl ThE'names of WInner; WIllbe announced'll. Send enlnes to Michigan
I
Call the Middle School at 886.4220
I II II' 'j InrI 10 f1owo I ~wcepsfa~f>s LanSing MI48690 (Useoddless for sweepsla~e\ only] I
I N/,Mf - I
Nl[)R[ >.~ _
850 Briarcliff Drive, Grosse Pointe Woods I lilY IAT! liP I
UniversIty Liggett welcomes students of any race, religion, sex, <1rethnic ongtn
I TEl rPH~>rif N JMBW I ] I
I ---------_.~----------------_.
,
-----~---~
_- ...... ----
•
: , 4 a
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Flve-A
'e.l)
Business
Kay is named
bank board member
David
Yates
Farms has been
Yates is top financial
officer at appliance chain
of the
C
VllLAGE.MARKET 18328 Mack Avenue - In The Farms
assIgned the
M. Jaul' Kav po~t of chIef fl-
of the CIty has na nClal offICer
/
been appoInted
to the board of
directors
First of Amenca
01
for HIghland
Superstores,
Inc Yates IS al- fine
"THIS WEEKS BELL RINGERS"
ready vIce presl-
Bank-DetroIt dent-fll1ance lor wines DAILY 8 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Kay IS vIce pI e- the applIance
liquor PRICES IN EFFECT
sldent of ad- cham He Jomed Wednesday and Saturday 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
mInIstratIon at JANUARY 16th, 17th & 18th
the fIrm m AprIl, Just before its InI-
DetroIt Edl~on tIal public offenng He has ex-
wIth responslblhty for admllllstra- penence m varIOus adm Illlstra
tlve sen Ices and materials live, fInancIal and plannmg pOSI-
management She ISactIve m CIVIC tIons WIth Avery InternatIOnal and
orgam,mtlons and ISvIce presIdent National Steel corporatIOns Yates
of the EconomIc Club of DetrOIt ISa graduate of the Harvard Bus)-
Kav receIved her undt'rgraduate np"" ';chool
VILLAGE FOOD MARKET HAS
degree In mdustnal management \nnouncing .. Patrick L. ADDED AN ALL NEW SELF SERVE
from the Ulllverslty of DetroIt She Bruch of the Park has been nam- CHEESE COUNTER. CHEESE FROM FRESH
also holds a master's degree In ed vIce preSIdent and general
ALL AROUND THE WORLD FOR
personnel p~ychology from Wayne manager-tnm products for the De-
State Umverslty and a master's III trOIt Gasket dl VISIOn 01 IndIan YOU TO SELECT FROM. STOP BY HALIBUT
busmess admllllstrahon
UniversIty of MIchIgan
from the Head Industnes ... Lynn Allard,
formerly of the Farms, has been
TODAY AND SEE THE WIDE SELEC-
TION WITH GREAT PRICES TO STEAK
appomted natIOnal executIve
MATCH.
$159
dIrector of the Canadian Condom 1-
MEDIUM
Vandals hit Kerby mum InstItute, headquartered
Toronto Sandra Beal-d, soon to
m
[I.'}fj;:~ GUNSSERG
Persons unknown apparently be of the Pomte, IS regIOnal FROG
yanked a fIve-foot pIece of fence
po~t out of the ground at Kerby
manager of the Research Institute
of AmerIca, where her responsIbi-
~-~-- \~ - J.I CORNED BEEF LEGS
School and used it to break fIve lIties WII! mclude assIstIng attor-
wmdows over the weekend Ac- neys, accountants and business
':~~'0-. '"
BRISKET
cordll1g to Farms police reports, people WIth theIr legal research II~'~ AU. FLAT CUTS LB. FRESH
the two-by-four-foot wmdows were
located behmd bushes III an unht
signs of entry
needs Patrick L. Sweene)' of
the Woods IS secretary
area of the school There were no Eastern Dental SocIety for 1985-86
of the
LAMB
SWORDFISH $498
99~.FRESH SQUEEZED
STEAK
- Nancy Parmenter
LB.
Choices PATTIES
of U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Mary-Louise Selover L.EAN AND MEATY PINK GRAPEFRUIT
SHORT RIBS
Book. ...
Actor .
Actre!os .
Assistant Director, Super Shape
"
. Charlotte's
. ..
Web by E.B. WhIte
Jack NIcholson
Blythe Danner
OF BEEF $12~ NEW A T VILLAGE
FOOD MARKET
MOVie . Jezebel WIth Bette DaVIS and Henry Fonda
Play . . .. Cats
OUR OWN
TV Show . MasterpIece Theatre RANCH STYL.E
Newscaster . '" . . . . . . .. . .. Peter Jennrngs SPECIAL
MagaZine
Columnist
Newspaper
.
.
.. .. The New Yorker
Russell Baker
. .New York Times
SLICED
BACON $15~ SOUTHERN
PECAN
98;' $19!x
Music Broadway show/claSSIcal
Entertainer
Pel or Animal •
Lily Tomlin
.. . Dog
SWISS PREMIUM GOBBLER'S
Sport. . .. .... ... . ... " .. . Spectator kind
Athlete .. . . TIm Fox. '85 Free Press marathon winner BROWN AND SERVE
Pro Team.. . .. .... . .. Detroit TIgers
Most Admired Person
Flower
. My mom
DaffodIl
PORKSAUSAGE Y
Color . ... . Blue
8 oz. PACKAGE
VacatIon Spot. . . Maine UJoods
CANADA DRY
$298
Favorite Food. . . .. . Lrngurne wzth whIte clam sauce EXTRA L.EAN - BONEL.ESS
Favorite Drink .. . . Coffee lrght
Song. . . What I DId for Love from Chorus Lrne
1 LITER SAI.E
Relaxation or Hobby .
Pet Peeve
ExerCIse/dance
People who don't lIsten :~~~ERFLY
• CWB SODA • SELTZER
LaGore named artist-in-residence ',CHOPS LB. • GINGER ALE • IDNIC
• DIET TONIC
Grosse Pomte reSIdent Law-
rence LaGore, pJalllSt and teacher,
has been named fIrst artIst-m-resl-
leadlllg IllstrumentalIsts
vocahsts from the metropolitan
DetrOIt area and has fIrmly
and
TAKE 'N' SAKE
dence at Marygrove College establIshed Itself 111 the cultural lIfe STUFFED
A member of the Marygrove of the cIty
plano faculty for i1 years, he
teaches plano m Grosse POlllte and
PORK CHOPS
IS an adjunct professor of plano at
two other local colleges
LaGore has performed exten-
$22~.
sively as SOlOIst, ensemble per- STUFFED WITH OUR OWN SAGE
former and accompamst III De- AND ONION DRESSING
$289
troit's concert halls and III other i.
J ....
locatIons throughout the United
States and Canada HIS lIst of con- FRESH
cert achvltIes Illcludes perform-
ances on the Brunch WIth Bach -\ OUR OWN ALL BEEF
serIes, the DetroIt InstItute of Arts
chamber concert senes, the Lau-
M ~J\MEAT LOAF
denslager MemOrIal Concerts, , .' READY TO BAKE
Nightcap with Mozart and Praelu- 2LB. PAN
dlUm Concerts at Orchestra Hall
In addItIOn he has also performed
on radIO and teleVISIOnbroadcasts
THE WINE THAT
and has recorded for Andes and
Golden Crest Records FARM FRESH CELEBRATES FOOD!
ALL VARIETIES
FRUIT & VEGETABLES
In 1977, LaGore founded the
chamber musIc senes, "Saturdays
at Four" The Illnovatlve senes,
now III Its mnth season, features
SAVE $400 on 3 liters
on
PLUS SAVE $1.00 MAIL-IN REBATE
THE BEAUJOLAIS BY WHICH ALL
TENNIS? OTHERS ARE JUDGED
RACQUETBALL?
SQUASH? #1
SAVE $150 on 750 mi.
MACON BLANC, SAVE $2.00 on 750 mi.
GRANNY SMITH APPLES • • .... 680 LB.
Whatever your game ••• we offer ORCHID CALIFORNIA RHINE WINE SALE
The BESTCWB On the East Side RED GRAPEFRUIT ••• . . . . . .4 $100 SAVE $200 on 3 liters
FOA
NEW CROP
We have resurfaced latex-ite courts
JUMBO CANTALOUPE . . . . . . . . $169 COUNTRY WINE SALE
EA.
Special rates for racquetball, squash, FRESH
senior citizens and corporate memberships 1.5 liters
GREEN CABBAGE • • • • • • • • • • • . 370 SAVE $260
LB.
Call Debby at 774-1300 #1
TASTE THE QUALITY
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CARROTS 3 LB. BAG ••••••••••••••• 980
WHITE ZINFANDEL, CHENIN BLANC,
WIMBLEDON FRESH
GREEN ONIONS OR RADISHES. 3'OA $100 ZINFANDEL, GAMAY ROSE
20250 E. 9 MILE RD. 774-1300 FRENCH COLOMBARD
~~---_.---- __ "4... ......_--
a; - ...
-
Opinions & letters Thursday,
Page Slx-A
January 16, 1986
Mice and the elephant
When Pierre Trudeau was asked about those resources to resIdents-only since 1931
Canada's relationshIps wIth the United States, "The resIdents-only policy continues to date,"
the former Canadian prime mmlster often Said the statement continues, "because the parks
that they remmded him of a mouse trymg to
sleep with an elephant.
What Trudeau meant, of course, was that
are at their maximum capacity and fully utiliz-
ed by the residents of the city of Grosse Pomte
Park"
~ONtT
BUT If \
Canada always had to be careful In dealIng wIth
the Umted States sImply because the UnIted
"The total recreational area available In
Grosse Pomte Park is less than 30 percent of US~THE PO~V~RAPH, WH~N YOU
States IS so much larger In populatIOn and m
the size of its economy than Canada IS And as
the national recommended standard,"
statement adds, "The neighborhood parks oc-
the
HOW l T~~~'tIH~N
CM S~~ H~I~IP~
T ~
a consequence Canada doe~ Impose certain re-
strictlOns on U,S. residents, US Investment
and other matters to avoid bemg overrun by
people and interests from the other SIde of the
cupy only 28 acres to service a population of ap-
proXImately 13,600 or a ratIO of two acres per
1,000 reSidents, That IS consIderably less than
10 acres per 1,000 reSIdents recommended by
ANYONE is LYlN~ H~~E MOVIN~.~.
border
To some extent Trudeau',:, comment dppll\.:::>
equally to the relatIOnships between the city of
the NatIonal Recreation Association. Even
\\hcn one consIders the 11.9 acres of school
playgrounds In Grosse Pointe Park, the ratIO IS
IN WASHINGTON?
Detroit and its suburbs, including the Grosse increased by less than one acre per 1,000 resi-
Pointes. The SIze of the CIty of Detroit ISso vast dents."
in comparison with ItS suburbs that many In the Park as in the other Pointes, the reSI-
suburban communities have taken actIOn to dents-only policy IS aimed not only at Detroit
limit the use of their publIc faCIlIties by nonre- reSIdents but at all nonresidents. The parks are
sidents The recent adoption by the city of Dear- fenced and guarded, admission is limited to
born of an ordinance to exclude nonreSidents those displaying resident passes and to their
from the use of some of its parks in a case in guests, and enforcement of the residents-only
pomt And It has led to a laWSUItand a boycott requirement IS not left to the selective discre-
against the merchants of Deal'born on the tion of city employees or officers
grounds that the ordInance was aimed at the ex- The Dearborn controversy has raised the
clusIOn of blacks and other mInorltles from cer- question about whether the ordinance was aim-
tain Dearborn parks ed chiefly at mmorities, but in the Pointes the
Some people, mcludlng the head of the argument is made that the residents-only policy
NAACP who is leadmg the Dearborn boycott, IS aimed at all nonresidents. In fact, the policy
have been quoted as saYing, In answer to a has been in effect in the Park smce 1931, which
newsman's questIOn, that If they Win theIr case was long before blacks became a majority of
against Dearborn, they won't have to take ac- the residents of Detroit.
tion against other suburbs, such as Flat Rock, Racism is not, of course, unknown in the
S1. Clair Shores and the five Grosse Pomtes, Pointes any more than it is in Dearborn or in
that have residents-only parks, because such Detroit. But our contention is that the major from our readers
restrIctions then WIll be "unconstitutIOnal." reason for the residents-only policy in the
Nobody knows how widely this feeling ISshared
by all NAACP members but it ISan opinion that
worries some Grosse Pointe reSIdents.
Pointes is the sheer size of Detroit and other
metropolitan area communities in comparison
with the SIze of the parks m the Pointes. On
Voters approved Dlarina expansion
" . that baSIS, we doubt the practicability of the To the Editor: WoodsmarIna can't accommodate knew what I was doing when I vot-
Yet the. mformatIo~ we have IS that the proposal by a Detroit reader of the Grosse I enjoyed readIng your Jan 9th boats larger than 27 feet or boats ed for the manna referendum
Grosse Po~nte~ are not m the same c~tegory as Pointe News that Detroit reSIdents be permit- article, "Woods Spent 1985Build- with deep draft. Clearly Improve- After all, Grosse Pomte ISa boat-
Dearborn In thiS c?se ~ecause the Pomtes haye ted to use parks m the Pointes by paying a fee. mg, Improvmg " The city govern- ments are necessary Ing commumty. A project which
developed and maIntamed their parks. only With If a large number of Detroit residents should ment seems to be domg a good Job It seems to me that the Woods improves an inadequate and sub-
tht: use of funds generated by taxatIOn .m the be willing to share the costs'of operating and deciding how to spend our tax rev- government doesn't care about standard marma at no expense to
Pomtes, by user fees applIcabl~ to reSIdents ma'ntaining the park the increased usage by enues. Over a millIOn dollars was boaters By ItS mactIon the city the taxpayers makes sense to my-
who use the parks, or by contrIbutIOns from I'd 'h" 1 d' . spent on streets and sewers, government seems to be tellIng the self and (please note elected offi-
Pointe reSIdents. No federal or state funds nonreSI ents mlg t sImp y ~pflve so~e res.I- on
S120,OOO a new fire engine, voters that they made a mIstake, clals) the majorIty of the voters.
have been mvolved so fa as we kno . dents of thelr.f~eedom to enJoy parks m theIr $25,000 on tenms courts, and so It knows what's best for them. Walter Nikesch
,I' \\, own commUnItles. forth. These are, of course, worth- Well, I would like to think that I Grosse Pointe Woods
The city of Grosse Pointe Park has issued a In effect, the suburbs are "mice" in compar- while projects and the funds seem
state~en~ ?f explanation to people who have Ison with the Detroit "elephant" and, it seems to be well spent The taxpayers
been mqumng about the comparIsons made be-
tween the Pointes and Dearborn. It points out
to us, Justlfled in raising barriers to the general
nonreSident public's use of their park facilities
must rely on a sound city govern-
ment to make WIsespendmg deci- ~
Time to give women credit
Htat' ~'because of the minimum neIghborhood so long as they do not violate,federal and state' sIOns SInce It IS impossible to ob- Tq Ithe.~ilor: , , , I ' gy we-learn that most of our ma- •
park space available," the Park has restricted legal requirements tain prIor voter approval for all This is an mterestIng article ternal and paternal grandmothers -T
major expenditures However/ (profile of MarIan TraInor, Nov - all the way back - were MI~s
when specifICapproval for a proJ- 21, 1985) The only thing left out IS (blank) because then malden
From one News to another
By now most residents of the Pomtes know the qualitIes of one of their number, even
ect IS obtaIned from the voters, I "who" she is - the fIrst rule of re- names were never used
do expect the city government to portmg Her maiden name is never
respond
I suggest we start the new year
given - nor that of her father, but by USIngthe malden name m obi-
About four years ago, the Woods we are told a great deal about her tuarIes and stOrIes about women
that the Detroit News has picked Tom Green- though weekly newspapers in smaller commun- voters passed a referendum on husband. Unless a father or brother ISmen-
wood, columnist, reporter and photographer for Ities traditionally served as training grounds manna Improvements at the tioned, we have no Idea who they
the Grosse Pointe News, to succeed the late for big city journalism. That IS still true today, Grosse Pomte Woods Lakefront I thmk it IStime we give women are
Charley Manos as a Detroi t News columnist In even in the era of chain journalism. So we wish Park StudIes have shown that the credit under their own names, not Dorothy <Jones) Kilpatrick
our view, the Grosse Pointe News' loss IS the Tom good luck even as we regret hIS leaving marina expansion would be total- that of their husbands In geneolo- Detroit
Detroit News' gain our staff ly paId for by the boat well rental
Community journahsts always are pleased
when metropolItan daily journalism recognizes
"Tom Greenwood will help fill the void lett
by Charley Manos' death," said BenjamIn J
fees It would cost the taxpayers
nothing Have there been any ad-
ditions, changes, major Improve-
Woods police are alert
• Burns, executive editor of the Detroit News in ments to the marIna SIncethe elec- To the Editor: the Grosse Pointe WoodspolIce In-
announcing the appointment. "He has a gentle, tions? Is anythmg planned for the My husband and I were vlsltmg formed us that an officer had found
easy wit and cares a lot about people." near future? Has the city govern- relatIves m Grosse Pomte Woods our dog I wanted to thank the
Readers of the Grosse Pointe News often ment even agreed on any kind of thiS Christmas We brought our police offICerwho made our Christ-
a plan for marma Improvements? Alaskan malamute puppy along mas day happy agam, and all the
found evidence of that wit and that caring for and late ChrIstmas Eve, she ran other officers who kept an eye out
people in Tom's column, "fyi," meaning "for The answers are all no
The voters approved the marina away We contacted all area polIce for a lost dog on theIr rounds
your mformation," which had appeared week-
ly on the front page of the News. But he also Issue because the Woods has the and spent the remaInder of the Thank you for bemg on duty for our
worst marIna and the most boaters mght followmg her tracks before famIly thiS Christmas!
served as a photographer and reporter for the of all the Pomtes Many wells re- we lost them We were frantic Erich and Jane Wilson Adichs
News, most recently covering the Woods and main unused every year because ChrIstmas afternoon, a call from Villa Park, III.
;
the Farms where he specialized in coverage of of a low bridge. This adds up to
the police departments.
Tom was one of five Wayne State University
thousands of lost dollars yearly
And unlIke the other Pomtes, the Clarify term, senior center
Journalism graduates on the Grosse Pointe To the Editor: We do not know what the school
News staff. He has served in the Marines, in-
cludmg duty m VIetnam, has worked as a Grateful The school survey IdentIfies a system had m mmd when It used
'iubJect for whIch follow-upmqUlry the phrase Semor Center That
IS mdlcated
photographer for the Associated Newspapers To the Editor: should be readily available.
weekly chain m Wayne, and has done free lance Three out of four respondents But the most Important Item of
On Monday, Jan 7, about 4 pm, supported establIshment of a
photography for other area publications. a Grosse Pomte Farms reSident, Semor Center When one considers mformatIon we seek ISa lIst of the
Tom's experIence, writing ability and inter: walkmg from Lothrop Road to- that the typIcal respondent was needs and interests of senior
est in people ought to make his column a fine ward Brownell School, experienc- over age 61, that ISa very slgmfl- Citizens whIch would be prOVIded
addItion to the Detroit News and Tom himself ed severe breathing difficultIes cant fmdmg. through a Semor Center, yet are
and collapsed at the corner of not currently prOVIdedby Services
a worthy successor to Charley Manos. Tom Will Apparently It IS perceived that for Old CItIzens at Ferry SchooL
start occupying hiS new space Feb 3 on a Mount Vernon and Chalfonte madequate attentIOnISbemg given the Neighborhood Club, Calvary
Two women dnvmg by noticed to the n~ds
three-times-a-week basis. hIS predIcament, stopped to offer CItizens,and and interest of semor Center, GP Semor Men's Club,
that the current
theIr help and took him to St John CIenCiescould and should be defi- Senior Women's Club, AARP
met Chapters, the several churches, et
In the public interest
The New Year puts additIOnal responsIbIhtIes vehicles on state roads declined 47 from the
Hospital The man and hiS famIly by a Semor Center
hope that this notIce m the Grosse
If the needs and mterests of
Pomte News Will reach the two semor cItizens were, m the opimon
al
WIth that mformatIon we would
good Samaritans as an expressIOn of the respondents, bemg proper- then be m a pOSItIOn plan the to
on Michigan motOrIsts in t~e public mterest. num~er who died in the same period in 1984, of their gratitude locatIOn, eqUIpment, staffmg and
ly addressed there would obvIOUS- fInancmg of the Semor Center
George Bielski Family
., As.of Jan, 1, the fme for fallure to wear a seat
belt Jumped from $15 to $25, as the mandatory
despIte a natlonal trend of increasing traffic
death tolls. So there is evidence that increas-
ly be no mterest m or support for
Grosse Pointe Farm .. a Semor Center .John J. Schonenberg ,Jr.
seat belt law entered ins sixth month. And on
the same date, the state required most cars in
the Detro!t ~etropolitan area to u~dergo ex-
~aust testmg In an effort to reduce all' pollutIOn
ing use of seat belts does save lives.
As for the exhaust tests the chIef complamts
to date have been about the varymg costs and
the varymg results The state permits a charge Grosse Pointe News
Gro<;<;cPointe Farm"
-
m the Wayne, Oa~la~d and Macomb counties. of up to $10 for the test, with some stations and Publl.hod W•• kly by Ant •• ho I'uhh.b ....
NEWS CLASSIFIED
DespIte. some CritiCism, the new seat belt law garages charging less. But several instances 99 KERCHEVAL AVE. 882-0294
DISPLAY
882-6900 882-3500
ISIncreasmgly popul~r among motorists, A sur- have been reported of cars failIng the test _ Grosse Pomte Farms, Michigan 48236 Pat Pahol<t.h JoAnne BllTt8T R~eT Ihgeq
v~y conducte~ for MIChIgan Secretary of State and passing It at a different statIOn Sfor()nd CfU!lJ Po'tAIC'f' PAId At Of'1rolt "lrhlliCan ~I"w", Fdltor A~"l'lant to Pubhlllher MenAger
CU!> P!. 23G-411OO I and CIAIIi"'llfied Menage-f
RIchard Austm found that 80 percent of the 600 Owmng and driving a car are heavy respon- ~;I", Frohman
to "alan" "dllor PM RoU"I-'lf'AU
persons quefled favor the law now as compared sibllitles They include not just the origmal cost \'lAIn Br0N3ell 'iRI~f1 PromoCmn
F'\-(' "fan(' RUTC'sr
with 67 percent in ~ay, two months before the and the contmumg operatmg expenses but also re~K\ 0 ( onnor ( 1Tol FI"C"hpT Ch".o.lI ••
"'p<>m fdllor
law became effectIve the many regulations imposed on the owner; a Anne \1ulh(>nn
\tf'H RI'... rd
a
r BenJamm (,mffr('
Kim K01loN<;Kl
However, the survey also found that only 58 license for the car and each driver, reqUIred m- \\ lihllr 'ftl~t(n {of"N!'n Slan~ "'t('\C Kulick
percen~ of the respondents say th~y buckle up surance, reqUIred seat belt use, and now re- Fdltonal \onlilultant
CIRCULATION
all the tIme. That figure, however, ISbetter than quired testmg (In the three~ounty area) for ex- "lkc ArldU(J{I)k 882-6900
the 29 ~rcent who gave the same positive ~aust emISSions Add to the list the many traf- Tom (JrttnwO<Xl f rAn BAcha
~arH:Y T'armenTtf
r.esponse In May, before the law became effec- flc laws motorists are expected to obey.
Robert G Edgar
live,. So the percentag~ of people buckli~g up It is true that a sense of responsibility can- Publisher
has mcre<;tsed subst.antlally "":Ith the law In ~f- not be imposed by legislation But laws that hit
feet. A~d It should rIse even h~gher WIth the In- the pocketbook when people shirk their respon- Robert B. Edgar, Editor and Publisher "f('m~r MIChl~IH'1 P'rf. .." A~~I.atlOn
Rnd 'JAohonRI Np~ "lpt4~T A~CW>Clatlon
crease In the pe!1aIty f~r fallIng to buckle up. sibilities do tend to promote compliance. Some (1940-1979)
Furthermore, m the fIve months after the law drIvers fall to realIze that cars can be deadly Audit Rureau
of Clrctll.Atlons
took effect, the number of people who died in projectiles, as well as polluters, which explains
why the laws are required to protect the public
,
,\
•
... -
Opinions & letters Page Seven-A
Thursday, January 16, 1986
Prime Time for senior citizens
By Marian Trainor ThiS new pattern of providing successfully IS for a group to keep
Almost never a day goes by that securIty for older citizens will not a close watch on key bills that may
along with dlsturbmg news of cata- affect those receivmg SOCial affect their membership Mem-
strophes m the au and threats of SecurIty benefIts now nor wIll It af- bers of the group than set off a
terroflsts that we don't also read fect those In their late 40s and 50s planned chain reactIon to com-
of proposed cuts m Medicare or A move towrd privatizatIon IS mUnIcations to lawmakers before
some prediction that Social SecUfl- bemg trIed out in Great BrItaIn It crUCial votes.
ty Will become too burdensome for is a supplement to theIr baSIC re-
wage-earners to support because tirement program For instance, the members of a
of the ratio of those who contribute British workers, If they so group or governmg board chooses
and those who benefIt ISshrinking choose, may allot a part of theIr legislative priorities at state and
Granted that airplane crashes SOCial SecurIty taxes to an ap- national levels Issues are then
and threats of SUICIdeattacks are proved pensIOn plan TheIr em- selected for actIon m upcoming
much more upsettmg than change ployers WIll also pay mto It The legislative sessions that you want
m Medicare and Society Security, worker's fund balance would ac- your representatIves to brmg be-
but to those who need and depend company hIm from Job to Job On fore the legislative bodies. DeSig-
on benefits such news is bad news his death, the worker would have nated members of the group can
It was noticeable that one of the something tangIble to leave hiS contact the staffs of congressmen,
questIOns that was put to President family. senators or state legislators and
Reagan when he gave his speech Experts belIeve that prIvate pen- ask that they be advised about the
on Libya was one that dealt, not sIOn programs are superIOr to CrItical stages of legIslative bills,
WIth that CflSIS, but With the effects government programs. This when CItizen OpInIOncan have the
of cuts m Medicare payments to theory of prIvatizatIOn IS not one most effect
hospitals that those now recelvmg Social
It was pomted out that older pe0- Security benefits wIll have to con- Spread the word SWIftly WIth a
ple were bemg sent home before tend With, however they will have preplanned telephone network
they were ready to go because of to deal With proposed cuts In Medi- where the legislatIve "watcher"
the practIce Instituted by the care
calls six members and so on. Wlth-
government In 1983 of paymg a It IS one that older Citizens m hours, hundreds of members
standard amount based on the pa- should do more than worry about can be contactmg lawmakers With
tient's Illness, glVlng hospitals m- It calls for concerned action. In opmions on legIslation your organ-
centIves to trIm unnecessary ex- earlIer days citizens who dIsagree IzatIOn cares aobut m time to affect
penses. WIth government proposals would votes.
Honoring the question, the pres- take to the street corners and pro-
Ident reassured the correspondent claim their displeasure.
that the problem was bemg looked Be speCIfIC. Tell how a measure
Supposedly teleVIsion has taken Will affect you as a semor citizen
Into and then he moved along to the place of those mformal street and generally how it will affect the
other questions concernmg the corner forums For those who can local economy
topic of hiS speech, which was the afford the money for that kmd of
i
UnIted States' boycott of Libya. exposure to vOice their opimons,
It was not an abrupt dismissal of that's true, but for indiViduals, the
the question but an answer, that cost is prohibItIve.
coming from the preSident, con-
taIned a measure of reassurance.
It all comes back to a balanced
Letters directed to elected of-
fIcials m Washington, D.C., letting
them know how you personally
__ I_s_a_y__ Wh_a_t_I_d_o_n_'t_s_a_y
budget While the goal of a balanc- would be affected by changes and
ed budget is one that we all would reductions in Medicare could help. It started early mto the New High school IS the last formal edu- What may have started It all IS as well
like to see achieved, the measures Your opInIOn IS your vote. The Year; a disqUieting gnawing cation they receive and It should be the blatant self-adverhsmg the I read further mto the survey
taken to reach that end should not ballot IS Important to legislators A every time I pIcked up a news- most comprehensive for which news media have been domg and found that, of 442 people ask-
threaten the health and income written message prOVIdes docu- paper or turned on the televiSIOn It people are wIlhng to pay taxes There Isn't a newspaper or televl- ed, 22 said they wanted more news
security of older Americans. mentation of your opinion as a wouldn't go away. It got stronger slOn news team that doesn't coverage of their schools While
voter. It took me a week to recognize Instead of inflating grade pomt trumpet they "have learned ex- grateful that seven of 10 read
We are told that Medicare is fac-
what made my Jaw muscles averages, why not just guarantee elUSively" or "first reported" school coverage, I also know that
mg legislative cuts of almost $10 If a measure comes up that you kids in certam classes a minImum
blllion over the next three years. have not known of previously, tWitch, my palms Itch and my back somethmg. I won d er h ow many 6 percent th InkId nee t 0 wor k
PrevIOus savings from Medicare eIther because you missed It in the muscles clench people have dislocated shoulders harder
cuts came from doctors and other paper or It was not given much from pattIng themselves on the So, anyone who thinks the
health prOViders This is m line publicity and you want to protest It happened a week ago Tuesday backs In the newsrooms across the schools aren't gettmg the coverage
when the staff proofreads the country they deserve, send along your
with the fact that health costs are It, send a wire There are two
paper. SItting in the printing plant What news medIa forget ISmfor- story Ideas or tOPiCSto me at the
rising twice as fast as older per- Western Union services that WIlI
poring over the pages, I was ex- matlOn ISour bUSIness Reportmg newspaper If there's an Issue I've
sons'incomes Even so, the cost of speed your directive on its way It
hospItalIzation for Medicare pa- costs just $2 50 for a IS-word mes- poundmg on my favorIte subject, somethmg first ISour duty, not our missed, a subject I've Ignored or
tients IS increased from a deducU sage. There's no charge for-your'
what's wrong With the schools Mike goal a mIstake I've made, let me know.
Ible of $400 to $492 (23 percent). name, organIzation, affilIatIOns A little item set me off. It seems Andrzejczyk That brmgs up the Item that ap- I'm not klddmg. An artIcle about
The fate of Social Security is and address. Write your opinIon in a group offers free exercise classes )- pea red on last week's edltoflal educatIon wrIters I once read said
another bothersome Item. Al- 15 words or less and phone the at South in the afternoons. I ,j page about how 70 percent of peo- school writers should be driven by
though it is not tied to the federal message to Western Umon wondered out loud why only at " pie surveyed by the publIc schools "anger In the face of the promise
budget, it IS dependent on the con- These messages are sent direc- South and whether North kIds turn to thiS paper for school news unfulfIlled." That anger should
trIbutIOns of those In the work tly to termmals on CapItol Hill at could attend If such an Item belongs In a drIVE' us all, from the superinten.
force the WhIte House or to state I added - to no one in particu- newspaper, It belongs on the edl- dent to the parent whose child IS
EconomISts say that as the popu- capitals They are delIvered m lar - that, since it W,:lSmy turn in grade? BeUer yet, make sure they tonal page, which IS the property starting kmdergarten. We often
latIOn grows older and lIves longer, wrIting. the column rotation, It was time to get mto college by offering a and purview of the publIsher In an ha ve to drag people - kickIng and
It IS gomg to become mcreasIngly If you have more to say, send a vent a little anger Editor Pat Pa- semester course m which students ideal world, a publisher reframs screaming - to get them to do the
difficult to fund Social Security be- Matlgram. For $2.80you are allow- holsky turned to me and saId, can memorize past SAT or ACT from taInting news columns be- fight thmg
cause the proportion of older peo- ed 50 words to present your mes- "Mike, when aren't you ventIng tests to improve theIr chances of cause he has the opmlOn page on You know something? That
ple will have increa&ed to a point sage. your anger?" high scores and getting mto col- which to express himself knot inSide IS loosemng a little If
where the contribution WhICh Timmg IS all Important. You've MISSIng a beat, I replied, "When lege. Johnny will get to Harvard, I admIt I am grateful for the re- you'll excuse me, I've got dIShes to
workers must pay will be very got to get your message to law- I'm asleep" but he won't know Ralph EllIson cogmtlOn and even a lIttle daunted do, a phone to answer and stones
hIgh makers before they vote on key It took me another two hours to from H G Wells. by It I'm also pretty embarrassed to WrIte.
recognize my angry knot and an
We are told that It IS pOSSible bIlls. Keepmg track of what bills evening of ignorIng the telephone,
Congress will more toward a are commg up IS not always easy dlfty dIshes, frozen pipes and laun-
phaSIng-out of SOCIalSecurIty and for an Individual. This ISwhere the dry to be sure. I was in the throes
toward a phasing-in of private pro- value of an orgamzation comes In of Impotent rage.
grams to protect retirees. The techmque that has worked It's been a while smce I've had
an attack. Usually, I focus my
anger and only let it show near va-
cation No vacation will help this
Shaking, unfocused rage is rare
to me. Through experience, I've
learned how to shut out certam
thmgs As Richard Pryor's Mud-
bone character says, I've learned
By Pat Rousseau how to deal with the WhIte Man's
World
WILD WINGS. IMPORTANT ORDER
When Ignorance, stupIdity or
such thIngs threaten, I turn away
DEADLINE IS January 31 for Robert Bateman's First
Canada Duck Stamp prmt at 1 Kercheval When they fall in front of me, I
work around them. I've learned to
• smIle and agree and, above all,
keep my mouth shut
Check The Further Reductions . 50% off and more on
a selection of dresses, sweaters, blouses, sports separates, It's lIke walkIng through a cow
pasture, though You can only
coats and scarves at Mafia Dinon, 11 Kercheval
dance so far before you step in
somethmg Then you get mad.
SpeCial at Trail Apot:ecary, 121Ker- ~ In the midst of these mfrequent
cheval save on ClaIr Burke's ongmal home attacks, I want to stand up at meet-
a $9 50 value
.
fragrance spray, Vapoufl, 5 oz. size IS $6 95 . "" -
_
-"'-
ings I cover and give people a good
harangue I'm not supposed to,
however, because it will comprom-
sab'eueS
Ise my objectIVity I say nothmg
T 11- ~ YEAR END CLEARANCE offers you sav- and seethe
1. mgs of 20% to 50% off everything m the store One thIng I wanted to rail
104 Kercheval agamst came up at the Jan. 6
Board of EducatIon meetmg. The
• admInistratIOn formed a commit-
Save 25% to 50% off selected mer- tee to study grading One poSSible
Ik
~
u,utSkt chandise store-wide at The League Shop, 72
Kercheval •
outcome could be a weighted grad-
ing system
A weIghted gradmg system sup-
JANUARY CLEARANCE
posedly rewards students who take
Gift Boxed Gerlty all occasion gift tougher classes by guarantee10g GOOSE DOWN COMFORTERS AND AlL.COTTON FLANNEL SHEETS
Items fInIshed In 24 Karat gold electroplate In- somethmg extra on their report Winter values you can really warm up to now Choose from our selection
clude magmfymg glass, money chp, cake cards Simply put, a grade be-
of ,mported comforters filled WIth white goose down and covered
server, napkm rIng, stapler and more are wait- comes a reward for motivation,
not performance In cotton cambriC AII.cotton gently napped flannel sheets
mg for you at Seasons of Paper, 115Kercheval
The logiC behmd the system is In prints and plaids Imported and domestic
• just as flawed. A weIghted system
Pit'tlf'ti7l01'tOfl STORE CLOSING SALE contmues assumes that all students who take
............. With further markdowns store-WIde at PIcard- tough academic classes go on to
college It also assumes that hIgh
~
·
Norton, 92 Kercheval.
• schools are farm teams In which
college students are trained before
they graduate to the big leagues.
Jacobsons
The Phoenlx
Phoenix
Semi Annual Clearance
Sale now 10 progress at the
The Phoemx features contemporary womens
Pubhc high schools
become the college student pro-
can't
We welcome Jacobson's Charge Card or Thl' American Express' Card
fashions .. if you haven't discovered The PhoeniX, now IS ducing factones Into which their
the fight time Colonial Bank BUIlding 882-7272 non-publIc counterparts are evol- We are now open until 6 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday
ving. From publIc high schools,
Thursday and Friday until 9
kids may choose any direction.
_~l _
Page Eight-A GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
David Frank Quinlan George Christofaro Catherine F. Engel
Services for Mr Quinlan, 36, of Services for Mr Christofaro, 80, Private services for Mrs Engel,
Fisher Road, were held Saturday, formerly of the Park, lately of Ea~t 88, of Trombly Road, were held
Jan 11, at the Verheyden Funeral DetrOit, Will be held at 11 a m to- Wednesday, Jan 8, at the Verhey-
Calling House Antiques Home and Grosse POinte Memor-
Ial Church
day at the Verheyden Funeral
Home
den Funeral Home and Elmwood
Cemetery
He died Jan. 8 at his home He died Jan IJ at St John Hos- She died Jan. 5 at Presbytenan
• of Southfield Born in DetrOit, he was a guard
for a secunty company.
pital
Born III Worchester, Ma:>s , he
Village, In Redford Township .
Born In Kalamazoo, she was pre-
Mr Qumlan IS survived by hiS was I etlred tram the Chrysler deceased by her husband, John H
mother, Ellen, and a brother, Dr Corp He was active m the Eagles Jr and is survived by two sons,
We will be set up at Wilham C Qumlan He was prede- Club and the Semor Men':> Club John H III and Stephen F , and
ceased by hiS fathel', Dr QUilliam I\Yr Chn:>tofaro was formerly a two grandchildren
Bishop Gallagher Antique Show' Qumlan gateman at the Wmdmlll Pomte Interment was at Elmwood Ce-
Mr. QUinlan was cremated and Park and he wa:>an aVid bowler metery
January 17, 18 & 19 mterred at the Grosse POinte He IS ~urvlved by three ddu-
Roland A. Benge
Memonal Columbanum ghters, 1\1anon Chnstofdro, Grace
19360 Harper near Morass & 1-94 SImpson and Llllda Soltensch, ServICes for Mr Benge, 83, of
Marie Van Becelaere four sIsters, one brother, five Vernier Road, were held Friday,
Services for Mrs Van Bece- grandchildren. and one great- Dec 27, at the Verheyden Funeral
We Will be prepared to APPRAISE and BUY Persian rugs, Gut glass, laere, 84, 01 the Woods, ",ere held grandchild Home
pocket watches, handmade qUIlts, old mandolms, banJOS, gUitars, Thursday, Jan. 9, at the Verheyden Memorwl contnbutlOn~ may be He died Dec. 23 at S1. John Hos-
VIOlins, any anhque toy or bank, pamtmgs, Japanese swords Funeral Home and St Clare of made to the Michigan Cancel' pital
Montefalco Church FoundatIOn Born in QUincy, Mich., he retIr-
Also an authonty on anhque Jewelry She died Jan 5 at the !,'ather Interment Will be at Mount Oli- ed as vice president of the Detroit
For more mformahor. call Mr Morabito 354 6407 res Murray NurSing Home, Center- vet Cemetery Bank & Trust Co (now Comerica)
11nc
James L. Picard and wac;; in charge (If the real
A native Grosse Pomter, she was LoUIS P. Martz Lochmoor Club golf profession- estate department. Later he be-
predeceased by her husband, ServICes for Mr Martz, 91, tor- al J1l11Picard died the way he'd came president and founder of
.• AdIel, and is survived by a daugh- merly of Kenslllgton Road, lately always told fflends he wanted to Roland A Benge and Co , a firm
ter, Joan Parsons a son, John, SIX of St Clair Shores, were held Mon- wlule playll1g golf Mr PICard was devoted to fmancial services.
grandchildren, one great-grand- day, Jail 6, at the Verheyden !"u stncken on the golf course at Inms- A former bank exammer, he
• • • • child, and a brothel neral Home brook Resort III Tarpon Sprmgs, founded the Michigan Bank Exa-
11; /, Fla , Jan 8 mmers Association and was also
'.$y Interment was at St Paul's He died Jan 3 at the Bon Secours
"That's the way he wanted to founder of the Bank of Livonia,
• Cemetery Nursmg Home
Cake n Ice Cream
A nallve DetrOiter, he was the go," sdld Lochmoor Club president now part of the Michigan National
Waddell George Bob Cavanaugh "He was a golf Banks He served as an mvestiga-
•
pre:>ldent of a brewery
ServICes for Mr George, 71, 01 Mr l\1arL~ wal> predeceased by pro all the way tor for Judge Frank L. Doty's
"Jim Picard Will be sorely grand jury in 1932durmg the bank-
• All Occasion Cakes •
the Woods, were held Saturday, hiS Wife, Berneatha, and ISsurvlv
Jan 11, at the Verheyden Funeral ed by a son, Lloyd, one grand- ml:>sed by everyone at Lochmoor ing cnsls and was a coordinator for
Home and St Joan of Arc Church child and two great-grandchild- We'll be able to replace the golf pro the banks, and sa vmg and loan as-
/~ He died Jan 8 at St John ren. but we'll never replace Jim sociatIOns in Michigan during
Hospital Interment was at Mount EllIOtt Picard, the man He was Just a World War II.
• Born In Greenvllle, S C , he was
a meat cutter
Cemetery
Patricia Ann Martin
:>uper, super individual"
Picard, 45, served as Loch-
Mr Benge was al;;o a lecturer on
real estate appraisals, mcluding
/;;
1,
• Interment was at Mount OlIvet
Cemetery Services for Miss Martln, 32, for
moor's pro for 12 years He was a
native of Lafayette, La , who work-
ed at Warren Overlake's Tam-O-
the Board of Assessors m Chicago,
and lectured on real estate loans at
Northwestern University, He was
• Frances M. Hughes merIy of St ClaIr Shores, lately o(
St Petersburg, Fla , were held re- Shan Golf Club and at Burmng
Tree Golf Club pflor to hiS arnval
also a member of the faculty at the
Hal Stonier Graduate School of
•
A memOrIal mass for Mrs cently III St Petersburg
%7 Hughes, 84, formerly o{ the Pomte, She died Dec 28 at Lochmoor Bankmg at Rutgers University and
PIcard was Michigan PGA Play- was in charge of real estate lend-
•
lately of Newton Square, Pa , were MISS Martm, the daughter of
held Dec 20 In Newton Square 30-year Farms pohce Sgt Pete er of the Year in 1976,won several ing at the Graduate School of
"-
events III the National PGA Wmter Banking at the University of Wis-
•
She died there Dec 19. Martll1, IS surVived by her
Make Your • Born m DetrOit, she attended the Senes, was named Michigan Golf onsm for five years.
parents, Peter and Pdtncla Ann,
Occasion extra Convent of Grosse Pomte and was ProfeSSIOnal of the Year by hIS Mr Benge was a member of the
•
three brothers, Denms, Timothy
special with a B-R It active m convent affairs for years and Michael, and paternal grand- peers m 1982and rose to presiden- Lochmoor club, Detroit AthletIc
cake. Cy of the section In 1982-83 He was Club, DetrOit Club and Grosse
•
Mrs Hughes IS survived by her mother, Kathenne Marlm
v;ldely known as one of the most Pomte Yacht Club.
ti Made In our store
husband, Victor a daughter,
Susanne Landen, a ~on, Victor,
Interment was m Clearwatel,
popular pros In Michigan. He is survived by a brother,
Fla
•
• •
of cake 'n ice cream
or all ice cream, in sizes to serve 8 to
30 kids of all ages, 1 to 101. Order early
five grandchildren,
great-grandchildren
and seven
Memorial contributions may be
made to Meals on Wheels, 300 Pflt-
Helene DeWitte
Services for Mrs DeWitte, 89, of
"1 have never met a man so well-
liked Jm1':>death ISa deep person-
alloss to me, to the Lochmoor Club
and to hiS many, many fnends,"
Richard, and was predeceased by
hiS wife, Marvel S , and a son,
Roland Jr
Interment was at Battle Creek
• WXUHlDSSllfS (I) •
Your choice of 31-derful flavors
chard Lane, Wallingford, Pa Grosse Pomte Boulevard, were Cavanaugh said Memonal Park, Battle Creek.
19086, held Monday, Jan 6, at the Ver- A reSident of Sterling Heights,
Interment was 10 Newton heyden Funeral Home and St Picard IS surVived by hiS Wife, Petronella (Nell) Young
~ Square Paul's Church Madelme, two daughters, Paula SerVIces for Mrs. Young, 98, for-
ICB CREAM STORE 00-; She died Jan 2 at Bon Secours and Amanda, hIS mother, Mrs
• ~~----------------------,
merly of the Woods, lately of St
fJ Edythe Grab Hospital Levee Picard; and four brothers Clair Shores, were held Monday
8 Born m BelgIUm, she was pre- Services were held Monday, Jan Jan.,6, at the Verheyden Funeral
~ • Services for Mrs Grob, 93, a deceased by her husband, Paul, 13, at the A.H Peters Funeral
33-year reSident of Renaud Road, Home and St Joan of Arc Church.
and ISSUrviVed by a daughter, Bet- Home and Our Lady Star of the
• : 20% : From Now thru Feb. 9th I WIll be held Fnday, Jan 17, at 10 She died Jan. 2 at the Georgian
ty H, a son, Wilham R, two Sea Church Interment was m Re- East Nursing Home.
a m at Our Lady Star of the Sea
I •
grandchildren, and two great- surrectIOn Cemetery Born m Detroit, she IS survived
Church gran(ichildren. by two daughters, Jane Wood-
~ OFF : She died Jan. 14 in Cottage-Bel- Interment was at Holy Sepulchre Staying sane series worth and Gerry Blake; one son,
•
f
any ice cream cake or pie
I purchase
with this coupon I
•
mont Nursmg Center, Harper
Woods
Born m DetrOit, Mrs Grob used
to work With her parents at the
Cemetery
Frank William Wheeler
"Llvmg WIth Irrational People"
will be the second tOPiCin a three-
lecture senes given by Sherwin
Wme at the War Memorial on Wed-
John J., 18 grandchildren,
great-grandchildren.
and 37
She was pre-
deceased by apother son, Samuel.
Interment was at Mount Elliott
•
Sta~dard Candy Co of Detroit, the No services for Mr Wheeler, 60,
Good Oil I)' at Baskm Robbms III Ihe I ongmators .1fthe candy cane She of Notre Dame Road, were sched- nesday, Jan 22, from 9'30 to 11'30 Cemetery
Kroger SbojJpmg Cenler 011 I was a member of Our Lady Star of uled He died Jan 6 at Cottage am
~ I Jefferson {Jelweell 8 & 9 Mile, • the Sea Altar Society and the
Woman's GUIld of the Blessed
Hospital
Born m West Virgmla, he was an
Most people, ourselves mcluded,
find It difficult to be ratIOnal on a
Police warn of
51 ClaIr Shores, il-ii. j8080 I
•
-tl'
Ph (Jl3) 779-9560
5tore Homs /2-9 MOll -5ulI
I
I
•
Sacrament Monastery .
She is survived by one son, Emil
C (Jim), three grandchildren,
auto worker
Mr Wheeler was a Widower
CrematIOn was at Evergreen Ce-
consistent basis, contends Wme, as
hiS series, "Staymg Sane m a
Crazy World," Will unravel Living
phone solicitors
Grosse Pointe Park pohce are
.....
All orders mu~t be picked up I and three great-grandchtldren metery With someone who ISsubject to m- warmng residents about a tele-
~------ by Feb. 9th. JI Interment was in Mount Olivet Arrangements were made by the appropnate outbursts and Issues phone solicitation that they say
Cemetery. Verheyden Funeral Home ImpOSSible or Inconsistent de- falsely represents itself as bemg
@ 1978 BASKIN ROBBINS ICE CREAM COMPANY. mands, ISdifficult, he says. He Will affilIated with local police depart-
~ ; '" /', :. offer a way to deal With thiS prob- ments as it attempts to raIse
money
WANTED lem and show how to make reason-
H ERB able demands ourselves The department was alerted to
~~ ~355 FISHER RD. We deilver
~-. P~~~~~iN Part-Time Wille's enthUSiastic approach to
hIS subject matter has made hIm
the fundraismg, which has been
going on for the past two weeks,
UNTIL HAS BEEN
882 - 5 100 ~ ~1'C~~ed ~~~Ifl JANUARY Bookkeeper for
EATING AT
a popular Councll of Sponsors
guest speaker. TIckets for the
after reSidents called to ask about
It, according to Sgt David Hiller,
retail VIllage
CFARMStlttfARl@T 22nd store. Retirees
welcome.
UNCLE HARRY'S
& IT HASN'T BEEN
HAMBURGER
Wednesday lecture are $6.50 each
The fmal tOpiC, "Llvmg With
Danger: The Courage to be Bold,"
preSIdent of the local Fraternal
Order of Pohce chapter
"They are not ralsmg money for
wlll be on Wednesday, Jan 29 Call Grosse Pomte Park polIce or any
- ~ ------- Call Mr. Albert
881-7511 for ll1formatlon other Grosse Pointe department,"
evemngs only he added
depend on us for
\, •• liE c.~01 •..,
I.' 477-3773 ~8~~~~K Switzerland trip The company IS called PolIce
•
........ ..-.v.......
775.3120
An II-day tour of SWItzerland,
sponsored by the War Memorial
Post No. 1278, accordmg to pohce
The company, when confronted by
pohce WIth reSident complaints
------- STOP SMOKING LOSE WEIGHT from April 28 to May 8, will be diS-
cussed at an mformatIon mght
demed they were mlsrepresentmg
themselves, Hiller added
THROUGH HYPNOSIS Wednesday, Jan 22, at 7'30 p m
FRYING OR BROILING The tour Will mclude three mghts
Should reSidents have questIons
CHICKENS .69C lB
modern
~fjJ/~~
each m the CItIes of Lausanne,
Lugano and Lucerne. Sightseemg
about thiS or other fundralsing
campaigns, they can call theIr
local police department to mqUire
11therapy
Also MEMORY. RELAXATION
tours Il1 each of the CIties WIll give
travelers a view of the distll1ct cul-
tures Il1 each Alpine region
The package pnce of $1,349 per
he added
First class fare
'
• ANTI DEPRESSION • SELF CONFIDENCE pe rc;011 ISbased on double occupan- One-way passage in one of the
• ELIMINATION OF FEAR cy \\ Ith smgle supplements avall- best SUItes III the doomed ocean
CONVENIENTLY WCATED AT ahle for an additional $95 A $350 lmer Tltamc, which sank m 1912on
26417 HOOVER RD depOSit Will secure a reservatIon her malden voyage, cost $4,350,the
(HOOVER flFVEN SHOPPING WIHRI until the fmal payment deadhne of eqUIvalent of nearly $50,000 m to-
757.3880 March 15 da}' 's funds, says NatIOnal Geo-
For informatIOn, call 881-7511 graphIC
~~
TOMATO 63Q r
BISQUE. In just 15minutes, I
t
I
~NONTHEBIG
S4VJII aam-vP - -~
.85~oz.~
vour buck will I
I
I
be worth S 1.40
BUMBLE
BROCCOLI 'r BEE 400z I
I
""-
wo.,..
......
.98C BUNCH 313~ Dl~~:ATEB
SNOW WHITE $1• 79
Johnson Sports, a malor Canadian (details and forms at store) Call
hockey supplier, IS only 1S us toll free for more InfO at
I
I
I
OIRECTIONS FROM TUNNEL
After cleanng customs on the
BOSTON • 82.69 MUSHROOMS LB minutes away and we give you
$1 40 for your U S cash dollar
1-800-265- 3635
I Canadian Side of the border turn
I I RIGHTto the first set of lights
LETTUCE BANANAS IDAHO ')~ Plus we've got the largest
selectlon of top line skates, sticks,
I (Goyeau) then turn RIGHTonto
POTAOTES I Goyeau to the next set of lights
3 LB. LARGE gloves, pads and you name It . In
.79~ $1.°0 SWEET MINEOLA
ORANGES 4/1.00
8LB
1$1.79
the Windsor areal And don't
forget the sales tax rebatel
I
I
I
IWyandotte) Turn LEFTonto
Wyandotte and follow to our
store at 5909 Wyandotte About a
15 minute dnve
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS
:;: Page Njne-A
Jung center plans programs
Shirley Lloyd, local astrologer,
opens the Center for Jung Studies'
1986 program Sunday, Jan 18,
van de Post, the fIlm deals With
Jung's life Admission IS free for
members and $3 50 for non-mem-
F LAM .E
when she presents her aclion bers
astrology seminar at Miller Hall,
ChrIst Church. Psychologist Sandor Brent and
FURNACE COMPANY
The cost of the seminar, WhICh psychotherapist I<~rederIck
Thompson Willco-lead a wOl'kshop,
runs from 2-5 p m IS $3 for
members and $6 for non-members Death as an Advisor, Saturday,
Jan 25, from 8'30 a m to 5 30 pm
Why Settle F~r Half A
Lloyd Will lead particIpants In an
exploratIon of theIr own inner solar
systems through indiVidual and
at MIller Hall The cost IS $35 for
members and $45 for non-mem-
Heating System?
bers
group exercIses Sreathe Easier & Save Energy
The second offering of the season ParticIpants Will examine hfe
- the shOWing of the fIlm, "The experIences, such as separatIOn'> with
Story of Carl Gustav Jung" - Will caused by dIvorce, Job change~,
~power
be from 7 to 9 30 pm FrIday, Jan
24, at the hall Narrated by South
African anthropologIst Laurens
movmg and growmg older
For more informatIOn on the
programs, call 885.8792
L.BB Humidifier
•
Aviation ground school offered LOBB HUMIDIFIERS are the only humidl'
fiers on the market, to carry a LIFETIME
"AVIation Ground School" WIll charts The 15-week presentatIon GUARANTEE on the hOUSing and TWO.
be offered on Thursdays, Jan 23 to will also Include an mterpretatlOn
May 15 at the War Memonal The YEAR GUARANTEE on the components
of the federal all' regulatIons and
Retiring Photo b) Elsa Frohman
course WIll meet from 7 to 10 p m
and Will prepare particIpants for
a speCial emphaSIS on weather '2 year free service.
'Evaporates up to 189 gal. per day
Dr. Charles Frohman of the Woods retired from the Lafayette the FAA-wntten prIvate pIlot The Informal lessons Will Incor-
CliniC last week. Above, Dr. Thomas SUllivan, director of clinical ~>..am pUI dte Ihe u~e of VIsual a Ids and MUUtll WA.l
services at Lafayette and another Grosse Pointer, reads a letter of FAA certIfied ground and flIght opportumtles for diSCUSSIOn The
mstructor Don Jones WIll dISCUSS class fee IS$55 plus a textbook, ap-
commendation to Frohman from C. Patrick Babcock, director of
the aIrplane and ItS systems, air- proxImately $45 RegIster at the
mental health for the state of Michigan. Frohman has been direc- ports and all' traffIC control, and center or call 881-7511for addItion-
tor of biochemistry at the clinic for 31 years. He was one of the navIgatIOn by radIO and aerial al informatIOn
clinic's charter employees, hired as the clinic opened in 1955. After
a lifetime in biochemical research, he is credited with discovery Thols for entering the art world
of the Frohman Factor, a protein now generally accepted as the A free, two-day workshop "Tools lIne, call the college at 872-3118,
cause of schizophrenia. lor entermg the art world' What ext 225
students and artIsts need to know," ConductIng the workshop Will be
Successful aging program by two promment New York art Caroll MIchels, sculptor and
consultants, IS belOg oftered at author of "How to SurvIve and
St I\Ialthew's Adult EducatIOn son's Independence as normal ag- CCS-College of Art and DeSIgn at Prosper as an ArtIst," and Dorothy
Department \~IIIpresent "Success- Ing occurs the Center for Creative Studies Solomon, also a profeSSIOnal art
lul Aging" Thursday, Jan 23, at 7 from 10 a m to 5 p m Saturday consultant They will diSCUSS baSIC
p m 10 the BIshop Donnelly ActIVI- There IS no fee, but reservatIOns and Sunday, Jan 25 and 26, 245
tIes buIldIng problems of launchmg and sustam-
at e reqUIred For more mforma- East Kirby 109 a career as an artIst, tools fol'
The program will be conducted tIOn, call 884 3002 To register by the Jan 15 dead- launching an art career, pubhc
by ArchIe Bedell, M D ,Ph D ,and
relatIOns and self-promotIOn, exhi-
Pat SIkora, ACSW, both lrom Bon
Secours HospItal He WIll speak on Dale Carnegie course scheduled bItion opportunItIes, dealIng With
dealers, pncmg, grants and fellow-
the phySical and psychologIcal ef- The Dale Carnegie ('ourse Will be St ClaIr Shores, on Saturdays ships and reachmg the corporate
fects of the aging process, and she offered at AssumptIon Cultural beginning Jan 18 marketplace
Will give practical applIcatIons Center, 21800 Marter Road, on the The 14-week program develops The workshop IS funded WIth a
that WIll aId In maintaIning a per- border of Grosse Pomte Woods and Interpersonal SkIlls, publIc speak- grant from the MIChIgan Counc!!
mg, memory deVices and self-con- for the Arts
fidence 10 busmess and personal
Stop smoking clinic Park home robbed hfe A free introductory onentatlOn Learn bridge REFRESHMENTS
The PatIent Education Center of Will be conducted Saturday, Jan ~\t.~s
A WhittIer Road home In the 11. at the center For reservatIOns,
Saint John Hospital has scheduled Begmner and refresher courses ~
c..~sy.. +'1.,L'\-.
Its annual Stop Smoking Chmc the
Park was broken Into sometime call 779-6111 In contract bridge WIll begIn next (" _,
Saturday evening, Jan 11 The
week of Jan 20-24 The fIVe day thief escaped With Jewelry and two
week at the War Memonal Frank tf •
"cold turkey" wIthdrawal
gram Will be held Monday through
pro- telephones, polIce saId PSR to be honored Welcenbach Will gIve one hour of
mstructlOn 10 Standard AmerIcan
~
The mtruder got mto the home PhySICIans tor SOCial ResponSI-
FrIday from 7 to 8 30 P m In the by climbing an enclosed porch to Bndge usmg methods recom- ST. CLAIR SHORES RECREATION CENTER 24800 JEFFERSON
hospItal auditOrIum bility (PSR l, the metropolItan De- mended by expert Frank Goren
a second-story wmdow, broke a tl'OIt chapter of InternatIOnal Phy- ST.ClAIR 5HORES.MICH.<between 9000 10mi16)
Each mght varIOUS physIcIans, Another hour of playmg time wIll
pane of glass and reacheb through SICians for the Prevention of Nu-
Drs Arthur Weaver, Donald be Included In the eight-week
fF=OR~~~~O~~~;
to unlock it clear War, wmners of the Nobel
Smith, John Burrows and James classes which cost $30
The InCident was reported later Peace Pnze 1985, Will be honored
Landers, WIll give mformation and that evenmg by the homeowners An evenmg refresher course wIll
technique trammg for smokmg at a service at FIrst Umtanan-Um- meet on Mondays, from 8 to 10
InvestigatIOn contlllues versa list Church, 10 30 am. Sun-
wllilol awal success The meetmg., pm, begmmng Jan 20 On Wed-
WIll also mclude lIterature and
Use~ book sale
day, Jan 26
Guest speakers Will be co-lead-
nesday mormngs, from 10a ill un- :Sefore 8 p.m., $5°0 in chips,
films to encourage knowledge'and til noon, another refresher course
positIve steps toward "klckmg the
habit"
The Grosse Pomte PublIc LIb- ers of PSR, Dr Molly Hayden and
Dr Eugene Pernn A receptIon
WIll be held from Jan 22 to March
12 Beginners may enroll 10 the
l~!!.~~ .P~~~ .2~i£~J ~o~k'
rary WIll hold a used book sale at Sponsored by LAC St. Clair Kiwanis
Advance registratiOn is neces- the Park Branch Library, 15430 WIll follow the servICe Thursday evenmg sessIOn whIch
sary and a $30 fee is charged Kercheval, on Saturday, Jan 25, The publIc IS inVited The church WIllmeet from 8 to 10 pill, Jan 23
There WIllbe no regIstratIon at the from 10 a m to 4'30 pm Used IS located at 4605 Cass at Forest In to March 13
door For further mformatIOn or books, paperbacks, records, cas- DetrOIt's Cultural Center For Call 881-7511for additIonal Infor-
regIstratIon, call 343-3870 settes and magazmes Will be sold more mformatlon, call 833-9107 matIOn
Samt John HospItal ISlocated at at bargam pnces,
22101 Moross Road at Mack For more mformatlOn, call Phyl-
Avenue lIs Huxley at 343-2071
CARIBBEAN
CRUISE
MIS Starward -
7 Days - Must be
booked by Jan. 19
10% DISCOUNT
COZUMEL - GO CAYMAN - OCHO AlaS - PVT ISLAND
JOAN ANDERSON TRAVEL SERVICE
940 Buhl Bldg DelrOit Est 1935
,.
963-2448
LAMP REPAIR
LAMP PARTS
WRIGHT'S
Gift & lamp Shop
18650 MACK AVE,
H.llt to QfO'aM Pt .. POll OffICe
885.8839
P S Bring Your Lamp ror
Cusrom Filling
89 Kercheval on the hill
'("'1; Store Hours; Monday-Saturday 8:00 to 5:30 ,all
Wednesday tin Noon Closed Sunday HOMI DILIVIRY
Ph. 885.8.00
...
HORMEL U.S.D.A. CHOICE CENTER CUT CORNISH
CURE 81 T BONE
FUNERAL HOMES BONELESS - $289 BONELESS HENS
521-3131
DetrOil East 15251 Harper Ave
ALF HAMS STEAKS
PORTERHOUSE
LI PORK LOIN
ROAST
$299 22 oz. SIZE
$199
LI ......
DetrOIt Central 4251 Cass Ave
Garden City 31551 Ford Rd $2991~
.... ~"i1' 3~9 CHOPS $ 3~9 ~~
On Dollar Fur C LivonIa 15451 Farmington Rd EACH ~ \
~ "'~\,
l~
EVERY FUR REDUCED 'lea/:. Peace of Mind through
pre arrangement CHICKEN II WISi:::::: CARRS'#J:
~Q,~ ~: 50% 0f f t91J('t9
Pre planning can greatly
reduce Slress for famIly
members All Important TENDERLOINS
NEPTUNE
Ion.' ... chlchn br... t~_
CHEDDAR
CHEESE
BI~~T~~ZE . ~
CRACKERS ~
Ol,/(1of 1000
All
IC( cI 10
II r'i rrd
SAl ES f NAL
1) 50
decls,ons can be eas,ly
made rn advance
together And Ihe cost of
the funeral can be fIXed at
~~$399
j ~ LI.
.tuff~;1~~hi;.nd Ir
EACH
~:$199
lB
99~/'oz ~ lOX.,
The selectIOn IS phenomenal The savings fantastIc The p"ces unbelIevable
i
today s prices
'_7/,. .....7",,"-, I" I, ". ,I,} _It ,I "!",{ ,Iii} CALIFORNIA COCKTAIL IDA RED I
1"" lhr('(' (',ample"
of nur nUI,randln~ ulur' Call us, mall or bring In this coupon.
~~~~~: TOMATOES APPLES
Please let me have more detaIls on
89.!O~99~ f1149~~
Il II II .... III
C \Il ~ (n \ I "-
\lld\ I l \ pre arra"gement
I \1 \ I II \1 t I
""prr4I1H\ prFl ,,11 1.1 1I(J1 Name
DETROIT ONl Y January 15 19 I \"()~IIII \I"~ I" " r, Add_re_ss _
I "' Hl
(II
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I.
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;
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SPECIAL SUNDAY OPENING Noon ~ r m ""pfflalh flr!( r41 \ r 49i ? c~ Stale Z,p 'Dfllr UPS Pick. Up. W. resefYe the right to limit qUlin titles Prices tn effect through January 21. ~~
H' ,ro<',(> ,q, ""
.;{!' Telephone
.
~~ 01 '(1
lIT jH.... or.l or I '1 J~IY' 14
"/~llfO _ ____ ~Il\~
GPN ~~
..!o....~
- ,
• ...... $ • e p
Page Ten-A GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
ALCOHOLISM HURTS MORE
ComDlunit Events
THAN THE DRINKER. French G.~
On Wednesday, Jan. 22, be-
ginnmg at 7 pm, the Grosse
You Can Stop the Hurting Pomte Historical Society Will spon-
The Oxford sor an open house and slide/lec-
Institute OUTPATIENT SERVICES RESIDENTIAL SERVICES
ture, "French Grosse Pomte "
The open house, from 7 to 7 30
St CIJlr Prof Bldg 825 VI' Drilhner Rd pm, Will be held at society head-
22151 Moross Rd Oxford MI 48051 quarters, Room 105, Monteith
Detroit, MI 48236 School, 1275 Cook Road, Gros&e
Pomte Woods, and Will give mem-
343-3121 962-2658 bers and guests an opportumty to
see new acqUIsitIOns and acquamt
them With the work of the Hls-
toncal Society
At 7 30 P m the slide-supported I
Medical Excellence and Human Understdndtng lecture Will begm m the Monteith
School gym Lucy Hamilton and
Accredlled by the loonl Comm""on on Acoedllallon 01 HOlp,t.l, Anne MUSial, society board mem-
Appro,ed by Blue C(OS~I Blue Shield 01M" hlgiln
AU Iialed w,lh Saini lohn Ho'P tal bers and long-tIme Grosse Pomte
residents wrote and produced the
evemng's presentation Refresh-
ments Will be served following the
lecture
fnformatlOn concermng French
It's A Fact Pear Trees Will be shared and a
&ection of a French Pear Tree will
be available for vlewmg
Of Ufe
N
••• Also, a Michigan state flag WIll
be presented to the ,)oclety by the
Why Not Be LOUisa St Clair Chapter, NSDAR
Mrs. George T Edson, regent, re-
Prepared? ;
cently said, "We' are pleased to
present a State of Michigan Flag
, to the GPHS whose efforts to com- A toast
pile and preserve early records of ... to the Grosse Pointe Park Foundation which raised $3,000 toward the renovation of the Wind-
As a nurse I've come to Grosse Pomte serve to keep alive mill Park Community Center last month. Hosts for the cocktail party at their home on Ellair Place-
understand _. death is a the memory of our ancestors who were Paula and William Yates, center. Serving them are Councilman John Prost, left, and Mayor'
fact of life. I've seen came to Michigan over 150 years Palmer Heenan, at the right.
ago"
many families burden- Tickets may be purchased at the
ed by the loss of a
loved one. It made
me stop and think,
door, $1 for students, $2 for guests,
and no charge for members Park-
ing ISaVailable m the school lot or
'Royal Fantily' opens Jan. 22
"There must be a better on Chaltonte "The Royal Family I" Grosse Hoffman Jr. and Tony are her day, Jan. 29, when It IS at 7 p m
way." Then I got this Guests are always welcome and Pomte Theatre's second produc- talented chIldren. Janet Roney, in For those who wish to have din-
encouraged to a ttend Grosse tion of the season, opens Wednes- her first major role for Grosse ner before the performance, the
practical brochur~ "A Fact day, Jan 22, at Fries Auditorium Pomte Theatre, is Gwen, Julie's m- Candlelight Theatre Buffet at the
of Life." I learned how Pomte Hlstoncal Society func-
tIOns For further mformatlOn on of the Grosse Pointe War Memor- genue daughter Gigi Gaggini and Grosse Pointe War Memonal is
making funeral plans in thiS program or any other aspect Ial and runs through Fcb 1 George Valenta are the evet'-quar- available at $10per person to those
advance can save my loved of the society, call 884-7010, Tues- A comedy by George S Kauf- relmg slightIy-ragged-around-the- preVIOusly holdmg thea tel' hckets
ones from making day or Wednesday, 10-4 pm, or man and Edna Ferber, "The Royal edges balance of the senior gener- The buffet Will be served at 6' 30
decisiOns at a difficult leave a message on the recorder Family" chronicles the commgs ation, while Richard Vreeland and p.m precedmg "The Royal Fami-
time and protect against and someone will return the call as and gomgs of Broadway's leadmg Charles Doyle are the love inter- ly" performanceb Jan. 22-29 and
costly inflation. qUIckly as poSSible family of actors of the 1930s, the ests of Julie and Gwen, respective- 29-31.
members of which bear no slight ly Dave Keena plays the family ReservatIOns should be made at
f" Music series resemblance to the then-reigning manager, Oscar Wolfe, a p'roto- least 3 days in ad"ance of perform-
ance date Fo!' further mforma-
..... /
'k/~:/" {! A.. The Ftrst Umtanan-Umversalt&t
fanllly of Barrymores Handsome
Tony IS pursued by women from
type of all warm, interested Broad-
way producers of the era Round- hon, call the War Memonal at 881-
/*4 ~
•••••••••••••••••••• ...... /> /
Church of DetrOIt Will host the be-
gmmng of the MOSIac MUSICSenes
Hollywood to New York, whtle
lead-actress Juhe is the darling of
mg out the cast are Elayne Dress
as Della and Manus Nemeth as Jo,
7511 The pnce mcludes serVice,
tax and gra tUlties
. --------..
=
• Pteasesend me my free "A Fact of Life" brochure.
Name
~~
= to benefIt restoration of Its 70-year-
old /<.:; M Skmner organ .
DetrOIt pianist Evelyne Scheyer
Will present the first concert With
every producer m town.
The mother of the clan, still a
well-known thespian in her own
nght, is played by Sheila Wyatt
both family retamers, and Douglas
Tobbe, Clif Levin, and Sal DeMpr-
curio.
Directed by Chancey Miller and
Hawaii film
The Grosse Pomte Adventure
Series will present "The HawaII
compositions by Bach, Beethoven Happening" Monday, Jan_ 20, at
. -------.
Dorothy Katcher as Julie and Bill produced by John Guadagnoh,
• City --- State __ • and Brahms on Sunday, Jan 26, at "The Royal Family" has an ex- the War Memonal.
. A.H.-.----.... .
."
•
• •
•
Zip
~~
Phone
~
(optlOnllQ •
2pm
Tickets are $7 general admiS-
Sion, $6 for students and senior
cltlzens They are available at the
door and the donation IS tax-de-
ductible
As the MosaiC MUSICSenes con-
tinues on an Irregular baSts, other
Women and finance
A lecture deSigned to give
women insight mto their fmances
Will be held at the War Memorial
Tuesday, Jan 21 from 7 to 8'30
pm ,
"Money Management for
perienced and capable crew: Mary
Lou Johnson, stage manager
Geoffrey Proven, technical direc-
tor Tom Stem, set designer, Man-
anne Casey, costumes,
Casey, sound, Blair Arden, hght-
ing, Gwenn Samuel and Mae Gal-
John
An optional dmner Will be serv-
ed III the Fnes Ballroom at 6-30
p m. Dmers Will partake
Cooper's Ranch punch, Kalua-
of
baked loin of pork With fruit sauce
and sweet potatoes Mauna Kea A
luau sundae topped with pmeapple
sauce and a macadamia nut Will
lagher, propertles and set dress-
• "'C I CI-I=:I • vanetles of musIc Will be featured Women" Will be presented by fi-
nancial planner Sandra Yelensky,
mg; and Diane Graham and Nan- complete the meal m time for the
mcluding Jazz, folk, blues and pop cy Fisher, makeup. Marie O'Con- 8 p.m. vlewmg of the film
• FUNERAL SERVICES •
•
•
•
20705 Mack at Vernier Grosse POinte, Michigan
(313)884-5500
48236 •
•
The church IS located at 4605
Cass Avenue at Forest m DetrOIt's
Cultural Center For more mfor-
mahon call the church offtce, 833-
who Will prOVide gUidance m fiscal
planmng for the present and fu-
ture Re-evaluation and decislOn-
makmg regarding investments, In-
nor serves as apprentice director
and Tom Sullivan as assistant
techmcal director.
A few tickets, priced at $6 50,
Tickets for the complete evening
are $16.50 per person or $4 15 for
reserved seatmg of the film only
Reserve at least three days m ad-
• 32000 Schoenherr Warren Michigan 48093 •
• (313,2938030 •
9107. surance and Wills will be among still remain for some perform- vance by check payable to Grosse
the subjects covered m the lecture ances of the play Reservatlons Pomte War Memonal, 32 Lake-
• 12057 Gratiot DetrOit Michigan 48205 • The paper on which these words Tickets cost $5 per person. For shore Road, Grosse Pomte Farms,
• (313}526-7700 and exact mformation may be had
NNG • are printed makes excellent additional mformatlOn, call 881- MICh 48236 For additional mfor-
by calhng 881-4004 Curtain time IS
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Thinking
organic mulch for a garden 7511 8 P m. With the exception of Sun- mahon, call 881-7511.
of Leasing
Think of
DRUMMY
LEASING INC.
a Mile at Gratiot
---COMING SOON---
m.li7OO m.2200
Da..... Bellore v P
Ralpr1
d
FI 2'eK Salf!'S Mgr
~)
caring An exclusive community
Professionals
working VVINDVVOOD of 18 custom luxury homes set on
the former estate of
together
for bener POINTE Horace Elgin Dodge Ir.
health care NEW LUXURY CONDOMINIUMS
[.
Localed at 24212 Jefferson Avenue,
1/4 mIle north of 9 MIle m St. Clair Shores, Michigan.
Affiliated
Health Services
For Infonnation on F umished Models
777.6780 - 881-6100
Open Tuesday - Sunday J •
Call:
5 p.m.
Dodge Place
• Prescnptlon
service
DELIVERY THE BLAKE COMPANY
• Jobst Support 19806 Mack Avenue
HOSiery Grosse POinte W ood~, Mlchi~an 48236
• DiabetiC Self-
Testing Center For more information. call
• Crulches &
wheelchaIrs
THE BLAKE COMPANY
1'"",,
pefSllMI ."'c, 19806 Mack Avenue
for IIH1 and your Grosse Pointe Woods. MI 48236
""'''y 881--6100
ST. CLAIR
PHARMACY
St Clair Prof Bldg
22151 Moross Ad
Detroll, Ml
343.3776
If
Thursday, January 16, 1986
Financial fitness
GROSSE POINTE NEWS
~--iiiIIIIiI -------------.."lII Page Eleven-A
"Financial Fltnes!>," an indIvid-
ualized program conducted by a
team of professIOnals, wl!l be of-
1985 1040 Prepared FREE
fered at A!>sumphon Cultural
Center beglnmng Wednesday, Jan
Norman J. Ochelski, CPA
22 369-2443
John M Poplawski, 5t John
Associates, E David I\Iarande, Appointments must be made by Jan. 31, 1986.
and a tax attorney and CPA wIll ~
team up to develop a conftdenhal
financial plan based on tax mml-
mization, Investment maXImIza-
tIOn, budgehng, retlrement and
estate plannmg and benefits
assessment
Whether tax savmgs, college
funding or retIrement mcome are
your goals, thIs expert, mdlvldual
plannmg program con!>lshng of
three classes and one persondl con-
sultahon wl!l help you
For reservatIOns, call 779-6111
MACLD will meet The Christ Church Choir of Men and Boys, directed by Frederic DeHaven, will sing with the Grosse
Pointe Symphony at the orchestra's "Music and the Spirit" concert, Jan. 26, in Parcells Auditorium.
MIchIgan Assoclatlon for Chl!-
dren and Adults With Learmng
Dlsabditlcs, Inc \\ 111 present
author and educator Dmghy Sharp
Church choir to join symphony in concert
The Grosse Pomte Symphony Notre Dame and the Amel'lcan Ca- Ryan Baller, Tom Best, Ben
Tuesday, Jan 21, at 7 30 P m III
Orchestra, under conductor FelIx thedralm Pans, and, l!l England, Braun, Alex Crenshaw, Jonathan
the Grosse Pomte Central Library
Sharp IS the author of "The ResllIck, will present a "MUSICand at Salisbury Cathedral, Yorkmllls- Cruz, Ulysses Cruz, Vlllcent Cruz,
the SPll'lt" concert Sunday, Jan tel' and Westmmster Abbey Van Fox, Jeff Huebner, Brent
Bucket Brigade," an establIshed
26, at 3 30, m Parcells AudItorIUm, DeHaven, III additIOn to hIS res- Jahnke, Ryan McCormIck, Dun-
set of games and learmng aids to
Mack at Verl11er ponSIbIlItIes as orgamst-cholr- can McMillan, Chl'lstopher' Moore.
be used III the home to help chl!-
dren master necessary sk1lls She master, IS profes!>or of organ and Weston Norton, Randy O~ann,
The program WIll open WIth
WIll offer practical advIce on how director of church musIc degree at Todd Osann, LIam Ryan and Wil-
Franz Joseph Haydn's "Mana
to help children with their home- Oakland UllIversltv and musIc son WehmeIer
Theresa Mass" (Mass III B Flat),
work and skl!l bUlldmg Remedia- director of the Rackham Sym- Following the concert, which
which WIll be sung by the Chl'lst phony ChOIr
tIOn techmques m game format to Church Choir of Men and Boys. Will conclude WIth the plaYlllg of
make routme practice more fun The roster of Men's ChOIr mem- Cesar Franck's Symphony III D
directed by Fredenc DeHaven
will also be presented bers lllcludes Roger Fitch, KeIth mlllor, the audIence IS mVlted to
Born WIth a severe learnmg dIs-
abilIty called dysleXia, Sharp IS
Four solOIsts - Margaret Rees, so-
prano, Sharon Babcock, alto,
MIchael Henncks, tenor, and
Geyer, Monte Jahnke, BasIl J ohn-
son, Oswald LeWIS, Jim Llsosky,
meet the artists at a receptIOn ar-
ranged by the Grosse Pomte Sym-
RONALD J. CONKLIN, D.P.M., P.C.
sensItIve to the learmng needs of DaVId LudWig, John NICholson, phony Women's AssocIation
DaVId LudWIg, bass - WIllbe fea-
all chIldren and adults She has Nell Presnell, Greg Roach, TIckets are $6 for adults and $3
tured FOOT SPECIALIST AND FOar SURGEON
earned master'!, degrees in pre- Charles Tighe, Bary WIlkmson, for students They are avaIlable at
The ChOIr of Men and Boys has Bruce WIlklllson, Pahl Zllln Boys
school and early chJldhood educa- the door or call 886-6244to order m ANNOUNCes OF
THE OPF.Jr-..JING
been the pride of Chmt Church
tion, speech and language path- ChOIr members are Grady Avant, advance. HIS NEW OFFICE AT
and a cultural asset of the commu-
ology, audIOlogy and teachmg of mty for more than 50 years It
the deaf, remedial readmg and
learnmg dIsabIlities, and ha!>
regularly smgs at the church on
Sunday mormngs, performs chOral
aJ&3J Q!llimnen
~weepn
WANTED 20835 MACK AVENUE
taught m these varIOUs fIelds for works WIth orchestra and makes Part-Time GROSSE POINTE WOODS, MICHIGAN 48236
more than 35 years For more m- , Our Service, For Your Safety"
appearances for various orgamza-
formatIOn about this program or Professional Service, Bookkeeper for 884-7566
tlons Its successful 1985 European
MACLD, call 343-9168 or 886-9547 tour Illcluded performances at Certified, Insured. retail Village
NO MESS. NO OUST. store. Retirees
Cleaning Fireplaces HOURS BY APPOINTMENT
Woodstoves Inserts 011Flues welcome. SATURDAY AND EVENING HOURS A\~ILABLE
Caps Screens Dampers
CITY OF (&rnsse 'ninte MICHIGAN
Animals Removed Oeodorl7lng
AcceSSOries
MJch Slate L,e #5125
Call Mr. Albert
evenmgs only
I I HAS BCEt\JMY PL[ !\SURE TO HAVE SERVED YOU IN THE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FREE INSPECTIONS 773-1444 - 477.3773 P'\,',l [HOPI OLIR. !'>,rw \1\ID [XPANDrD 1-:\CILn ILl) \\ ILL
JANUARY 20, 1986 CONlINUI. TD M[f I IHL GRO\\'ING '\ilTDS or OUR
ADVERTISEMFNT P/,TltN IS
Notice IShereby given that a PublIc Heanng WIll be held Monday,
January 20, 1:)86 at 7.30 P M. by the City CounCIl at the MUnICipal
Offices 17147Maumee Avenue for review of Commumty Develop-
ment p~ojects to be submItted to Wayne County of~lce.s of Com-
munity Development Block Grant Program The City Illvltes ItS
clhzens as well as mdlvlduals or representatives of neighborhood
groups to submIt Ideas and comments concernlllg projects for the
1986applIcation Fundlllg between $63,000'$65.000 may be avaIlable
for approved projects for 1986
T .W. Kressbach
GPN - 1/16/86 City Manager Clerk
Bu"tcher Block Meat: Specials.
OUR OWN HOME BAKED OUR OWN FRESH CUT
SUMMARY OF THE MINUTES
FRESH MEAT LOAVES STUFFED PORK CHOPS
2 LBS BEFORE COOKING
CITY OF <&ross£"ointt lJiarms MICHIGAN
$1.99 EA. SI.89 LB.
LEAN, BONELESS FRESH HOMEMADE
DECEMBER 16, 1985 PORK LOIN ROASTS ITALIAN SAUSAGE
ARE YOU A LOTTERY EXPERT?
The Meetmg was called to order at 8 00 P m
Present on Roll Call Mayor James H Dmgeman, Councilmen Joseph L
Test your knowledge of one of the
most excltmg departments of state $1.89 LB. 9ge LB.
government y,lth thIS two ffimute
Fromm, Bruce 1\1 Rock\\ell, John M Crm\ ley, Harry T f~chlm and Mary qUIz U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Anne GhesqUlel e
1. Michigan voters .lpproved the cred.
BONELESS SIRLOIN STEAK
Those Absent
Also Present
Were
Mrs Kathleen
Councilman Gall Kaess
Gallagher Le\\ lS, Counsel. Me~sr~ , Andrew
tlOn of d.state Lotterv b) a 11',0 to one
mllrgln In
n 1972 [- 1977 r 11983 CAUUFWWER S1.39 EA $2.99 LB.
Bremer, Jr CIty Manager
Ferber, PolIce ChIef
RIchard G Solak, CIty Clerk and Robert K
2. From Its mceptlOn through the
fIscal year endmg Seplember 30,
1985 the MichIgan Lottery ha'i cre
JmCE ORANGES :11_ 3 9 DOZ cf~~~~~ufffr~E
-2 9
ated IhlS numberofmllhonalres
1\Iayor James II Dmgeman preSided at the 1\leetmg [l75 I J92
3. Durmg the 1985 fi'cal year, the
[ ]1l4 CHERRY 'IUMATO~. PIIlT $1.39 QUART
Kae'o~ \\ as e"\cu'ied
Counulman from allend1l1g the I\Ieet1l1g Michigan Lottl'n pre.,enled
number of ca,h m~ard., to players
thl'i
UTECATER FROM 4 TO 400
The MlI1utes of the Hegular MeelIl1g \\ hlch was held on December 2. 19R5 _5 millIOn -10 million
were appro\;ed as 'iubmilled _16 million
4. In the current fio,cal )car the Lot-
The Council. actll1g al> d Zonmg Board of .\pp<'als, approved the i\Imute'o lerv expect'i to pre'ient th" total
of the Public Hearmg held on December 2, 1985 and further granted the amount ofpn7e money to pld)ers
appeal of!\lr <t !\Irs Donald Sullivan, thereb\ authorl7lng Issuance of <1 _ $106 millIon _ $2,}9 nHllion
_~'i6Imllhon
BUlldll1g Permit for the constructIOn of a 'iunroom to the rear of thelr e'{-
IStll1g d\\ell lI1g located at 18 Harbor Court and further appro\ ed the agree 5. In the 1985 n',(,d )ear, the Lottery
ment between the Clty and Under HIli Enterpnse'i thereb) determ1l1111g contnbuled thl'i amount to the State
that Under Hilt Enterpn<;es meets the term'o for provldll1g parkmg for the &hool Aid Fund
Punch & Judy Deyelopments a ...reqUIred bv SectIOn 1')(14 9 I c) of the Clt" t> _ $'i!'l millIon _ $112 mIllIOn
_ $369 millIOn
Zonll1g Ordll1ance
6. If thl' contnbutlon to K 12 educa
The Council approved pa) ment of a ~tdtement from Dlckll1'ion Wnght tlOn h,ld come from direct !axe'i the
Moon. Van Dusen & Freeman Counsellors at L.I\\. In the total amount of n mount per :\1 Ieh Ig,1n hou"ehold
y,()uld equal HEAT MIRROR™
$7,9174J. for sen Ice'i rendereo on behalf of the CII\ of Grosse POll1te _ $10 __ $7'i __ $1l5
, Farm,; TRANSPARENT
7 The Lotterv prOVided thlS percent
of the lot-II <;tatl' Schoo) Aid Fund
INSULATION ...
The Council approv('d <lno propo<;ed Schedule of Heguldr l\Ieelll1g ...for the _4', __ 16'1, __ 2.N
Calendar" e,lr 11)86 a ...amended
meetll1g~ at 7 ,W P m
'ochedulmg the commencement of w( h
.,H .
\ ....,y,Jo){;,mlJ)y,
R-4 available now
('xcluslvely at your Four
] Volf'r"" (1ppTU\'M it con"tltullOnal chanR"e Seasons Dealer TWice as
The CounCIl appro\ ('(j the "aldl) ,lIld henefltllllfea<;~ for the Clt) ...Clerlcdl ~ nowJng for ,I ,t.ll~ LoUuv In '1.1~ 1972
Per,;onnel Tlcht, for th, Ii"t Loll' rv game W('nt 00 gooeJ as double glaZing
,,~I, Nowmh", 11 1972 let,; the light In but
2 Throlll(h "" pll'rrher 10 19% thf' Lot
The CounCIl apprm ('d the 6 month mIen m agreement for the Clt \ '0 Pollce Il n h,c_ cr' ,tf'<! 114 m,lIIona,rM IndudlOg
keeps the heat
Department ~I a<ldeE! m Ih, rh1-1 1I'oC,11 V'M out In
1 Ofth, mOT<Lh~n 16 mlilioo co,h Lollf'rv • • •• •• summer
The CounCil appro\('d the 10\\ bld \\hlch met or (''{(eeoed all ')lCclflca pn/,( ...."on In lh{' la ...! fil..,(;J1 vrar mo<;t came
~n In<::tdol g.tmf''''' ",Ilh{,"l~h av.'(lrd ...rang-Ing
tlOn'i of Roval Oak fo'ord for nme pollcC' and <ldmll1l<,(ratIYC' \ehlcle ... 111 from $210 $1 mlilion Thf' Daoly 1 Dallv 4
the total amount of $1l8,li42 ()() I otto ~nd ( ud ("mf" provldpd the
rt mamrlrr wRrd~
ortf,f" ....
The fo)JO\\ II1g HC'port \\a<; rccel\C'd 11) th(' Council and ordered placed on 4 Bd~~ on .... 11('.., ('... lmat(~ the Lottery
t
file ("pl'Ch to a"am ~'ifil million In pnw.
Police D('partment HC'port for Ill(' :\Ionth of No\C'mbC'r 1<J8'i
InchHtln~ OlAj()r ;'lVw.lrd., palti In annudl ENJOY OUTDOOR LIVING - INDOORS II
t
In ...1:l1mt nil., to pi iyrr .. In lllC' rUTT{'nt
f'i"<al yr.n WITH A BEAUTIFUL AND PRACTICAL FOUR SEASONsn. ROOM
The CounCIl appro\;ed a kttC'r of commcnddtlon recognl7lng the \'olunl('er :> R('v~nm .... from <III Loth r.,. g;lme'i are THE IDEAL STRUCTURE FOR A FAMILY ROOM, DINING ROOM,
Gro,;<;e POll1le Clo", n Corp ... "rm"rk,'Oi f"r Ih, "tal, &h,",1 /\,,1 ~\lOd
10 h, Ip '"prort K 12 r<illrat,oo In Ihp I•• L SPA ENCLOSURE, BREAKFAST NOOK, COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL
n~al waf tl"1(> 1.A"~tl('ry...coni r,hutlon to th(>
TI1(' COIlI1cII appro\('d illack AH'nu(' BU"lI1C''''' & Prof(' ......
lOllal \""?Clclilon ... f'lOd r< 'lChed $11>9mIllion VISIl Creative Spas Inc Four Seasons DeSign & Remodeling Center for the lateS1ldeas III room
rcque<;t tor a $')00 contllbuhon to hC'lp dcfr<l) th(' co,t of Ihe 19M f JrC'\\ork'o 6 W,thn"llh, 510'1 mollion Loltf'rv conln 'lddllions, With quality work (rom our NationWide ProfeSSional Network, and learn more about
to be held June 2'1 1980 hllllOTl In Ihr 'oll\te '>chool AId ~'und It tr e advantages of Heat MIrror'" exclUSively (rom Four Seasons
" .ulll h"r ''''I "1rh MIChl1{1n hou'lChold
dnoth{r $11~ In rhrPct f.... U:M to maintain
The CounCIl adopted a re,;o)ullon thallmm('dwtely follo\\lI1g adJournment Ih, ",'mr l£'Vrl of 'Oillnllon
of the Hegular M('elmg a ('Jo,ed ~e<;SIOIl "hall he held for th(' purpo<,e of
dl'icll<;'img Ihe pllrchd"e of real propert)
7 Thr I"ll' rv' $.lfi'l mllli"n conlnhuhoo
to Ihe ,.."••tp ~hool A,ll !>\lOd ,n the '.,t
Call
r.,,~1 yf'ilr ilCcollnl,<! (or .pproXlmau.ly
prrCf'nto(lhr 101,,1$1 6 holl,"n hl,dj(pt
2.1 524-1212
Upon proper motion made ,;upported and cameo, the Mer! mg ad lourn('d
""nr! vour I"tlny qu,,,,t,oo Lo FOR FREE COLOR
at 10 15 P m Wmorr« emir
I'() 1kJx 30077
MlChlJ(an Lollf'r) CREAT9ue SPAS 9Kc CATALOG OR VISIT
JAMES H. DINGEMAN, RICHARD G. SOLAK, ["''''lOl{ MI4R'J09
SALES DESIGN INSTALLATION SERVICE OUR SHOWROOM
MAYOH CITY CLERK [fyour qll' ,lion I< ll<ed vou" 011 receive 'iO
2821 Rochester Road • Tray MI 48083
GPN 01/16/80 frE'('Imlaot I{ame t"ket,
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL ENCLOSURES
Page Twelve-A GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
GAL
II.:.
/~II
I\\~
6
I.'
I
1
T
Schools
North High
orientation
Department chairpersons, coun-
selors and admlmstrators 01 North
High School Wednesday, Jan 22,
at 7 30 P m In the Performmg Arts
buddmg WIll pre~ent IIltormatlOll
Co-Sponsored by m course selectIOn, schedule pldn
Grosse POinte Public Schools mng and pupil adjustment for
students who Will attend North
Dept. of Community EducatIOn In the fall
'~
Cople~ 01 the 54 page 198&-87 Pro
gram of Studies have been
deltvered to the private and para
chlal schools m Grosse Pomte. and
copies have also been sent to all In-
coming eighth graders from
Brownell and Parcells Pdrenb
820 Huh I Bldg. [)eIrOll, MI 48226 may Wish to bring the!>e cople~ to
the presentatIOn
:\ftcr the form~l! prcscnt:J.tlOn.
parent~ and students \\ 111 hdvc the
opportumty to walk around the
ROLL SHUTTER SYSTEMS buddmg and view some of the
room!> and the actiVities that take
Great For Patio Doors & Storefronts place III them Department chair-
persons and teachers wIII be avail-
able to answer questlOn~
"Better Than Bars on Your Windows" )lefreshments Will be ~ef\'ed b\
the CommerCial Foods depart
Energy ment Students and their pal ent~ Photo bl Kay Photography
Conservation
Sound
are asked to attend Caring and sharing
Students and staff at Mason Elementary School were very much into the spirit of caring and
Imulatlon
Home Security
School events sharing this holiday season. The student council sponsored an all-school food collection for
distribution to local families, while the staff and kindergarten classes contributed clothing and
The following events WIll tdke
Ught, Privacy place within the Grosse Pomte
toys to the L1NC program. Above, from left, Mason principal William Mestdagh and secretary
Control Public School System through next Jeanne Fisher, show the collections by kindergarten students with Marc Dula, Shane Conlan,
week Friday Jeffrey Morawski and Kelley Griffin to Frances Tauoularis, Mason kindergarten teacher and
• Attractive, Money-Savmg Sunday Jan 19 - Open house at director ot the LlNC drive.
Home Improvement 2 p,m. at Trombly
Tuesday, Jan 21 - School-age
• Durable. Maintenance-Free,
Vinyl Shutter Construction movies at 4 p m at the Park
library
Kerby students enjoy Martian trip
• Mounts on Outside of
Wednesday, Jan 22 - School- B) Nancy Solak (Jupiter, Mars and Venus), how
WIndows and Doors The children have returned to
age movies at 4 pm at the Woods "Do you want to !>ee the mght hot the sun's surface IS (11,000 earth, and Via bus, to their clas~-
• Custom Factory BUIlt, hbrary sky as If you were JI1 the city or the (l!!gress F), what causes the
ProfeSSionally fnstalled room where they spend the rest of
Wednesday, Jan 22 - Parent countn? Tim Skomeczny recent- l'oorthern Lights (sun spots), which the afternoon m diSCUSSIOnWIth
peer group meeting at 7 30 P m at ly asked a group of thIrd" graders star IS the laZiest because It never their teacher, MarCia Ferguson In
Brownell from Kerby Elementary School moves (the North Star). about Hal- addition to spoutmg newfound Ill-
ThiS \\ a" thell second VI~lt to
EAST SIDE LOCKSMITHS Thursday, Jan 23 - School-age
movies at 4 pm at Central Gro~se Pomte ~orth ihgh School':,
ley's Comet. 'the dirty snowbaJl"
seldom seen more than once III a
formatIOn, they say they hked
"Mr Planetanum." He was Intel
"Your Security Is Our Business" Library PlanetarIUm. ,,0 the) knew what IJletJlue plus a \\ hole host of other estmg, pohte, and funny
15138 E. Warren Fflday, Jan 24 - ReCOrds Day, thev liked I11ght sky wonders
no school , 'The countn sk\ I The eoullln And wha t was the best part 01
881-0280 sky r" came th'e ch'orus of eXCited "One moon of Jupiter looks hke the VISIt? Why the triP to Mars, of
a pIzza," Skomeczny says as he
Science display vOices The IJght~ dimmed to ca\ e-
IJke darkness, and slowly. as eves shoob ItS Image on the screen
course.
The Detroit SCience Center Will adjusted, milhons of starts ap- above "It's easy to spell. It's call- *
'MEAT ME AT MULIER'S ... WHERE PARKING IS A PLEASURE" present a dazzling display with peared on the dome overhead ed 10 Can anyone guess how to Grosse POinte North's planet-
lasers, lights, electricity and Skomeczny. who IS the director spell It?" arium IS used 10 to 15 times pE'1'
15215 822-7786 frozen balloons in a hands-on pro- of the facllltv and allows students
There's a momE'nt of silence, and
week, mostly for school programs
MONDAY-SATURDAY gram at the Harper Woods Publtc to call him "Mr PlanetarIUm" for School districts other than Gros~e
KERCHEVAL BOO to 6:00 Library Saturday, Jan 18. The SimpliCity's sake. IS pleased with then, like several hghtbulbs bemg Pointe's, and commulllty groups,
Grosse' 45.minute program begms at 2' 30 theu' enthUSIasm He IS doublv t turned ana once, a handful of stu- can) enJoy It, also People mter-
Pointe and is open to chIldren In grades dents venture "I-O?"
pleased when a review of theIr fIr;t ested in takmg advantage of It, or
Park K-8, ~esslOn reveals that thev have re- "Yes " Skomeczny says as he one of the planetarium's SIX tele-
EST. 1937 tamed a plethora of galactiC m- scopes to spot Halley's Cornet.
pu~hes a button on his computer to
"An Impressive Selection of foods in a Relatively Small Place" formatIOn may call Halley's Hothne from
flash the image of Mlmas, a
MULIER'S MARKET A gondolier rows hiS gondola on The two hours at the planet-
one Side only. The little boat anum was a supplement to theIr
Saturman moon He likens It to
Death Star III the movie "Star
3 30 P m to 7:30 a m. to find out If
the skIes are clear and amenable
OUR LEAN ROLLED doesn't go in Circles, because It's regular classroom ~tudJes of the Wars," and the youngsters mur- to sightings. Skomeczny says that
BLADE bUIlt especially unsymmetrIcal to umverse They learned whIch mur their agreement A couple of January Will be a ~ood month for
GROUND BEEF POT compensate for the one-Sided row- three planets can be seen WIth the them add that It looks hke a gait trackmg the comet The number to
ROUND ROAST ROAST
ing naked eye dt thIS tuue of J ear ball call IS 343-2289
10 LBS.
$26!1 $15~ PORTABLE VCR'S
$1599
SOLD 10.LB. BAG ONLY
FULL SLICE
ROUND
SIRLOIN, RUMP
EYE ROUND
WINTER'S
FRITO-LAY
SPECIAL
HOW TO
RENT
A CAR
~
EM~,~r,:;~,~RC
cru~ 1~~ "2Lt 8 Pak
Exp 1 2586
Overhead Projectors
• Portable VCR With built-In
color monitor for professional presen-
tations. Also, 12 VDC
STEAK KNACKWURST DORI~~~z, $129 FOR MARYLAND BEVERAGE operation for
LESS: MARINE and
$24!1 $21~ DORIT~~, $179 Ca'l 772 8003 Because Vie
lease thousands of cars on a
long Ifrm baSIS and some are
SHOPPE
15015 MACK 882-7229 • Lightweight portable
RV use!
turned In early (belore Ihe overhead projectors for
DOVE TOMATOES CALIFORNIA lease exprres) Vie can afford
to rent them 10you dally the office or on the go
BARS weekly or monthly for less
CHOCOLATE, VANILLA
STRAWBERRY
FROM
MEXICO LETTUCE than the resl'
KEN BROWN
presentations.
SALES and RENTAL
GREAT LAKES AUDIOVISUAL
89C.. mu 89C u
69C MUD
LEASING CORP.
18400 Nine Mile Rd
E OetrOlf MI 48021
Phone (313) 772 8003
296-3121
PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JAN 22, 1986
HARVEY's
Compleat
IT'S THE BIGGEST CLEARANCE Traveler Jk~~
345 FISHER ROAD
SALE EVERI GROSSE POINTE, MICHIGAN
881-0200 ANNUAL JANUARY
Now Through January 25
Prints. .................
Upholsteries. .
from $1.99
from $6.99
SALE
II ~ JANUARY 10.25
~t iLICO.C O"RNfRS
~-"i..U Yoo'
21431 MACK A"E.
775-0078
1933 S. TELEGRAPH
25% to 500/0 OFF
DecorohveFob"c,
Tues.-Sal.9:30-5:3O 332-9163
Mon. 9:30-9:00
~un. 1:00-5:00
SELECTED MERCHANDISE
72 KERCHEVAL
\
L • • ~ f r. ~ I I • •
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Thlrteen.A
Learn a language
The University of DetrOit ISnow
registering adult students for eve-
nmg foreign language classes in
REMODELING?
Japanese, Spanish, ArabiC,
French, German, Italian, Portu- If it's done by For 30 years,
guese and Russian, to begm Jan Customcraft, ADDITIONS • DORMERS
REC ROOMS
21
The 12-week evening classes will it's in a class CUSTOM KITCHENS
BATHROOMS
be offered at the U of D mam cam- by itself PORCH ENCLOSURES
pus at McNichols and LIvernOIs, CUSTOM GARAGES
the downtown Renaissance Cam-
pUS on East Jefferson and at the
• • • REPLACEMENT AND
GREENHOUSE WINDOWS
BerkshIre Middle School m Birm-
CALL THE OFFICES REMODELED
Ingham Designed for several pro- PROFESSIONALS COMMERCIAL REMODELING
ficIency levels, mcludmg begmner,
the classes will be conducted m the
Dartmouth RassIUs method devel-
"5'1!!~.R.F'+
oped by Professor John Rasslus of
Dartmouth College
These U of D language cla~~e~
have been ~elected by local and na-
tIOnal corporatIOns to prepare
their executives for ~ork abroad 18332 made avenue 881-1024
grosse point. f.rms, mi 48236
Learnmg accelerates under the
Dartmoulh-RassJUs method be
cau~e the mstructor create~ a
d} namll. dd:>:>lOUJIl d Imu::.phcI e
thaI allows students to speak at
least 100 tlme~ dunng a c1a~~
penod and receive Immediate er-
Father-daughter event ror correctIOn The result IS that
students become fluent m the
language With mmlmum effort As
Our Lady Star of the Sea High School recently held its first Father-Daughter Mass and Break-
the cla~sroom expenence IS so m-
fast, with the liturgy celebrated by the pastor, Father Ralph Kowalski, and fathers and their tense, no outSIde homework I~
daughters serving as lectors and gift bearers. At the breakfast held at the Grosse Pomte Yacht given
Club, the tables were decorated in blue and white, the school colors. Some of the participants
Reglstra tlOn lI1formatlOn IS
included, from left, George Petersmarck, Andrew Rider, standing next to granddaughter Melis-
available by callIng the Umverslty
sa Petersmarck, Joy Jensen and Don Jensen, chairman of the event. Rider celebrated his 75th
birthday the day of the event.
of DetrOIt's DIVISIOnof Contlllumg
ProfeSSIOnal EducatIon at 927-
SUN CANOPIES
1025
,• Tan Year Round
Lake laps at Pointe seawalls, covers Inarina doCks . . . • Portable
(Continued from Page 1;\) OffiCIals are now reViewing the The Woods IS not ~ale from spnng, many boat owners will • No Harmful R~;'s
be done to protect It ConSIderable possIblhty of ralsmg both walls at water woes by bemg located 111- have to fmd alternative dockage
damage has already been done to least a foot and a half, accordmg land The cIty-owned park III St next summer Petersen said the • No More Sunburn
the marIna facilIty there. to City Manager Thomas Kress- ClaIr Shores IS already flooded
"Much of the mam pier and most bach An ImmedIate problem IS along the shore .
city Will send out warlllngs to that
effect m la te January
SUPER
of the fmger pIers are under water erOSIOnbehind the seawalls, caus-
But the real problem ISthat boat
SALE
now," Crawford SaId "The fInger ed by water washmg over and "We want to gIve them ample
piers are being pushed up, the
main pIer IS beIng pushed down."
The electrICIty and water hnes
servIng the docks were severed by
around
Of equal concern is lhe CIty
manna, where water IS lapping at
the bottom of the docks The docks,
owners who have always docked III
the city manna will probably have
to look for a new spot The water
IS already only three feet below the
time to make other arrange-
ments," he said
In a sense, people who choose 10 MY. CLEMENS
$699°0 /
bridge over the acces~ to the lake
Similar actIOn last year
workers relocated the Imes to lhe
CIty
tops of the piers, but thIS year they
whIch were raIsed once m 1973,
when lake levels were at another
record hIgh. ~ III be completely
"It's gomg to play havoc WIth live near the water have to expect
boaters trymg to get undel the these ups and downs Farms 792-4920
36534 GROESBECK
792 4920 •
bndge," said CIty Adlllll1lstrator Public Work~ Director John Defoe.
were severed agam under water 1£ levels keep who says the city plans to raIse the S. of 16 MIle OPEN DAIL Y
"We may just have to cut off the mcreasmg Chester Petersen "The majonty
cat~alks on the docks, IS philo
utIhties," Crawford saId As m the Park, property along of docks are on the othel Side of the saphlcal
Jeffer~on dlOPS :::.harply to the road"
Meanwhtle .. F'ox Creek IS bnm-
mIng only mches from the top of lake Several of the houses in that Smce only a rowboat WIll lIkely "Some years \\le raise 'em. some
the berm along Alter Road Some area were sandbagged m 1973, be able to fit under the bridge by years we lower 'em," he saId
of the reSIdents on the other, lower Kressbach said, but ha ve Improv-
side have sandbagged theIr ed their seawalls since that time
property "(High water) does put a stram OPEN DAILY
on sewers and buildmg footings In
BUY
When the creek crests, It floods
the parking lot at the park That
hasn't happened yet, but Crawford
those areas, so we kmd of have
our fmgers crossed," Kressbach
10:00-6:00
Closed Sunday
USED OR BROKEN
GOLD OR SIL VER .YORKSHIRE FOOD MARKET I:
wasn't feelIng optlllllstic.J,'Once It
gets over the top (of the berm), It'S
J said. "But we don't have the type
of SItuatIOn where folks are walk-
Ing around in waders"
MOE'S Coins & Stamps 16711 Mack Avenue at Yorkshire • 885-7140
straight downhIll to Grosse POinte Turn Your Jewelry & Old Gold to Cash
Park," he said At the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club, BUYING GOLD AND SILVER
Open Daily 9.8, Sunday 10-2.
Department of Public Works management IS trymg to stay Anything Marked J OK. J 4K-18K
employees m the Shores are spend- ahead of the problem ASSIstant And Sterling Silver YOur Complete Food and Beverage Center
mg all theIr spare tIme fillIng sand-
bags for a wall to be built at the
Manager Ralph Mason said the
club has mstalled 16 Impellers,
Buy Gold & Sliver Coins and Stamps * PACKAGE LIQUOR DEALER * SUNDAY LIQUOR *
park by March. The Village took underwater agitators to keep the
Ice from forming
(313) 881-3955 D~~~I~,SM~~~~
('i\' YORKSHIRE'S 38th .f"
delIvery of a truckload of sand and
5,000 bags m December Approx- "They relIeve pressure, so when
imately 600 to 700 feet of frontage surges occur, they cause less dam-
along the VIllage park shorelme IS age," Mason said
expected to flood
"We deCIded to start early so we
can fIll the bags Without over-
tIme," explamed VIllage Manager
Michael Kenyon. "We have to get
The club has also expanded ItS
bubblIng program to 60 boats ThIS
also helps keep the harbor free of
Ice and allows the pressure to
break through m deSignated areas,
TAX SEMINAR i!ANNIV£fiSltflY
~
I') ~ U. S.D.A.
SALJ~ PRIME or CHOICE _ ~ ': ~
it done before the Ice breaks up "
The City's improvement project
according to Mason LET'S TALK ABOUT ..
.T.BONE " l::&. FRESH ,J~il~/~.~:
IS hkely to be much more exten-
"We can't do much about \\lmd-
driven Ice across the lake," he
Your IRA and KEOGH Plans
and how to get the most for
,~: STEAKS ~~~-,d GREEN ~ ~ ~ ~, .
.C1
SIve Seawalls at two cIty-owned J!: " '.
49
said "We just allow It to come up • , 1..'-, -~
propertIes are old Already. lake.
water is lappmg wIthm t\VOmches
over the seawall In that sense,
high water IS almost a blessmg -
your retirement for the least
money.
"\'~$3 -r:~!..:~" BEANS
of the top of the walls, WIth levels
projected to nse at least SIXmches
the Ice goes over the wall mstead
of crushmg It ., How to write off your parents'
.~ • LB. 69~LB, ..,
or children's home. : • PORTERHOUSE S:~;,.",~.,:/
JANUARY 28th, 7:30 p.m.
~STEAKS
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-
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(FROM ROUND STEAK) • LB. LB." _
IRiSH BROWNBERRY
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Your Hosts - John & Kathy Kennedy Groesheck Chapel of
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R Hamilton H
1903.19RI
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I IJ
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.
~ l~J CASE OF 24 CASE OF 24
lla\ld M lIamlll .. n
Ronald I) IIrrkmann
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r lo\d R. Monraltue
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Page Fou rteen-A GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
u.s. professionals see
By Nancy Parmenter on where you look at foreigners as
real world of People's Republic
always askmg you questIOns,"
109 a hvmg every day Just the way It takes mne months to orgamze at the right time With deSire and
From small beglOnmgs huge If they're m a zoo," Everett said we do " a delegatIOn "1 work slowly," energy." Everett said
enterprises grow. Fifteen years "<Our parllclpants) learn and Between 15 and 24 people par- Everett said "I don't want to take Thus far, the delegatIOns have The exchange works the other
ago, Grosse Pointer Dr. Robert understand more about the prob- tiCipate In each miSSiOn Becau~e a delegatIOn WIth less than the kept relations on the purely profe!:>- wav too Some of the money rais-
Everett hadn't even thought of co- lems that these people face, earn- Chlna-U S Exchdnge~ l~ orgdDlled best" slOnal plane DespIte the enormous ed through parllclpant fees ISused
ordmating mternatlOnal ex- under IRS regulations. the tnp IS What takes so long IS that the respect for and Illterest In family lor scholaJ'shlps to bnng Chinese
changes between Chmese and tax-deductible tor the pI ole~~lOndl leader of any prospective delega- hfe in Chm3, the Chmese tend to be t
prote!:>!>lOlwlso the United States
Amencan professIOnals; in 1986, partiCipant and partially tax- ItlOn has to submit a proposal to the too reserved to mVlte people to for a year 01 study DelegatIOns
through his independent not-for- deducllble lor a ~pou~e The lappropnate Chmese mmlstry, their homes untli the\ have Irom the Chme~e mllllstnes also
profit corporation, Chma-U S Ex- spousal deductIOn came dbout be Iwhlch - upon approval- Issues a developed a deep fnendsfllp make \%It!>
changes, he expects to send 200 cau!>e of the great Importdnce IlormallllvltatlOn and suggests an \ The t\\ o-way exchange of under-
professional delegations But now, oW1I1glal'gel) to the standmg has promoted good feel-
placed upon the lamd~ unJt III ltl11erdry complex network evolved through
The object is to present China China, Everett !>dJd The proces!> had resulted 111 an lIlg between the two countnes,
through its own eyes The Amer. several years ot organlllug. Everett believes It may also have
Each delegalton centel!> dround extensive network of Chinese gov- Everett IS start1l1g to work home
Ican participants In the 17- to a particular prole~~lOn When he ernment and embassy offICials for brought dLout d change In the way
19-day triPS spend at least half 01 VISitSmto the Itlneral y . Ju!>tlor the Clunese clo thmg!>
started, 1<.:verell took mo,>tl\ Everett, who works With the tea, for example," he !>a1d . It's
their time mvolved m professIOnal member!> 01 hi'> 0\\ n prol e!> 1011 .
'> mmJ!>tneb 01 sCience and tech- 'When I flr!>tstarted thiS, I u!>ed
actiVIties - lectures, roundtable not the custom to mVlte (casual) to \\ nte letters all over the world
dentistry - but no\\, mlnel '>. Jlology, l'<l1lways,performlllg arts, VISitors to the house"
discussIOns, factory tours - with farmer!>, la II yer:. tedcher!> 01 light Illdustry, bankmg and who- and Ju!>t\\alt to "ee who would re-
their Chmese counterparts Journalists dre Ju!>tdS llkel) to go evel ebe I!>necessary to deSign a The usual thmg for bU!>lIle!>~ dC- vel
!>pond" 1<.: etl said "Chlnd
Mealtimes, which are also coor- Both the delegdtlOn ledder dnd ml""lOn to SUIt Illdlvldual quamtances IS to mIx !>ocldhllng dll\ dyS u!>edto \\rlte and say there
dmated by Chma-U S Exchanges, the participant'> dl e requu'ed to expertIse and business 111 a more fOlmal set \\ ere no room!> Imagme a country
offer an opportumty to SOCialize brll1g somethmg to the tilP 1I1 J By nO\l, Chma-U S Exchanges tmg "In Chma. you're dOlllg of a billion people - and no
with the Chmese and talk about protes!>lOnal sen~e Re!>umeb dnd I~ the bIggest such orgamzatlon III busllless all the llme - people arc !'ooms'
busmess m an mformal way. Par- wntten goal and dtcornpll~hment the !>tate Everett says It's Just
tl\_IPdllt~ t:IIJ up Ivilh ,m almo~t e
::.ldlemenl!> help d!>~U1 W,lt edctl gooa fortune "1 was lucky to get
dawn-to-dusk immerSIOn m thmgs particIpant ha!>!>omethll1g to eon- the Idea at a lime of upswmg 111
Chmese tnbute to a roundtable dJ!>cu!>slon Chll1ese relatIOns," he said .. 'I'm
"There are so many tours going Dr. Robert Everett or as a lecturer ju!>td bloke on l\1ack Avenue, there
Public school advertises for local students
By Mike Andrzejczyk more than 87 percent, and Defer, Smce the school ha'> begun \\ IdeI' What the open house can do IS
What do Umverslty LIggett Mid- WIth Just abcut83 percent, accord- advertisement of ItS programs, .'build SPll'lt and pnde in the Trom-
dle School. DetrOIt Waldorf School. mg to the census whICh include all-day kmdergarten bl~ commumty." Joyce adds Em-
Grosse POinte Academy and Of the 859 school-age chIldren and latchkey a!:>well a!:>Illgh abl!l phaSIZing the commullity part of
Trombly Elementary School have counted m the district, 155 at- ty and computer cla!>:.e~. the the open house thiS year Will be an
10 common') tended non-public schools Accord- school's enrollment ha!> been appearance by Park Mayor
All four ..... have open house!>
Ill mg to the recently completed res- nsmg Palmer Heenan, who Will speak
thIS month. And all four have ad- Idents' survey of attitudes about Trombly was prOjected to have bnefly about the school system as
vertised the event. even though public schools, close to 31 percent begun thiS school year \\ Ith 224stu \\ell as talk about the millage,
Trombly IS part of the Grosse who send their children to pnvate dent!> m September, but Fourth !>chool offiCial" say
Pointe Pubhc School System schools said they sent their chil- Fnday counts aclualh counted 247 The open house Willalso show off
Trombly's open house Sunda) dren to non-pubhc schools for the thiS year Some 01 those children programs at the school, With the
from 2 to -1 pm at the school on religIOUS Instruction avaIlable are converts from non-public classroom tours and displays of the
Beaconsfield IS a little more Other responses to the question schools, accordmg to Joyce, who art department, BABES and
elaborate than those held mother of chOICeof non-public over public adds that after the recent maIling Green Circle substance abuse pro-
pubhc schools It's also the onl) schools showed those surveyed 01 inVItatIOn!>. she hd!> ah'ead\ grdms, computer demonstratIOn
one advertised throughout the ele- saying they sent their children to started gellmg calls Irom parent;; and a history 01 the school
mentary school's dlstnct by direct non-pUblic schools because It was askmg about the servIce!> dnd CUl'- Also speak1l1g at the reception m
mail a tradition (13 percent), they felt nculum at the school the auditorIUm Will be Suzanna
More than 1,600flyers went out to non-public schools had higher aca- .'The advertlsmg goe!:> along Sippola, preSident of the PTO,
announce the event The PTO plan- demIC standards (9 percent>. With the board of educatIOn's goal DebbIe Saros. open house com-
ning committee lor the open house there was stricter disciplllle m non- 01 tellIng the !>toQ of the school mittee chairman. and Joyce
spent most of Its $250budget on the public schools (6 percenlJ, and of- sy!:>lem,' !>he add" 'Thl~ I!> a Saros and Manna Terrell co-
produchon and maJilllg of the fered a better reputation and bet- chance lor u!>to put our best tOOL chaired the 16 member planlllng
hand-addressed lI1Vltatlons ter curriculum (6 percent> forwdrd lor the commul1lty .. committee
"The invitatIOns were sent to While the 50 or so students who
every household in the dlstnct."
Prlllcipal Shlela Joyce said "We
could be lured to attend Trombly
wouldn't brmg any more money to Board accepts PrO donations
plan to showcase Trombly to ItS the school system, which ISout-of- The Board of EducatIOn accept- to pay some of the expenses for an
fullest to show what a cntical m- formula and doesn't receive direct ed more than $8,500 m gifts from educational field trIp and to buy
stltutlOn It is to our commumty .. aid from the state Department 01 the Poupard and Mason PTOs classroom matenals for teachers.
The school decided to hoid Its Education, the extra children Monday, Jan. 13. In past months, board members
open house m January because It'S could eliminate the needs for "flex- Mason PTO's gift will help fund have been questIoning whether the
traditionally the month that par- grades" at the school, according to assemblies for students, educa- donatIOns by PTOs at different
ents begin decldmg where they WI)) school personnel tIOnal field tnps and studies, an artschools IS resulting in an ineqUit-
send their children to school In Sep- The school was one of four appreciation program, a fifthable distnbution of eqUipment and
tember, school officials say elementary schools found to have grade Toronto tnp and to purchase matenals among the elementary
"We hope to lure every school- at least two extra rooms in a study educational enrichment materials. schools PhO'o by Elizabeth Carperller Lions Gate Unl mlled
age child in the district to attend done late last year by the ad- Poupard PTO's gIft ISto be used Questions have also been raised,
school at Trombly," Joyce adds
But according to school system
mlmstratlOn. The school current-
ly has 11 self-con tamed class- Class rescheduled
chiefly by trustees Carl Anderson
and Carol Marl', whether some of The temperature climbed
census data from 1984, Trombly rooms, accordmg to the admmIs- the donations are be1l1gused to buy ... to 40 degrees Saturday, a near heat wave follOWing a week
already has the third.hlghest per- Robert Maniscalco's Port.alt equipment that the school system
tra hon survey. Paintmg class, scheduled to beg1l1 should nghtfully be bUYing. of biting cold, and Mike Bourgon of the Farms decided to wash
centage of school-age children at- The school began making its his wife's car after he paid $5 to get his own done. The warm
tendmg public school Accordmg to at the War Memoflal, Tuesday. The administration IS workmg
open houses more a commumty Jan. 14, from 7 to 10 pm, Will be spell was short.lived, however, and temperatures dipped again
the dlstnct's blenmal census, the event to attract possible students on developing a gift policy, accord-
school's dlstnct attracted better rescheduled to begm the follow1l1g Sunday night.
when the first rumblmg<:; 01school week, Jan 21, at the same tIme Ing to Supenntendent John Whrit-
than 83 percent of the 859 5- to closmgs began. Trombly's enroll- ner Officials hope to have a draft
19-year-olds hving In the elemen- Students III the class WIll be treat- of the pollcy In a couple months
ment ISJust under 250students, the ed to one sessIOn taught by the Ill-
tary school dlstnct In 1984 smallest of the nme elementary structor's father, natIOnally ac-
The two elementary districts
With hll'(her percentages of school
schools The school Itself IS the sec-
ond-oldest elementary school in
claImed portrait artist. Joseph
Maniscalco, on Jan 28
Park police hire three, promote two
age children attendmg public the dlstl'lct and the third-oldest There are some new faces wear- A Park reSIdent, Kretzschmar \\ as department m Apnl after success-
schools were Poupard, With htUe ThiS one-tIme-only sessIOn WIth
school buildmg the semor Mamscalco IS for enrol- mg Grosse Pointe Park police one of the successful apphcants 01 ful completIOn of the 440 hours of
led students only Register at the blues The department hired one the examinatIOns gIven dunng last trammg, the department said
War Memoflal, 82 Lakeshore new officer, sent two more to the fall EffectIve Jdll 15. offIcers John
AFTER INVENTORY Road The course wIll be extended pohce academy for trammg and Attendlllg Macomb County ~ Schulte and Steven Johnson were
one week to March 11and WIllcost promoted two others to sergeant pohce academy program beglll promoted to the rdnk of sergeant
recently nmg Jan 27 Will be Chn:.tophel Schulte. JO. has been a pollee ot
CLEARANCE SALE $60plus model fee for eight weeks
Call 881-7511 for additIOnal Illfor- OffIcer John Kretzschmar began Powell and Stephen Let throp hcer !>lI1ce Apnl 1978 Johnson, JI,
matlon work With the department Dec 26 Powell, a Park reSIdent and lJlIl- ,>tarted \\ Ith the department 111
verslty of Mlchlgal1 graduate '\[aJ 1977 Both officers have
25% to 50% OFF REMODELING?
works With the department a~ a
clvlhan dispatcher Lathrop d
Park reSident, WIll delay hiS fmal
semester at MichIgan State Ulll-
reCel\ ed letter" of recommenda-
tIOn for theu' \\ ork dUring theIr
tenure. police :.ald
Both men \, III begm tralnlllg 111
THINK PRICE. verslty where he ISsludymg pollee umform officer superVISIOn and
admInistratIOn, to attend the plamclothc!> mvestlgatlOn, accord-
o Garment Bags Andlamo 0 THINK QUALITY. academy Both wlil 101ll the 1I1g to the department
o Tote Bags Ciao 0 THINK LETO BLDG. CO.
o Hand Bags Le Sportsac 0 Police foil shed break-in
o Back Packs High Sierra 0 Why wait? Call now. A DetrOIt man awaIt'> pr(']lmll1 J 1P m Thm ~da:-. Jan 9. accord
o Clothing Jan Sport 0 ADDITIONS • DORMERS
ary exammauoll m Pdrl-. ;\TuniCI
pal Court on charges of Il1dIJC10U"
lIlg to rcpOI h 1I0meo\\ ners called
o Etc. Etc. 0 destruction of property under $100
police to "a~ the:- had ~potled ,1
man near th('\r "hed which \\ dS dt
REC ROOMS • KITCHENS 111 connectIOn \\Ith an dtlempled I'llhcd 10 1111' g,lI dge and aldl m
Somerset Mall
2750 W. Big Beaver Road ~-
./ ---::::~
/ /
Fair1aneTown Center ROOFING AND SIDING bredk-1I1 of a shed connected to d .,\.,tem
3rd Level Buckmgham Road home poll('(' . Ofl1ccr" '>I'-Hltledthe man near
Troy, Michigan / -~ Deal1X>m, Michigan saId the gdrclge dlHI gd\ e eha"e ,\ :.lll
(313) 649-1660 ./ / (313) 271-1750
.. LETO The man \\a!> alTalgned Id"t
\\ eel.. on the charge and rel(,d"cd
\ellldllCe tedlll captured the mcln
I~
TL \986
SINCE nedl/)\
BUILDING CO 1911 on SIOOper~onal bond Fill ih('1 111\ ('.,tlgdllOIl .,h(med
The lI1C'ldentoecm red dt dbolll I h(' hd .... \\ d" hI
p o"en h('d
Oil I he ....
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rNIl~,l'FNf)ENTJ.Y OWNED AND ()I'~ RAn,n Grosse Pointe Wds 882-1340 ~
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• '-+eM: .1 - _ ...._- L
Second Section Section 8
Thursday, January 16, 1986
Parcells to give benefit concert in Detroit
By Elsa Frohman
havml; the second, relIgIOUS, and act The qualIty of your smg- born With the proper vOice to be
For man v performers, "paymg
ceremony She attributes the Ger- mg, at best, comes second In a developed
your dues" ISa euphemIsm for the
man appathy toward religIOn to concert, you can be clean and pre-
years of waIting tables or drlvmg the state supported church "You have to be born With It,"
a taxI cab while struggl10g for cIse You can concentrate on the
"I don't think people here would mUSIC The VIsual a~pect IS null she said "But that's omy a small
every bit part that come along It part of the battle I was lucky to
stand for the stnct SOCIalsystem and VOId," she said.
15 the difftcult period In a per- have the genes I have five
they have In Germany," Parcells Becau~e of the mten~lty of an
former's hte when he or she saId "H's a wonderful place for brothers and sisters and they all
operatic performance, the
breaks out of anonymity and be- old people and artists. You don't have pleasant vOIces They all
smgers are takmg a higher nsk of
comes a household word see poverty In Germany Every could smg If they wanted to But
mjuring their vOices than concert
For Grosse POinte Ehzabeth fall, singers by the hundredh go sIngers there Isn't any reason for Uhto be-
"Betsy" Parcells, paymg her over there and audll10n Once you "It IS the same as With come the Jackson Five There's a
dues has meant a steady Job m a get that Job, It kmd of grows on athletes," she saId "Just hke lot more of It You have to have
respected European opera com- you" you can rum your back (In the drive and Will and It's not for
pany. As a member of the Solo Parcells knew she wanted a opera) you put a lot of stram on everybody Even If you do come
Ensemble oj the Fl ankfUl t C<1recr In mus]", dt dll €dily dgt: the organism YOU'I to <l:>kmg<lJut up WIth thE> gf>nf>tw m<ltf>rlAI, It'<<
Opera, 10 Germany, smce 1983, However, the deCISIOnto purhue a and you run the nsk of breaking not a guarantee"
she has been smgmg roles IS pro- career In opera came much later homething A singer must be can The hard work on the way to be-
ductIOns such as "The MagIC SCIOUSf thiS With a good tramer,
o commg a singer dIscourages all
Flute" and "Tales of Hoffman" "I was nearly through the con- you Improve the shape of your but the most determmed
servatory," she said. "I Just vocal cords You work hard but "You really have to love It a lot
Parcells has come back to didn't know I thought maybe I'd
Grosse Pomte with two purposes don't damage them" to take It up as a professIOn," she
make a career of smgmg the It takes years of trammg to de- said "You have to love It enough
m mind. The fll'st was achieved 'Messiah' year-around"
last weekend as she mamed her velop an operatic VOIce, accord- to get you over the days Whell) au
Her earliest experiences With IIlg to Parcells But before the hate It There IS the drudge work
German sweetheart, Dlerk-Ech- musIc came from smgmg III the
hard Becker The second will be work starts, the sillger !TIIlStbe (Continued on Page tB)
chOIr at Grosse Pomte Memorial
achieved thiS weekend when she Church.
gives a benefIt concert for the Or-
chestra Hall renovatIOn on Jan 18
at 8 p m
"Even as a Child, I had a very
sweet, pleasant vOIce," she saId Salute to Excellence focuses
Parcells' Involvement with the
concert comes through her
"Usually, the best children's
vOIces come from boys I was not on Golden Age of Detroit TV
good at sports, not particularly
mother, a member of Ibex, WhICh popular I wasn't full of that kind The "Salute to Excellence" benefit for Children's HospItal WIll
ISsponsoring the benefIt Ibex is a of fluff " focus on the Golden Age of DetrOit TeleviSIOn thiS year In Its
local organIzatIOn for the support A turmng pomt came for thIrd year, the program recogmzeh Mlchlgamans who have made
of the arts Ibex has been suppor- Parcells when the chOIr dIrector outstanding contnbutlOns In busmess, politics, humamtles,
tIve of the Orchestra Hall renova- smgled her out one day, to show medIcine, sports and the arts
tion project for several years the rest of the children how the ThiS year's honoree will be Soupy Sales, who was one of the
For Parcells, the concert WIll song should be sung establishmg figures III the field of children's teleVISIOn In thiS
be a gala homecoming. But soon "Everybody was starmg at area and a leader III the field nationally
after she takes her last bows, she me," she said "I thought then, I The honorary chaIrmen for the event are Mr and Mrs WIlliam
must return to Frankfurt and her want to be stellar I couldn't walt Clay Ford, and general chairmen are Mr and Mrs BaSIl M
regular job. for every Tuesday, for chOIr prac- Bnggs and Mr and Mrs John G Levy
"Germany IS the only place tice Children Illterested m musIc The salute Will be held on Jan 24 m the Renaissance Ballroom
where an opera sInger can have a are often that way" of the Westm Hotel beglllmng With cocktails dt 6 30 pm, dinner
steady job with a salary," Photo by Elsa Fret-man Parcells attended high school at at 7'30 pm and the progl'am beglllmng at 8 30 pm Bla' k tie IS
Parcells saId. She explained that Elizabeth Parcells is visiting home this week with her Yorkshire Liggett, but did her semor year optIOnal
most American compames, In- and graduated from Interlochen The program WIl! be Videotaped by WDJV-TV and broadcaSt ,<;
terrier, Clair, and her new husband, Dierk-Eckhardt Becker, not piC-
cluding the- prestigious New York where she could prepare for a a specIal on March 23 Jrom 7 to 9 P m The master of cel emome~
tured. Parcells is a member of the Solo Ensemble of the Frankfurt Will be Dick Purtan
City Opera and the MetropolItan conservatory She then spent the
Opera, only hIre smgers by the Opera. She is giving a benefit concert for Orchestra Hall while she Proceeds from ticket sales Will go to Children's HospItal of
Is home, next SIXyears, for both a bache-
night If you are singing, you get lor's and master's degree at the Michigan, a subSidiary of the DetrOit MedIcal Center, the
paId If you don't have a role in to- pending on what the company IS III Wlesbaden, Germany He was New England Conservatory of academiC health center of Wayne State Umverslty A voluntary,
night's production, forget it. currently producing the publIc relations man for the MUSICIn Boston. nonprofIt, 2oo-bed hospital orgamzed m 1886, Children's HospItal
"The only steady job with the "A state supported theater has opera The couple were married "That was the best thmg for functions under the general superVISIOn of a volunteer board of
Met is III the chorus," she saId a responsIbIlity to the pubhc," III a CIVil ceremony III Germany, me," she said "To stay in one trustees and IS privately funded Children's hen'es patients from
"And if you are III the chorus, you she said. "We have to do fairy but repeated theIr vows m place and concentrate But I all mCOP1elevels
can kISS a solo career goodbye." tales, children's productions, church, here, over the weekend didn't have any fun at all." For tickets, contact Children's Hospital of IVIIchlgan, 3901
In Germany, where the govern- lIght opera and operettas We get "In Germany, the CIvil DUring most of her time at the Beaubien, DetrOIt, Mlch ,48201 Or telephone 494-5373 Tickets
ment supports state operas, to do one or two Illteresting things ceremony is reqUIred," Parcells conservatory, Parcells concen- are $125 per person of which a portIOn is tax deductible A reserv-
singers are hired as part of the a year I can't be center stage all said She explained that most trated on concert music, a very ed table for 10 can be purchased for $1,250
opera ensemble They have a the time, but nobody starves III German couples Simply have a different field from opera In 1984, the Salute of Excellence honored AI Kalllle and George
regular Job WIth the company and Germany" civil ceremony, only those With a "In opera, the visual IS Impor- Kell of the Baseball Hall of Fame. In 1985, the honor \Vd~ given
work m many different parts, de- Parcells met her new hushand strong attatchment to the church tant You have to move, dance to Sparky Anderson of the DetrOit Tigers
CJ)rtJper:s STORE WIDE
TheThlbots Qill~rnQ~[f ffidJD~
has cut its prices
·
m half . '
We're
continuing our
500/0 off
Semiannual Sale.
The Talbots famous Semiannual Sale con-
tmues. Now IS your chance to take advantage
of the impeccable quahty of The Talbots Fall
and Winter collection at half the origmal
price Find 50% off savings on an extensive
selectIOnof. .
• Sportswear, sweaters, and skIrts.
• Dresses, shirts, and blouses
• Shoes and arcessones. Countrify your home, go easy
h
ClaSSICSke these at pnces hke these only on your bUdget and discover
Reg Sale
come around tWicea year. So corne In while the classic look of Cambrlclge
Cambridge Bedroom
the selection IS at its best and find fabulous today. In solid oak. 68" Tnple Dresser
saVIngs on our Fall and Wmter merchandise These Cambridge claSSICSIn solid oak tn-fold Mirror, Queen size
at The Talbots Semiannual Sale. are painstakingly crafted and beautifUlly Poster Bed 3 pcs $2757 $1995
detailed They'll add charm and comfort to Chest-on.Chest $1119 $ 799
your home and Will offer a relaXing haven at Night Stand $ 359 $ 269
the end of a busy day Fine savings now' 'Comparable savings on tWin full and king s,ze oeds
AVAILABLE FOR
PROMPT DELIVERY
TELEPHONE
"8-3500
~ew Store'l: ANN ARBOR, 514 Ea~t Wa~hmR1onStreet Tel q<j48686' GROS~E POI:\iTE, 17015Kercheval Street
Tel 884 5'i9'i
23020MACK AVE. (NEAR 9 MILE) 51. CLAI~ SHORES
BIRMINGHAM. 2.'15South Woodward Avenue Tel 2'iR.96lJ6' DEARBORN, Falrlane Town Center Tel 3160344
• NOVI, T\\clve Oak~ Mall Tel 34lJ 6.500 Store Hours Monday, ThurSday, Fnday - Till 9 P m
The Talbot.. ~ ill be opcn "un day for ~our ..hopping com COIcncc, TueSday, Wednesday Saturday - Till 530 pm (Closed SlIndClY)
,--------------
Page Two-B
- -----
l
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
I The next frontier: I~ngaged~~~~~~~~~~~~
I Buehrle-Muhleck The bride-elect is a 1984
graduate of Wayne State Univer- Rogers-Hamel
Alpha Phi Sorority and IS cur-
rently an urban planner for
Don and Manon Buehrle of sity Law School and is currently Mr and Mrs. Fred E Rogers of Sagmaw County
Muskegon announce the engage- earpmg a master's degree at the Grosse Pomte Park announce the The bridegroom-elect is a
ment of their daughter, Laura, to Umversity of MIChigan. engagement of theIr daughter, graduate of Sharon High School,
Robert A Muhleck, son of Mar- Grove City College With a bache-
Peace garet
George
Muhleck
IS planned
Muhleck
and the late
of Harper
Woods An Apnl 26, 19B6 weddmg
The bndegroom-elect
graduate
IS a 1983
of Detroit College of
Law and IS associated with the
law firm of McInally, Brucker,
Sharon Lee, to James
Hamel, son of Mr and Mrs. Wil-
lard Hamel of Dearborn. A July
12, 1986 wedding IS planned
Riley
lor of sCience m chemistry and
the University of Michigan With
an MBA. He IS a member of Ep-
silon PI Fraternity and currently
Newcombe, Wilke and DeBona The bride-elect is a 1974 grad-
The bnde-elect IS a graduate of uate of Grosse Pomte South High works for Dow Corning in Mid-
This booklet challenges the inevitability Mona Shores High School m 1976 School and a 1978 graduate of land, Mich
of conflict. It shows how peace can be waged
and MIChIgan State Ulllver~lty in
1980 She IS the office manager
McDonald-McMillan Ohvet College With a bachelor of
fme arts. She IS a member of
Mr and Mrs. Thomas J Mc-
and won in individual lives. In your life. and purchasmg coordmator for
Thomas Solvent Co of DetrOIt Donald of Grosse Pomte Woods
Sigma Beta and Alpha Chi
Omega
Read Waging peace: the spiritual basis. The bndegroom-elect IS a 1971 announce the engagement of theIr
daughter, Sharon Ann, to Steven
The bridegroom-elect IS a grad-
gradUate of Gro~se Pomte North
It asks you to consider peace and your role HIgh School and MIchigan Career Thomas McMIllan, son of Mr and
uate of Edsel Ford High School m
1972 and Henry Ford Commumty
in it from a new perspec- Institute m 1977 He IS an engi- Mrs George Arsenault of Grosse
Pomte Farms An April 1986 wed-
College WIth a degree In com-
neering techl1lclan In the Hydra- mUnicatIons
tive. A perspective that matlc Dlvl~IOn at GI\1C dmg is planned at the Grosse
The couple are both regIstered
includes all mankind_ Pomte Woods PresbyterIan flf'lct llndf','wntf'r~ for tl1f' I\f(>w
ChUl ch. York LIfe Insurance Company
Explore the The bnde-elect IS a graduate of
next frontier. Peace. Grosse Pomte South High School
and attended Sagmaw Valley
This booklet is avail- State College and IVlacomb Coun-
able for sale at your ty CommunIty College
local Christian Science The bndegroom-elect IS a grad-
uate of Grosse Pointe South High
Reading Room. School and attended Wayne State
Umverslty Patricia Clark
SiX selecft.d articles on 'he ntJlurulne.}j of
Clark Kendall R
!'f'u,e In/rodar/lon by furl fodl f41/ar m
(hldof7h, (h""lwfl ~ClmceVumlor
Mr and Mrs. Thomas Clark of
Grosse Pomte Farms announce
106 Kercheval Ave. the engagement of their
Cynthia Ehrlich and
Grosse Pointe Farms John Winland
daughter, PatrICia Mane, to WIl-
Mon .• Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wed until 7:45 p.m. ham Bradshaw Kendall, son of
i Renee Janush and
_ J
Wilber Brucker EhrlichRWinlarul the late Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Kendall of Grosse Pomte. A May
STOREWIDE SALE
Mr. and Mrs. William G 17, 1986 garden wedding at the
Ehrlich of Grosse Pointe Park an- Grosse Pointe War Memorial is
Janush-Brucker nounce the engagement of their
daughter, Cynthia, to John Win-
planned.
The bride-elect is currently a
Mr and Mrs Walter D Janush land, son of Mr. and Mrs. David student at Michigan State Univer-
CHILDREN'S & INFANTS Jr of DetrOIt announce
engagement
the
of theIr daughter,
A Wmland of Sharon, Pa. A July sity working toward a bachelor of
5, 1986 wedding is planned. landscape architecture.
CLOTIUNG & ACCESSORIES Renee, to WIlber M Brucker III,
son of Mr and Mrs Wilber M
The bride-elect is a graduate of The bridegroom-elect IS a
Grosse Pointe South High School, graduate of the University of
Brucker Jr of Grosse Pointe
YOUNG CLOTHES
110 KERCHEVAL ON TH~ HILL
Farms A September 1986 wed-
ding IS planned at Immaculate
ConceptIOn UI-ralnlan Church Sharon Ann McDonald
the University of Michigan with a
bachelor of arts in economiCS,
and a master's degree in urban
planning She is a member of
North Carolina with a bachelor of
architecture and the University of
Illmois with a master of architec-
ture
OUR BIGGEST MARKDOWNS EVE~~
GIRLS WINTER ~ -Weddings
SPORTSWEAR D;~
... Ii
the 6 m. nuptIal mass, whIch was man and Steven HIcks of Grosse
4-~ followed by a receptIOn at the Jan 2 at Grosse Pointe Memonal
- ... Grosse POInte Yacht Club
Pomte, and Sheldon Hall Jr , Ur- Church
50% Usmg the fabflc from her
mother's antique ivory satin and
lace dress, the bflde designed her
banna, Va James Motschall Jr., of
Grosse Pomte, and Joseph New-
berry of ChIcago, Ill., were lectors
The mother of the bnde wore a
The Rev Dr. Stan Wilson offI-
Ciated at the 11 a m ceremony
The matron of honor was Marcia
Powell, frIend of the bnde, Grosse
gown WIth a htted bodice trimm- lavender chIffon tea-length gown Pomte Park
ed With pearls over a full chapel- WIth a corsage of cream-colored The groom's three sons, Russell
ALL BOYS WINTER length skirt. The cathedral veil,
edged by Brussels lace, was gath-
cymbidIUm orchIds The groom's
mother wore a dusty-rose chiffon,
Herndon, Albequerque, N.M,
Ronald H Herndon, Charles, S.C ,
MERCHANDISE ered onto a matching lace-over-
satin cap tflmmed with pearls She
tea-length gown, also WIth a
cream-colored cymbidIUm orchid
and (Thomas A Herndon, Okla-
4 14
R
carried an arm bouquet of white corsage
homa City, Okla., acted as best
roses and baby's breath men for their father.
50%o
OFFANO
MORE
The bnde's Sister, Carol Stevens
of Montcfalr, N.J , was maId of
honor. Bridesmaids were Carol
After a brief honeymoon, the
couple will live In Grosse Pomte
Woods The bnde IS a graduate of
the UniversIty, of MIChigan and
The couple honeymooned with a
weekend weddmg trip The Will
!lve m Grosse Pointe Park
The bride is a graduate of Wel-
JennIngs, sister of the groom, earned a master's degree from
VISIT OUR TODDLER \ :~ DetrOIt, and Cynthia Ann Steves, Pennsylvania State Umverslty
lesley College and IS a certified
pubhc accountant The groom IS a
ALL NEW sister-in-law of the bride, Mountain The groom, a lIfe-long reSIdent of graduate of Wayne State Univer-
BA.RGAJN
BASEMENT ~~~,
.ru..,1.
u....
WINTER .. ~lfPl' ,
.......)
'"
View, Calif. The attendants wore
perIwinkle blue taffeta tea-length
Grosse Pointe, graduated from the
UniverSity of MIchIgan Dental
sIty and ISa hIgh school counselor.
All SIXof the couple's sons par-
SPRING &- smoaR CLOTHES -a Dr. and Mrs. William Jennings dresses and carried arm bouquets
of cream-eolored alstromeria Illes,
School. He has been in practice In
Grosse Pointe for 12 years, and is
tiCIpated in the small family cere-
mony The bride's three sons, War-
MERCHANDISE AT
COST OR 1!ELOW
50% OFF '-.~-, Stevens-Jennings roses, blue bachelor buttons and
baby's breath.
currently preSIdent of the Detroit ren Whitney of the Umversity of
AND MORE --. Anne Mitchell Stevens. daughter The best man was Dr MIChael
DIstrICt Dental SOCiety MIChigan, Christopher Whitney of
of Mr and Mrs Walter Stevens of Jennmgs, brother of the g#Jm, Cornell University and Stuart
Grosse Pomte Farms, and Dr Wil- Harper Woods Groomsmen were Whitney-Herndon Whitney of MIChigan State, gave
her m marrIage.
ham G Jenmngs, son of Mr and Dr Thomas Gebeck, Grosse Garland Herzog Whitney of
Mrs George Jennmgs of Grosse POInte, and Capt Richard Grosse POinte Park, daughter of
POinte Woods, were marned on Stevens, the bnde's brother from Henry and Helen Herzog of Wash- Miskito Indians
Nov 29, 1985 at St Paul Cathohc Mountam VIew, Calif. The groom's mgton, D.C ,and C Ray Herndon In Nicaragua, 10,000 Mlskito In-
Church nephew, Brandon Jennmgs, was of Grosse Pomte Park, son of dians have been marched to relo-
The Rev Edward Ritter, COUSin rmgbearer, and the ushers were Horace and Lula Elmore of New catIOn camps by government
of the groom's mother, celebrated Jimmie Bloink Jr., Dr Jan Ll'h- Havel1, MIen, were married on troops, says NatIOnal GeographIC
~11111111111111111l111ll111l11ll11111ll1ll11ll111l1ll111l1l11 /1111 /11111 III 1111 r~
HERB HAS BEEN,
EATING AT UNCLE
qo~
v~W' DELI ~ A POSITIVE ALTERNATIVE ~
HARRY'S' IT HASN'T 21809 MACK
i i
BEEN HAMBURGER 775-3120 ~ For an older person needing supervision ~
E and a place to stay dunng the 'day. ~
KlmlNG AND WEAVINGYARNS E Transportation available ~
25% DISCOUNT
Wool. snk, Alpaca Acrylics, Mohair, Cotton, Cashmere
CAROL GRAY STUDIO
I
E
CALVARY ADULT DAY CARE
near Mack & Moross
I
~
315 Lakeland • 882.2428
Mon. Tues. 10:00-4:00 • Or Call
~
-
~
881-3374
-~
111111111111111/111111111 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Fn
Due to an incredible response,
A Partial List of Our thiS sale will be continued
Incredible Sale Values thru January 31. GROSSE POINTE MEMORIAL CHURCH
REO. SALE
REG. SALE MEN'S ASSOCIATION
~'595 '250 ~'4500 &1995
• Brlghtner Added • Natural Mahogany
$295
Blue Fox Jackets '650 Mink Coats '4500 &1995 ANNUAL PANCAKE SUPPER
m+mJimI
Available In Ranch and
• Natural
Coyote Coats '5000 &1995
Autumn Hale • • '1595 '695 • Brightner Added
• Natural Blue Fox Silver Raccoon
Coats '2000 '895 Coats '5500 &2395 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1986
• Dye Added Ranch Hundreds of Other Furs at SERVINC FROM 5:30 to 7:30 P.M.
Mink Jackets '3500 '1495 Comparable Savingsl
• Natural Long Hair Whilr' QUilntlt,e~ Last I
Beaver Coats '3500 &1495 "'0 (('ordprs al these prices
See Our Complete Collection
of Men's IUT<; Dra'itlcally Reduced HOT DElICIOUS PANCAKES, $2 SO Adults
SAUSAGES, SYRUP, BUTTE R, $1 00 Children
COFFEE, MILK, FRESH FRUIT $700 family maximum
PLEASE CALL CHURCH OFFICE FOR RESERVA T10f\JS
882.5330
16 LAKESHORE - GROSSE POINTE FARMS
,
&
Thursday, January Hi, 1986
: GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Three-B
Academy
•
receIves RACK SALE!
Timmis
melTIorial
George A. Haggarty, president
of the board of trustees of the
Grosse Pointe Academy, has an-
nounced the receipt of a gift of
$500,000 to the Second Century
Fund from MIchael and Nancy
TlmmlS The gift IS given 10
memory of their daughter, Laura
Elizabeth Timmis, a 1984 gradu-
ate. This major gIft will prOVide
the funds for the constructIon of a
new bUIldmg whIch WIll be named
m Laura's honor, as well as reno-
50% OFF SHOES
vation of the existing Early School SELECTED STYLES
The Grosse Pointe Academy,
located on Lake Shore Road In &
Gro<;s(' Pointe Farms, IS celebrat-
mg Its centennial year and has pro-
BRAND NAMES
VIded pflmary educatIon to many
resIdents of this community The 50% OFF BOOTS
Early School at the Grosse Pomte
Academy IS dIstingUIshed as the DRESS & WINTER
largest and oldest Montessori SELECTED STYLES &: BRAND NAMES
School In the State of MichIgan,
=
dating from its found1Og m 1962.
"The Grosse Pointe Academy IACOBELL'S
--
was an important part of Laura's HOURS
NATURALIZER SHOES
Get acquainted with AAUW PhOlO bV Joe Gazdlck growmg up years, as she attended
the school from preschool to grad- EASTLAND CENTER SOUTHLAND CENTER
83~80 287-1550
MooS10-1 P.M.
SUNDA Y 12-S P.M.
Membership Vice President Francesca Catalfio- Truba, seated center, and program develop- uation in 1984," Timmis said
ment vice.president Aralynn Vinande, seated left, discuss with Mary Leech, standing center, "ThIS gift reflects the appreciation
of the family and is a fitting
and Anne Stockman, seated right, plans for the Prospective Members' Coffee Meeting that the memorial to Laura The Early
American Association of University Women's Grosse Pointe branch will hold on Wednesday eve- School manifests the philosophy of
ning, Jan. 22, at 7:30 p.m., in the upstairs lounge of Grosse Pointe Memorial Church. Study the academy's founders and IS the
groups and committees will have displays and a brief presentation will further explain the cornerstone of an academy educa-
scope of the AAUW activities. Interested women from east side communities who hold bac- tIOn This expanded facility will
calaureate or higher degrees are invited to drop in at the meeting or to call 881.9585 or contmue to prOVIde the excellent
885-8247 in advance for further information. education for WhICh The Grosse
Pomte Academy IS recogmzed."
Ground wIll be broken for the
Club information wanted Valentine dance set new building and the renovation of
the existmg faCIlIty in mid-March
A Valentmes Day dance Will be 1986and all work will be completed
In edltmg thIS section, I often find that I would like to contact held on Fnday, Feb 14, at 7 p.m m tIme for the opening of the new
a club or orgamzatIOn and find that I don't know who the contact at the Grosse Pomte War Memor- school year m September. The new
person IS or how to reach that person. Most of you publicity Ial Treat your Valentme to a SIt- bUIldmg Will Implement the re-
chaIrmen have been very good about including a contact number down dinner, wme and beer, and commendations set forth in the
on your news releases, but If you haven't turned anything in thiS dancing musIC wIth a disc jockey school's long range plans prepared
week, and I'd stIll lIke to get 10 touch wIth you - I'm often left for only $15 per person by J Michael Kirk, noted restora-
wonderIng who to contact TIckets may be picked up at the tIon architect The new buildmg
To help me stay in better touch with you - I'd Itke to put together War Memonal or you may maIl a WIll be 4,680 square feet and WIll
a dIrectory of club and orgamzation contact people. This informa- check to the Grosse Pomte Soccer contam an actiVIty room, a gym-
tIOn Will not be published - so don't worry about your address and AssocIation, Valentme Dance, P 0 nasium and an additional class-
phone number becoming public information. I'd just like to have Box 36156, Grosse Po1Ote, MICh., room
the mformation so If I suddenly decide that this week I'd hke to 48236, by Feb 1 ThiS construction IS made pos-
do a feature on your club, I'll be able to reach someone The dance is sponsored by the sible by the Second Century Fund
If you'd like to have your club lIsted In my dIrectory, please fill Grosse Pomte Soccer Association. campaign whIch was initiated in
out the form below and return It to: Elsa Frohman, Features but It ISopen to anyone who wants the spring of 1984 The campaign,
Editor, The Grosse Pomte News, 99 Kercheval, Grosse Pomte to have a good time under Haggarty's chairmanship,
Farms, Mlch , 48236
has raIsed more than $2 million for
NAME OF ORGANIZATION _
No weekends support of scholarships, buIlding
renovation, chapel support and en-
In Edwardian England, people dowment of faculty salaries. More
mVlted house guests to come for than 100 volunteer parents, trust-
NAME OF PRESIDENT ,PHONE: _ "Saturday to Monday" because ees, alumm and friends have
the term "weekend" was con- devoted a conSIderable amount of
NAME OF PUBLICITY CHAIR PHONE:, _ SIdered vulgar, says NatIOnal Geo- effort to makmg thIS campaign a
graphIc
success.
BRIEF STATEMENT OF THE NATURE OF YOUR ORGANIZATION No-return bottles
Wme bottle!> from the wreck of Designer
TItamc, which sank III 1912 at a The United States 1984 contem-
cost of 1,522 lIves, now he on the porary Christmas stamp was de-
NAME OF CORRESPONDING SECRETARY _ ocean floor at 13,000 feet, and can Signed by 9-year-<lld Danny LaBoc-
be IdentIfied as to type of wine m cetta of Richmond HIll, NY, in
deep-sea photographs, says Na- only 20 mmutes, says National
MAILING ADDRESS _ tional GeographIc GeographIC World
MEETING SCHEDULE _
Discover
the unique
Private Duty Nursing Care ~ beautiful
serving the Grosse Pointes
and the Tri-Counties
YOU , / ':i.~
through /
I)
OrldoL
/'/
personalized color analysis ;
Consultation Fee includes. 'I}
MACOMb NURSiNG U'i~j!~2 • Color AnalySIS
Private Homes, Hospitals
or Nursing Homes
• Skm A nal)'sis
• Ana()'Sis (ifJ'our Make-up
• Seasonal SINlleb Book
For ,lppolOtmcnt or mformation I
, snow
'.
'f;~~
I
• 24 Hour Service - 7 Days a Week l.lll r, eh n at '; 26-34';9 SATURDAY, JANUARY 25
• Full Time or Part Time Coverage
• Bonded and Insured " \~SATURDAY. FEBRUARY1
By RN's, LPN's, Nurse Aides, ~. 9 A.M., GROSSE POINTE
and Live in Companions '\, See the latest fashions
263.0580 \\ for the bride. bridal
\ attendants and mothers.
Community Professional Nursing Service
\ Includes breakfast.
$2.50 per person
For reservations
call: 882-7000,
extension 199.
St. Clair Room.
We invite you
to register
your gift
preferences
We welcome Jacobson's Charge Card or The Amencan Express~ Card
We Ire now open until 8 on MondlY, Tue.dIY, Wedne.dlY Ind SlturdlY
Thursday and Friday until 9
-~------_.~-~---~--~-~--------"-~-
"
~ - ..
---~---_-.... ...... -------. - ..... ----. - .....'_hIlSl4 _
Page Four-S GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
DON'T PAINT YOUR ~
RADIATORS ~~
Sleam and hOI water Ace radiator
~~~:;~~sW~~hv:~~~~t o,l enclosures
c
proven 10 be the IlneSI I PrOjeel heal out ,nto
melhod 01 healing BUT room
are uyly and old 2 Keep drapes walls
fashioned Pa nl or wood cleaner
covers drastccally reduce 3 Beautify your home
heatmg efl,c'ency Free catalog of Ideas and
IrscO
Manulacturl119CO.
Ff~A EstJma'es
efl c,enl healing
( II I
Wr/le or phone to '"
)
3564 Blue Rock Road, Clnclnnatf, Ohio 45247 1.800- 543-7040
f
JOSEPH P. PERSE with
Nancy Schmitt A& C l/plrollery CO.
Cottage Auxiliary UPHOLSTERING
Servicing
& DECORATING
the Pom/es for over 30 years
plans luncheon
RebervdtlOnb are now bemg mumty education and for the
taken tor the dnnual meetll1g and hospital's health promotIOn ac- Wide Selection of
luncheon of the Cottage Hospital ttvlttes He has coormdated and
Auxiliary \\ hlch \\ ill be held on taught health education programs
Free pick-up & delivery
CASUAL &
Wednebday, Jan 22 at the Grosse at The DetrOIt Medical Center and
POll1tc Club b Berkbhlre Place, at Wayne State Umverslty smce
free estimates
VA 2.9660
DECORATIVE
Gt osse POinte Farmb 1977
:\Jemberb and guebts will be wel- SchmItt ISa regIstered nurse and
12339 HAYES FABRICS
comed at 11 15a m and lunch w1l1 patIent educatron coordinator at
be !>erved at noon. followed by the the instttute She was extensive ex-
busmess meetmg and m!>tallallon penence m rehabIlttation nursmg
of officers and has developed mterdlsclplin-
Next on the agenda IS an hour
long lIght and lively pt e:>entatlOn
ary educatiOn programs for pa-
tients in several of the hospItal's WORSHIP SERVICES
of "The Therapellllc Value of specIalty umts
Humor' by Damel D Thomaszew- Schmitt utilIzes humor WIth pa- Christ the King
Grosse Pointe First English
ski and Nancy L Schmitt from the tIents both at the bedsIde and m the Unitadan Church
RehabIlitatIOn Instttute In the De- Lutheran Church Ev. Lutheran
classroom. With the objective of
20338 Mack GPW Church
-.
trOit Medical Center The program legltlmlzmg humor as a therapeu-
884-5090 ~ Vermer Road at
\\ IIIgive a lIghthearted yet senous
look at the role of humor In our per-
tiC tool, she organized the Rehab-
IlitatiOn InstItute's annual "Staff Sunda) School 9 00 a m
...... Wedgewood Drive,
sonal, profebslOnal and volunteer Laff," and educational program "Keep In Touch" Grosse Pointe Woods
Bible Classes 9 00 a m 884-5040
lives for all hospital employees. Rev Ms Pat Carol
Family Worship 10 10 a m
ThomdszewskI Ibdirector of edu- For reservatiOn mformation call FolJolled by FelJo\\shlp 11 a.m Service Early Worship &
catton at the Il1s11tute He IS re- Mrs W1l1iamDeBruyne at 293-3786 Hour and Church School Sunday School - 9 10 a m
!>ponslble for pallent staff, com- the evenmg of Jan 16 Wed Bible Class 10 ()()a m 17150 MAUMEE Late Worship - 11 00 a m
881-0420 Paul F Keppler, Paslor
Joseph P Fabry, Pastor
John CorradoMInister Bruce Qualman, Paslor
-A/ew f/rrivalS St. Paul Ev.
,/. Lutheran
._".
Redeemer
United
Faith Lutheran
Church
-db. Church Methodist CHRIST CENTERED -
David Hans Kaufmann mother IS Mrs James Wharton : . ~ .' 881-6670 ~ Church SPIRIT LED
Paternal grandparents are Mr " ,- Challonte and Jefferson at Phlhp
Dr and Mrs Robert Kaufmann 20571 Vermer
and Mrs. Harry Bearse. Lotllrop 822.2296
of Grosse POInte Park are the Just east of 1-94
9 00 a m Family lI'oflihlP Sunday WorshIp. to 15 a m
parents of a son, DaVid Hans,
born Dec ~ Maternal grand-
Amy Elizabeth 10 10 a m EducatIon for all
Harper Woods
884-2035 Sunday School • 9 00 a m
parents are Mr and Mrs Gordon Dickinson 11 15 a m \\oflihlp
Nursery all servIces
Pra)er & Praise
9 00 a m Church School Wed 730 P m
M Stetz of Grosse POll1te Park. Brian and Molly Dickinson of
REV J PHILIP WAHL 10 30 a m WorshIp Pastor
Paternal grandparents are Dr. Rochester Hills are the parents of Rev Don Llch!enfelt Ronald W Schmidt
and Mrs Werner C Kaufmann of a daughter, Arpy ,Ehz~R~~~, bor,n REV ROBERT CURRY
New York, NY
Dec. 10 Maternal grandparents
The Grosse Pointe Grosse Pointe
Julia Anne Stefanovich are Mr and Mrs. Richard'Julien
Congregational UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Steve and JulIe Stefanovlch of of Kalamazoo. Paternal grand-
parents are Mr. and Mrs Philip and 211 Moross Road 886-2363
Chnton, N C , are the parents of a American Baptist
(J
daughter, JulIa Anne, born Dec Dlckm~on of Grosse Pomte Park
17. Maternal grandmother IS
Amanda
Church
240 Chalfonte at Lothrop
"Ethnics Present,
Lorene PurvIs of Emmence, Ky 884-J075 Please Stand!"
Paternal grandparents are Steve Colleen Cencer "Have We
and Barbara Stefanovich of Dr Robert W Boley, preachmg
Mr and Mrs Paul D Cencer of Regressed?"
Grosse Pomte Grosse POinte Woods are the Exodus 20 1-4 9.00 a m WorshIp & Church School
Sarah Marie Bennett parents of a daughter, Amanda Deuteronomy 28 1-8 11.00 a m WorshIp & Nursery through Kmdergarten
Bill and Wendy Bennett of Colleen, born Dee 13 Maternal 9 10 & 11 15 a m ~ervlces Dr Robert W Boley Rev Jack Mannschreck
grandparents are Mr and Mrs 9 30 a m Church School
Southgate, Ky, formerly of Cnb room both sel'\ ICes
Grosse POinte Farms, are the Erwm M Sleron of JacksonvIlle, THE SUBJECT FOR THIS SUNDAY IS:
Fla Paternal grandparents are Dr Ro} R Hutcheon
parents of a daughter, Sarah ReI Keith A Harrmgton
Mane, born Oct 18 Maternal Mr. and Mrs James P Cencer of "Life"
JANUARY FUR SALE
grandparents q.rc Toby Morris of
Middletown, OhiO, and the late
St Clair, Mich
.< l ST. MICHAEL'S First Church of Christ, Scientist
Sharon Stahl Paternal grand- Jennifer Marie Bell EPISCOPAL Grosse Pointe Farms
30% TO 60% OFF parent!> are Jean Bennett of Cm-
cmnah and the late Clayton Ben-
DaVid and Dianna Bell of ~ CHURCH 282 Chalfonle Ave.
Grosse POll1te Woods are the lOH5 Sunnmgdale Park (4 blocks West of Moross)
:leU parents of a daughter, Jenmfer (.ro~,e POInie \\ood~
Services
Kay Anos Furs MON-SAT.
9'30 a m ~.OO p m.
Andrew Brett Bearse Marie, born Dec 30. Maternal
grandparents are Mr and Mrs
881-1820
8 00 a m Holy Euchanst
Sunday 1030 A M
Sunday School 1030 A M
Wednesday, 8 00 P M
19261 Mack (near Moross) next to Woods Theatre 886-7715 Tom and Sallie Bearse of
Grosse POll1te Fat ms are the
Everett Beach of Hillsdale, MICh
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
to 30 a m
Choral EucharIst and ALL ARE WELCOME
Sermon, Sunday School
parents of a son, Andrew Brett, and Mrs Rupert Bell of Port (Nursery Avallablel
born Dec 16 Maternal grand- Huron Weekday Euchansl Grosse Pointe Woods
9 30 a m Tuesda}
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
GP Unitarian welcomes Pat Carol Reclor Roberl E \ell\
Karen P EI an. a~oclale 19950 Mack Avenue
(ha "way t)e"Neell Morass and Vern er Roads)
Lookmg For Fnendshlp 886-4300
The Grosse POInte Ul1Itanan and Bible Teachmg"
9 :lQ a m FamIly WorshIp
Church wIll welcome Pat Carol to
WHITTIER TOWERS the pulpit on Jan 19 She has
St. James
"Knot Now"
served churches In Westford, Pastor Edward Taylor, preachmg
Mass, and IS currently Involved Lutheran Church 11 a m DIVme Worship
m wrltmg Hebrew Bible stone!> "on The Hill" "Picking Up the Fragments"
for church schools for a film stnp Mc'lIl1an at Kerchl'\ al
senes 8ll4-0511 Dr Irvmg PhIllIps, preachmg
Her sermon IS tItled "Keep In 9'30 & 11 am qIMJ(! ("jJ(.(///(1 <jY(i/f/(.)wl f{jhlliffl
Touch" and concerns the story of WorshIp
Ruth from the Hebrew BIble and 930am
Presbyterian U S.A
human relatIOnship,> It IS In- Sunday School
teresting to know that her mother & Nursery
ISa Methodist minister III Burton, "The Sign of Hope"
rooms and Apartments 10-30 am Dr Donald G Lester, preaching
Mich. near Jo'lInt
-all with private bat~s Coffee Hour
The Grosse POinte Ul1Itarran
• Around-the-clock security Church IS open to everyone It IS 930&1J30am ServIces
Pa~lor (,e.,r!\"r" 'khrltl'r
non-credaL reqUlrmg only that Pa.,lor Roherl \ Hlmbo Cflb.Toddler Care 16 [~1keshore Drive
• RegIstered Nurses on duty ChIldren ~ Church Gros~e Pomte Farm~
you arc mterested III enrIchIng VISITORS \\ EL< O;\JE School 11825.110 24 h rs
• Excellent Meals your life clnd the lives of those
f around you Pat Carol GROSSE POINTE
and BAPTIST CHURCH
• Beauty/Barber
• Grocery Store
Shop
Elizabeth Parcells • • •
21116 \'lack hl'nur
Gro~~1' POinte "ood~
8S1-1'l41
• Doctors'
• Gift Shop
all within
ClInic
the bUilding
(Conlinul'd
and the practIce
backs"
From Pagt> 1H)
and the set-
Hall box office at 833-3700, or go
by the box offIce In person
A ~arm Wdcomr
A"".IlIr.; YOI'
~ll")\\~
Cont,"~nlal Rr~ak(a'i ~
q II. m
t'
I
to
DIAL A
(or everyonr
A recent additIOn to Parcells' q 4') a m
L
The .Welcome-
awaiting your
sign is out,
call or visit.
credits IS a compact dl~c record-
mg, Just rcl('ased, that she did two
years ago WIth Conductor Leopold
Hager On the recordmg, Parcells
Filthy pictures
Art restorers cleanmg MIchelan-
gelo's frescoes in the VatIcan's SIS-
~unday ""hool
1100am
\formng ,",oNhll'
6 '10 pm
Evem ng ""rvl ce
~
~
....,..
/
tI
•../
!l,r.. ..
PRAYER
tme Chapel have found, under- WFO'F.~DAY"
smgs Bach It was released m neath centuries of grrme, astomsh- ';4~ P m
for information or an appointment: Europe on the "Forlane" label. FamIly NIght Dmner
call LOIS NAIR
For tIckets to Parcells' concert
thIS weekend, where she WIll be
mgly bright colors, and have con.
cluded that much of the smoky
gloom assOCiated With hIS pamt.
mgs was nothmg more than dIrt,
6 45 P m
Youth & Adull BIble Siudy
Awana Cluh for Children
Rev DaVId WIck
Senior Pa,tnr
882-8770
accompamed by .James Wmn on »~\ qar II ~llrJ of Fd
the plano, contact the Orchestra says NatIOnal GeographiC I I
• •
;-,-------
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page FJVe-B
LINC helped make Christmas brighter
Stacks of ChrIstmas presents,
IlDage & Eyewear
nursery and church schools were "We are really proud of our II1Junes, strokes, amputatIOns,
1,843 to be exact, were the special able to donate toys, or hats and
\
,
gifts of Grosse Pomte school chIl- school chJldren and theIr famJl- those with neurologIcal dIsorders,
mIttens to deservlllg, but often lIes," said Noto such as multiple sclerOSIS, and
dren to the foster care children of neglected fostel' care kIds
Wayne County thl~ holIday season "Even though one elementary burn patients
Program co-chaIrmen Jeannie school chose only to have their "We need these systeml>," said
Through OperatIOn LINC's 12th Noto and Maggi O'BrIen reported
annual Foster Care Children's kmdergarten class partICipate and Callahan, "not only for musIc
that 2Ll more gIlts were received fewer students were actually 111- therapy - for patients learmng to
ChrIstmas GIlt PI ogram, l>tudentl> by the program 111 1985 than m
In 14 Grosse Pomte elementary, volved IJ1this year's drive, the chil- walk agam who are aIded by the
pre" JOUl>years dren were even more generous beat of mUSIC, for example - but
than before," she explained also as a way lor patients to relax
"Foster Care chIldren are IJ1 and find enjoyment as a release for
temporary homes through no fault theIr pam"
of their own, and the State only "Each evemng we ha ve dIfferent
prOVIdes $10 per chIld for each mUblcal group'> come 111 to prOVide
foster mother to buy ChrI~tmas lIve entertamment for our patients
gIfts," added O'Bnen but we desperately need a sound
"Those additIonal surpnl>e gIfb to
l>Yl>tem be dble to reach all the
from our great kids are much ap- patients," l>he said
preclated," she said Area reSIdents who mIght be
"Of course, we would always able to rionate eqUipment or ,'olun-
welcome the support of any club, teer InformdtlOn may contact 1\1e-
orgamzatlOn or II1dlVlduall> who hnda Callahan at 494-9786 or the
mIght want to donate the gIfts next OperatIOn LINC office at 882-6100
year," saId Noto OperatIOn LINC antlclpatel>
WhIle the tmsel, ornaments and many new requests for help from
lIghts have been put away for numerous metropolItan al'ea agen-
another year, the success ot we
Clel> berve 111 1986 We need your
LINC's other hohday programs time and contnbutlOn~ As a non-
contll1ue to brIng happmess to profl t, volunteer orgaJ1lzatlOn 19599 Mack
many needy people m 1986 LINC depends on your support To Naturally
Among the many gen2rous con- volunteer or donate useable Items at
G.P.W.
tl'lbutlOns to LINC agencIes from at any time of the year, pleal>e call 882-9711
the commumty thIS season. the LINC at 882-6100, between 9 a m
MIchIgan Candy Dealers ASSOCia- and 2 pm
tIOn prOVided 425 candy-tilled
Christmas stockmgs, the RIchard
School Daisy GIrls Scout Troop Slovak Ethnic
gave handmade stockmg stuffers,
the Gold and Silver TrefOil Asso-
ciation contrIbuted many personal
care gIftS, and 12 beautJ1 ul, hand-
Sunday set
The Sal'lsan Folk Ensemble and
WINTER
made dolls were brought 10 by a
CLEARANCE
the InternatIOnal InstItute Will host
talented local cItIzen a Slovak Ethmc Sunday, Jan 19at
And because of thoughtfulness 2 p m 111 the Institute Hall ot Na-
such as thiS the annual LINC Toy tIOns, III E Kirby m DetrOIt
Chest and GIfts Program was able The Sansan dancers Will offer a
to present toys, candy, personal speCial performance WIth choreo-
care Items and food to Adult Ser- grapher Jaroslav SeVCik, a formel'
SRLE
vIce Centers, Inc ; DetrOIt Antl- solOIst tor the Slovak National Folk
Hunger Program; the Renms- Dance Company, "Sluk " Also ap
sance Health Care, Inc , La Casa peanng WIll be Peter J\llchlIca,
Community Youth SerVice, vIsIting prole~l>or Irom the Wayne
Brown's Chapel MISSIOnary Bap- State Umverslty MUSIC Depart
tist Church; Jefferson House of the
Capuchm Commumty
Conner House of the Eastwood
Community Climc, and the Asser-
tIVe Commumty Treatment Pro-
Center,
ment
"Famed Slovak artist Vlham
Mesco WIll exhIbIt and olfer for
bale more than 50 of hll>\\ oodcarv
mgs," saId Mdry Ball, execul1ve
20% TO 50%
Vincent Lionti
gram at ACT-Hegira Programs,
Inc.
WIth the advent of the Ne""
dIrector of the InternatIOnal Insti-
tute "He"" III also perfO! m selec,
tlOns on authentic IJ1struments, the
OFF
GP Symphony Women's Assoc. Year, an important request for aId fUJara and piS tala ,.
to hold membership meeting comes to LINe from the Rehablh-
tatlOn Institute of DetrOIt's Thera-
peutIc RecreatIon Department
A film of Slovakia as well al>Sio
vak refreshments Will be mcluded
for $5, $4 for International Institute
RLL WINTER mERCHRNDISE
The Grosse Pomte Symphony his father, C Victor LlOnti He IS
Women's AssocIation will hold its
annual general membership meet-
also a vlOhst and the VIOla Con-
certo by DalmazIO Santmi was
According to MelInda Callahan,
director of therapeutic recreatIOn,
the IJ1stItute needs a VCR (VHS) to
members ReservatIons are neces-
sary and can be made by callIng
the institute dUrIng busll1e~s hours
RT
mg to kIck off the 1986 year of ac- written for and dedicated to him in
tivIties on Jan 23, at 10 :30 a.m ,at 1980 He was the 1977 reCIpient of show movIes to patients, a stereo at 871-8600,or bend check or money HOURS:
the Grosse Pomte Hunt Club With tape player and turntable, a order, made payable to the Inter-
-
the Dorothy Gluckman Award rn-F,9:00-5:30
The busmess meeting wIll'begin ffofu tne'Greerl\vich Syinpnony microphone, and the expertIse of a ndtlOnal Institute, to Slovak Sun-
the program and a SOCIalhour and knowledgeable volunteer to help day, 111 E Kirby, DetrOit, MI 10:00-5:00
SOot.
He IS a member of the Venturn
lunch will foHow at 11 30 A pro- Quartet and ISa coach for the D30 InstItute workers choose and im- 48202 Seating ISlimIted so call to- ....
gram of musIc featurmg Vmcent plement and appropriate sound day
LlOnh, vlOhmst WIll follow the
CIVIC Orchestra He IS a faculty
member at Macomb County Com- system for patIents The InternatIOnal Inl>tltute Ib a Tradl tIOna I Women s Apparel
meal mumty College, and has been a The institute serves a Wide Torch Dnve supported agency that 22430 GREATER MACK • ST CLAIR SHORES,
The SOCIal chaIrman for the member of the DetrOIt Symphony val'Jety of disabled patients prOVIdes SOCialservIces to new Im- Mf 48080 • 773.8110
aSSocIatIOn IS SylVia RutkowskI. Orchestra SInce June 1983 Among these are people sufferIng mlgrant~ and foreign speakmg
The program chaIrman IS Jane TIckets for the meeting and pro- spmal cord mjul'les, closed head people
Buhl The preSident of the GPSWA gram are $12 per person and can
IS Mary Baynert be obtamed by contactmg Mrs An-
LlOnti has been playmg the violm thony Rutkowski, 23318 Norcrest
NAIL CLINIC AND
since age 6, under the tutleage of
~~....... ~<o..,
< '-
Dr , St Clair Shores, 48080 Moving1 Engaged1 New Baby?
Getting Settled Made Simple ):Lo, SKIN CARE SALON
b<j;!4$\
New Town dilemmas fade after a WELCOME WAGON Neu' Revolutionary}
:4
SPECTACULAR JANUARY
call
As WELCOME WAGON RepresenlatlVe ,'s my lob to
help you make the mosl 01 your new ne,ghborhood
Breaktbrougb Concept
FUR CLEARANCE ShopPing Areas Communltyopportunltres SpeCia,al l<'or Nail lL'\:tensions
tractions Lots 01 tiPS 10 save you tlma and money
]\,u\ e 11,1It the ,lppl1c..JlIO!1 [Iml ot
_
*i~"---'--'----_-"'-ON SALE
ALL OUR FURS Plus a basket 01 g,lls for your family I II be listening
for your call II(,H r BONDI i\l(, .., ~TI M
Y lOI1\ ClHIO!1,ll ,Ill \II('" lip,> .1I1L! \\ I,lp'"
4:~ HELPFUL HINTS for Weddings and Engage.
Here's a few examples
No more odors 20311 l\-lack
~*<
'.
<"'"--;.;-
)'<7-\
>
WHILE THEY LAST
menta tool ,:) I r. ")I r
vyeTroine W~O~ No more lifting Gros~e Pte. Woods. 881-4211
(at Lochmoor)
"'
"""
-,
....::;.. Female Ranch Mink "';oat
reg. $5595 now $2995
Newcomer, ctHInge-of.,esldence, baby calls,
50% OFF EXPIRES FEBRUARY 2H
and engagementa.
Ranch Mink Coat
881.5618 GROSSE POINTE
Silver Fox sleeves and Tuxedo
reg. $4595 now $2950
Lunaralne Mink Coat
JANUARY SPECIAL SALE
reg. $3395 now $1995
on all FLEXSTEEL
,, Blush Mink Coat
Blush Fox sleeves and Tuxedo
reg. $3895 now $2495
SOFAS and LOVES EATS
Autumn Haze Mink Coats
reg. 53395 now $2550
Coyote Coats
reg. $5595 now 53595
Coyote Jacket
reg $2395 now $1595
Beaver Coat
reg. $2695 now $1750
Blonde Beaver Coat
reg. $3695 now $2385
Beaver Jacket
reg. $1595 now 5995
Raccoon Jackets
reg 52695 now 51595
Blue, Red, Crystal Fox
Flank Blouson Jackets
reg. $1595 now 5995
Full Skin Crystal Fox
Stroller
reg. $5295 now $3395
Red Fox Jackel
reg $2995 now $1995
80" Sofa 60" Love"e,lt With LIfetime Warranty on
Opossum P,ece ReverSible
Jackets Construction by rLEXS fH L In your selcclJon of
reg. 5419 now $199 FabriCS. Allow 5 wrek" tor de!lvery
1835 ffetlwud
Fournier's 27113 Harper
St Clair Shores
nS-8900
16421 Harper
DetrOIt
343-9169 881-1285
Cwct!t ~ Htoek
G,P.w.
Furniture Open Mon Thurs Frr 10830
Tues & Sat 106
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
Open Man Thur Frr 9.8
Tues & Sat 9 5 30
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
! '
Page Six-B GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
C "t"lIp Moms In<: 1980
,
I
\
Kings & 100s I
\\ Count ern.
Also availahleinMenthol.j \
\\
\
Kings 10 mg "Iar:' 0 8 mg nlcollne -
100's 12 mg "Iar" 0 9 mg nlcollne av per clgarelle bV FTC method
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.
Mfr's suggested pricing based on full-prrce brands
Thursday, January 16, 1986 GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Seven-B
and A/ews----------------
(!/ub (!hurch
CREW Eastside Pear Tree Louisa St. Clair DAR Women's Association of Women's Connection
A group of Detroit-area women Handweavers Guild Questers LOUIsa St Clair chapter of thc Grosse Pointe Memorial The Women's Connection of
ha ve orgamzed a Michigan affilIa- National SOCIety of the Ddughtcr&
The EastsIde Handweavers The annual meetll1g of the Gro::.se Pomte presents Selma
tion with CREW-Commercial Real Mrs Steven StefanovlCh and of the American RevolutIOn will
Guild, an association of persons Women's As&oclation of Gro&se FI::.her, who will speak at the
Estate Women, home-based In Mrs John McLellan wIll host the celebrate Its 93rd birthday With a Thursday, Jan 23, dinner program
WashIngton, D C, The group com- lI1volved in various fiber arts, m- Pear Tree Chapter of Questers POlOte MemOrial Church wIll be
cludll1g weaving, spinmhg and gala luncheon meetlllg at the De~ held Jan 21, at 10 a m Following held at the Golden LIOn restaurant
prises real estate professIOnals in- meeting on Thursday, Jan 16, at trOlt Golf Club on Saturday, Jan
basketry, Will hold their monthly a bnef bU~lI1ess meetmg and pre- Fisher has her own tax practice
terested in furtherIng their career 10 am, at the Central LIbrary,
meetll1g on Monday, Jan 20, at 111The SOCial hour will beglO at sentatIOn of annual reports, the and IS an "enrolled" agent, which
development and establlshmg con- Kercheval and Fischer roads
the Gro&se Pomte Central LI- 11 30 a m and lunch WIll be scrv. group WIll adjourn to Bdrbour enables her to practice before the
tacts With people mvolved in The program WIll feature Dr ed at 12 30 P m
brary Chapel where the Rev Anne E IRS
vanous aspects of commercIal Charles Hansen as guest speaker Mr~ George T Ed::.on, chapter
real estate The program entItled "Warpmg Fuhrmel::.ter, mtenm d&~Oclatlon Her tOpIC wll1 be the proposed
HIS talk WIll be followed by a bnef I egent, Will preSide at the meeting
the Loom," will present Ideas for pa~tor, Will conduct the m::.tallatlOn tax law and Its effects The even-
CREW IS Intended to brmg bus mess meetmg. Coffee and rolls The featured ~peaker Will be Mr&
planmng warps which combme w111be served of thc officers CommuOlon wdl be mg is open to the publIc There IS
together women In all avenues of John P Weaver Sr , regent of the
yarns of many dIfferent textures !>crved a charge of $13to members and $15
real estate - architecture, con- Guests are mvited to JOIl1 the Daughters of the AmerIcan Revo
and colors, and varIOus problem A luncheon honorlllg the assocla- to non-members for the dlllner and
structIon, fmance, acquisitIon - m members for thiS specIal occa&lOn lutlOn of Michigan Hcr tOPiC \\ ill
solVIng Ideas and techmques It tlOn'~ pa&t preSidents will follow at program There IS a charge of $4
addition to the traditional roles of be "Our Country's Coloma I Inni>
Will be of mterest to both ex- noon 111 the follow~hlp hall Reser- for the program only,
selhng and property management
There IS a need in the DetrOIt perIenced and nOVIce weavers Sweet Adelines and Taverns" SpeCIal guests wIll f
V'<:ltlOnsor lunch can be made by The deadlme for reservatIOns IS
All persons who are mterested 10 be members of the state executive call1llg the church offICe at 882- Saturday, Jan. 18 SOCializing and
metro area for these mdiVIduals to The Greater DetroIt Chapter of board and regents of nelghbormg
the fIber arts are welcome to at- 5.330 dmner is from 6 to 8 pm, with the
get together and share ideas and Sweet AdelInes, Inc. IS holdIng a chapters
tend speCIal guest mght 011 TUc::,JdY, orogram following For reserva-
establish a stl Ullg netwul kmg sy~-
tern, accordmg to CeCe Sharp, Refreshments and social hour Jan 21 at 7'30 pm. 111 the Gabriel
Mrs Frank S Clark IS the (;rosse Pointe tIons, contact Anne Marie LaIrd at
begm at 7 pm With a bUSIness hostess and reservations are bemg 331 1998
president of Schostak Equities
meeting at 7-30 p m al,d thE:pro-
Richard BUilding, U of M-Dear-
taken by Mrs Charles E Marches-
Camera Club
Corp and a CREW founder. born campus, 5001 Evergreen,
Meetmgs are scheduled for the gram scheduled for 7,45 P m For Dearborn Women who like to SlOg
sault and Mrs Kenneth M The Grosse Pomte Cqmera Club AARP
further mformatlOn you may call Wheeler Will meet on Tuesday, Jan 21, for The Grosse Pomte Chapter :2151
second Wednesday of each month are lOvlted to attend
Sue Elhson at 881-2906 or Mary both prmts and slIdes for competi- of the Amencan ASSOCiation of Re-
With the next meetmg scheduled Guests wlll be mVlted to particI-
LeIgh Herdegen at 882-2261 pate m a typical Sweet Adehnes re- Breather's Club tIOn, at 7.30 pm, at Brownell Mid- tired Persons will meet at 1 pm
for Wednesday, Feb 21,7 p.m. at dle School. 260 Chalfonte, Gro&&e
the AmerIcan Center BUIldmg, hearsal and learn a song 111 four- 'What Ii>Emphysema'l" 1&the 011 Jan 27, at Gro::.se Pomte Mem-
Pomte Farms For more Il1forma ondl Church
27777Franklin Road m Southfield.
Grosse CI DOI"nteSl"ngles part barbershop harmony It ISnot tOPIC at the month's BreatheI'~ tlOn, call 881-8034 Dr John A Whntner, superIn-
Guest speaker is Leslie Cohen of necessary to know how to read Club, the support group of chromc
Forbes/Cohen PropertIes in South- Richard Walker of Reuters musIc The chorus will also enter- lung disease patients sponsored by tendent of the Grosse Pomte
field Potential candidates, who News Service wIll be the featured tam them WIth songs from its re- the American Lung ASSOClatlOnof Pointe Garden Club Schools, Will speak on the subject.
have been employed for at least speaker on Friday, Jan 17 at 7'30 cent show whICh featured musIC of Southea&tern MIChigan The meet- Pomte Garden Club will meet at "Our Grosse POll1te Schoob - To~
two years on a primary basis in pm, when the Grosse Pomte the 40s mg beglOs at 2 30 pm Monday, noon Monday Jan 20, at the da} and TomolTo\\- "
commercIal real estate, are en- Singles convene In the Lakeshore Sweet AdelInes. Inc IS an mter- Jan 20 at the Calvary Semor Whither, 450 Burns DrIve Ed-
couraged to call Sharp or Kathleen ~oom of the Grosse POInte national smging orgamzatlOn With Center, 4950 Gateshead, DetrOit ward Eaton of Eaton Nursery Will No cap
Valenstein at 559-2000 for further Academy, 171 Lake Shore Rd, over 30,000 members throughout Bob Padalmo, MAR R T , wIll give a talk on "Landscape Reno- Damel Boone never wore a coon-
detaIls Grosse Pomte Farms HIS tOPIC' the Umted States, Canada, Eng- be the speaker vatIOn of Older Homes" skm cap, says NatIOnal Geograph-
"Reporting DetrOIt - For the land, Sweden, the Netherlands, Breather's Club meets the third Mrs Richard A Forsyth IS IC
Rest of the World" Japan and Australia The Greater Monday of each month and IS a hostess for the luncheon meeting,
GPUMC An Afterglow Dance, Im- DetrOIt chapter has 45 members free community service of the aSSisted by Mrs Dainforth B.
Fellowship Groups mediately following the general representIng 26 commumtles in the Lung ASSOCiation For more mfor- French, and Mrs Gerald E War-
meetIng wiII be held at the Jeffer- DetrOit metropolitan area. The matIon, call 961-1697 ren
The Fellowship Groups of
son Yacht Club, 24505 E. Jeffer- group performs for semor clhzen
Grosse POlllte United Methodist son, St Clair Shores, at 9-30 pm groups, church groups and other Ribbon Farms Questers
Church Will meet on Tuesday, Jan
21 The program will be an over-
The music of Doug DI Maria will CIVIC and commumty orgamza- Junior Group The RIbbon Farms Chapter of
be featured tions the Questers Will meet at noon for
view of the Book of Damel, which Sunday afternoon, Jan 19, at 5 For further mformatlOn call of Goodwill a luncheon at the home of Mrs
wIll be the BIble study for Lent
The program Will be gIVen by
p.m. Grosse Pomte Smgles Will Juhe PPIrce at 8l:l2-1877 The "Potpourri" cookbook pub- Joseph Scanlan on Monday, Jan NURSING
Carol Ann MaleItzke and Pat
have a WlI1e & Cheese Party at d hshed by the Jumor Group of 20 The members Will each parti-
HOME
the Grosse Pomte Farms home of Win mill GoodWIll \\-III be on sale at the cIpate In the program by brmgmg
Deck
Pointe Questers Pomte Pedlar on Saturday, Jan one collectible and presentmg dl&-
The AM Fellowship, Barbara
Brasseur, chairman, Will meet in
a member.
Friday, Jan 31, the featured
speaker will be Dr Miguel Loren-
h
T e Wm ml
d '11 I
ointe Questers
18, when Grosse Pomters Helen
Huber and Joanne Zuchowski are
tmgU1&hll1gfeatures and hIstorical
data to the group
8045
H,.,T JHHR.,O'
the mornmg at the home of Carol will meet in the h me of Mrs J L on hand to demonstrate some of I)J fRO! f, 'fiCH.
Davey zim, M D, tOpIC, "Natural En- Obenauer on Monday, Jan 20. Tho old
the recipes m the book There wlll
At noon, the Evelyn GrIffIth Fel- ~:~~~~ent through Plastic Sur- She WIll also be presentmg the
be a tastmg table of samples Damel Boone, the great AmerI-
lowship, Margarette 01l1a, chair- Grosse Pointe Singles IS a dl- program on the hIstory of collect- ReCipes for hors d'oeuvres, soups, can frontiersman, volunteered to 821-3525
man, wIll meet with Betty Dun- verSIfied smgles group offering a Ible bells, glVmg the foundatIOn an entree and desserts WIll be fight 111 the War ot 1812, but wa~
woodle in her home. Betty Bu "fa and the how and when of the bell's QUr1llT>
varIety of actiVItIes m educa- h b demonstrated The program Will turned down because he wa& 78,
and Irene Dickson will serve as ~o- honal travel and social functlons. beginning. T e oldest ell was go on from 11 a m to 2 p m says NatIOnal GeographiC \URSING Cr1RE
hostesses found some 3,000,000 years ago 10
Sue Lenz, Margaret Layson and A,ny smgle person, 35 and up, IS m- Asia
Roberta Owens wLlI be co-host- vlted to att~nd any ~f these func- The coffee hour and meetmg Wll!
esses for the WesteY~~IlWshlp hon~ For mformatl?n, call t~ be c~.by Presldellt Mr::.
With supper at ute churcnRober- HoMme 445:r288, anyti'rfte .... Carl~asia before the program
ta Owens IS chairman of the Fol-
lowship. Alpha Xi Delta
DOrISWhite FellowshIp, Dorothy ANNOUNCING
Greer, chairman, WII! meet m the The first meetmg of the new year
evemng at the home of Emily
Boley
for the Grosse Pomte and Macomb
County Alumnae of Alpha Xi Delta
Pam Arnold
(formerly of the Image Makers)
FLOOR COVERING INC.
Everyone IS welcome Select a Will be a VoLUNGteer Workshop
time convement for you and call
the church office for more mfor-
at the American Lung Association
offices on West Adams m DetrOIt
HAS JOINED THE STAFF
AT JANUARY CARPET
matlon on Monday, Jan 20 PartIcipants
are asked to brmg a brown bag
lunch
SALE
Pointe Book Club
The January meeting of the
Starting at 9.30 a m. the alum-
nae Will address and stuff enve-
lopes WIth material whIch answers
EXTRA 10%DISCOUNT
POInte Book Club WIll be held Mon- requests for Christmas Seal con- On Our Already Low Price
day, Jan 20 at the home of Mrs tributions for heatlh mformation
Ellsworth W Allison. The co- Mrs. Stephen Lyle, preSIdent of Mohawk • Galaxy • Salem
hostesses Will be Mrs William the alumnae group, Will be coor- Lees - Wunda Weve • Pepperell
Hosbem and Mrs Kennard Jones. dinating a car pool to dnve to the
Followmg the luncheon, Gerda workshop, Her number is 977-3263
Bwhtz of the Grosse Pomte Li-
brary Service wIll review several
Alpha XI Deltas have been work-
mg with the AmerIcan Lung Asso-
14410 HarperCt~t};3;A
current books mcludmg "Accident-
al TOUrIst" by Anne Taylor, and
ciation for many years as one of
their natIOnal phIlanthropic proJ- 19565 MACK AVE. I v/S4" "I 822.2645 [E-8]
"Davlta's Harp" by Chalm Potok ects GROSSE POINTE WOODS Man .Frr 8 00-6 00 Sal 9 00-3 00
60th JANUARY FUR SALE THINKING OF A NEW
ARPIN FURS Of WiNdSOR
KITCHEN?
If It's By Customcraft,
Fine/Canadian Furs at Very Special Prices It's in a Clm,s by Itself
CALL THE PROFESSIONALS
~~~~~~~~FI~81.1024
V,s,t our Showroom
IF YOU
CAN'T BE If we cen help
you with your
Heart of Gold Comesee Arpin's fabulous 1986 collection of fashion furs, expertly crafted
THERE medical or
personal car.
needs, call us.
• Home nursing
Two Grosse Pointe Farms residents recently attended the
Heart of Gold Award Council meeting to screen nominations
for the 1986 volunteer awards program. Pictured are, left, San-
dy Fisher, Heart of Gold screening and judging chairman; and
Inlo loday's exciting new designs .•. and of course, you are assured 01
line qualify and value when you shop Arpin's.
Duty an d Sales
TO CARE, • Private Nursing
• Home making
services
Karla Scherer Fink, Heart of Gold vice chairman. The Heart
of Gold program, which honors outstanding volunteers, is
sponsored by the Heart of Gold Award Council and the United
Foundation. Trl-county area residents will be honored for mak.
Tax Refunded
Fuil Premium on
American Funds
711/CJ In,l1'lfJin
Fur Speria,tst for over 58 year"
CALL US. 343-4357
ing outstanding volunteer contributions at a luncheon Feb. Prof•• slonal Medica. S.rvlc ••
Park In the Downlown ItH4 Pell~~ler Sereee 2040 H...,., Aw."
18 at Cobo Hall. For ticket Information, contact the United H_,...r Wood., MI 4822.
Foundation at 965-7100 before Jan. 31.
ParklnR GaraRf - Windsor • 1- ')I <). 253 5612 • SHlt .
Park at PelISSIer Daily <) (0 ') ~O, Fn (0 <) Mhl"'"d
U,. ..lth ~"r'\1(f"
......... - MII C."whwwlttee fer 0..... ,. T ....
-_ ..._ ...~,.,- ~ ... --_ ......
Page Eight-B GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
Grosse Pointe Real Estate Exchange GROSSE POINTE FARMS OFFICE
THE PROPERTIES LISTED ON THESE PAGES ARE OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY
G) BY MEMBERS OF THE GROSSE POINTE REAL EST~,TE EXCHANGE ~ 90 Kercheval
884.6200
r!im ~tU'O.$ ~~ene£, in~ ST. CLAIR SHORES OFFICE
23915 E. Jefferson
17108 MACK 775-6200
886.9030
FIRST OFFERING
FIRST OFFERING
1138 ANITA - Beautiful bilei-. ranch III nunt condltlOnt I 1\\0 bedroom!>, Flond,l room $71,000
OPEN SUNDAY
STUNNING AND BRIGHT de!>cflbe thIS three
bedl oom, t\\O and one half bath St Cldll on the
Lake condominIUm The !>unken hvmg room
\\llh ndlllral rlre-plart' ha<; 1\\0 doorwal1, that
ledd'> to the enclosed patio Although there I~
..I dJlllllg room, the kItchen has eatmg !>paeeand
matching appliances plus a trash compactOl
\105BEHK~HIHE - Open f:>unda) 1 ~ Unbe Full bd!>ement WIth dark loom and a one car
lIe\ dble English Tudor Unbehe\ able pllte I attdched garage are defmlte as!>ets MUST
Fedturmg three !>tOl)-~tal/led glass sl.y light, SEE"
kitchen \\ Itll butler!> pdntn and gorgcous
hI edHa!>t room Gorgeous leaded gldss dnd OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
h'lld\\ood throughout OPE,\, ~U;.,DAY 1')'
BY APPOINTMENT FIRST OFFERING
;;~
1$
JU:::. T THE RANCH jou've been !ookmg for and THIS WONDERFUL FAMILY HOME has four
now that ItS been redone III neutldl tones, It'!> bedrooms and two and one half baths It
perfect Llvmg loom and den have natural flre- features a large family room WIthfIreplace, up-
868 WESTCHESTER - Three bedl oom bnck 7'fl ;l,IIDDLESEX - Fabulous house located on place" the kItchen ha!> been updated With dated kItchen WIth eatmg area and IIlcludes a
Colomal. central air, fanlll) room formal dUI one of Glos!>e POInte Pal ks fme'>t and most newer dl!>h\\asher, dIsposal and floor The newer refngerator, stove and mICrowave oven
mg room, large screened In porch oft of kit secluded streets FIlJlshed ba!>ement with FlOrida room has ,>lJdmg doorwall to pllvate Beautiful yard WIthnew patio and shrubs ThIS
chen. new cement drive and yard natur<ll fll eplace, central air, gal age door patIO and gas gnll for those summer bar-be- home has been well mallltained and decorated
opener, la\\ n !>prlllkier sy!>tem que's 1\vo bedrooms, two full baths All thIS illSIde and out and IS m move-m condltlon.835
and more 655 ROSLYN WESTCHESTER
, '
DEVONSHIRE AN EXECUTIVE IMAGE WIll be fulfilled WIth thIS SIXbedroom, three full baths
and two lavatory home Amellltles for elegant entertamlllg SpacIOus famIly room, sound proof
Ilbrarv Cu!>tom bullt In 1969 PatIO with barbecue to accent lovely mgrollnd pool
S RENAUD OVER 2600 SQUARE FEET of custom bUilt ranch style IIvmg Excellent floor plan
offel!>IIvlng loom dllJlng loom, fdmlly room, three bedrooms and two full hie baths Extra large
curner lot mcludes a !>prlllkier sjstem and an attached two tar garage WIth carport Call for extra
detmls of <Illextl d mnelJltlCo
HAHVARD I\OT A DRIVE BYI" ThiS three bedroom, one and one half bath Dutch ColomallS
. .~;~ .:
TASTEFULLY decorated m neutral colors The hVlng room WIth natural fIreplace, formal dmmg
room den and bedroom have refllllshed harawood floors Low heat bills are the result of the new
946RIVARD - Brick Illcome III Grosse Pomte B08BERKSHIHE - Five bedrooms, four full energy effiCIent furnace, new storms and screens and extra, extra msulatlOn There are many more
1ll""~LO
sO L-'0
Perfect for extra duclllg umt or fO! bdth!>,lavator)- Ell" I", 'h, sel vIce !>tallb, amemtlCs and assets m thiS lovely home Call for detaIls
large famdy n
tached garage,
sO etc T\\ 0 car at
.. dlllreplace III basement
!>prmkler sy!>tel 1n burglar. fire
and "cold" alar ~ ,~lems RecreatIOn room HARRISON THIS HOUSE HAS A HOST OF NEW THINGS like a new roof, new carpetmg,
and recreatIOn room Call bl ol..er fOi mOle de- lfl the ba~ement with fireplace new furnace, and ne\\ 100AMP service to name a few Llvmg room has cathedral ceIling WIth charm-
taIls' mg brick fireplace, fIrst 1I00r laundry, and ItS close to schools and transportatIOn
HOME BUYING SYSTEM HOME MARKETING SYSTEM
NEW OFFERING I ThIS beautIful three bed-
room condo offers central aIr and all ap
phances Clo'>eto the VlIlage shoppmg area
dnd transportation Immediate occupan-
cy' Call today for details' $80,000
I F IISTP) 886 5800
CHARMING BUNGALOW t SpacIOus and IJIce-
Iy decorated With large fanllly room,
beaultful master sUIte \\ Ith skylltes and SIt-
do\~n vall1t\ III bath Heflmshed hardwood • 7
-
floors 507491l0 1;16 BRYS OPE\, SUN- ~",,- ... ~ H
DA Y 2-i 886 :iBOO
IMMACULATE AND VERSATILE home on
exqUIsitely landscaped grounds and With-in
walkmg distance to all schools ThIS three to
four bedroom brick bungalow has a natural
brick fIreplace m the basement, recreatIon
room and bar, furnace room and offIce MUCH
MORE' $105,000 (G-68HAWl 886-4200
''''''''',-..M}.;st'''1,,~~i? ",
Everyday, we service families just like yours ... FIRST OFf'ERING I ThIS wonderfully located
four bedroom, two and one half bath cen-
helping them find the perfect home. Below is ter entra nce Colomal features three fire
just an example of some of the things that our places One fIreplace IS III the kItchen Has
buyers are looking for! two-car attached garage and more Call for
details $172,000. m-OOOXf<')8852000
fo f{r:~HLY DECORATED and super sharp' LIGGETT SCHOOL AREA ThiS four bedroom,
If you're thinking of selling your home - WE Thl., four to five bedroom bungalow ha!>two two and one half bath Coloma I has a great
dnd (JO~ half bath!> flr~t floO! laundn flr!>t ne\', kItchen completed m 1985 Oak cabl-
HAVE THE BUYERS! If you're looking for a and fanta!>tlc kitchen" Great
floor md.,tpr !>Ulte neb. !>peclal tile, kitchen-aId dIshwasher
home - WE HAVE THE SYSTEM that can make IdmlJy homf' 2')4LOTHROP OPE~ SUNDA Y Central aIr, patIO to a lovely back yard
2-i 1',1',6 WI(j
your dreams come true! tH-05CANl 885-2000
MUST BUY A HOME I A three or four bedroom GHOSC;EP( JI Vff: CITY Thl'>umque Coloma I
YOUNG COUPLE HAVE BEEN SEAHCIlJNG hd" hN'n exten<;lvelv restored m the la'>t
ranch In Gros~e Pomte Park or Gro<;se for a three or four bedroom ('olol1lal or
POinte Shores Minimum of two bath" \l.Ith tv. II }"dr., Th(' home boa,,!!>of a 10\ely m
ranch m north cnd of Gros'>e Pomte Park, I('nor dccentpd h\ j('aded glas'> \\ 1IIdo\\'>
family room (If aVdllablel Bet\l.een any area of Gros"e Pomte Farm!> or Gros.,e
$175,000 and $210,000 Need!> IMMf:DI dnd di'l<lIled \l.et pla~ter $114000
POlflte Woods cast of Mack Will do ~ome If-' 01 LI ~) llll6 illOO
ATELY' (GOOIRICl ll86 4200 redecoraltng If needed Up to $100,000
WOO IFAR I 1186 ')800 1\1I1\'TCONJlITION I Thl'> t\l.O hedroom bnck
SEEKING TO SETTLE m a three bedroom
Colomal or ranch In Grosse POinte City or ndturaJ fireplace In the hv
r<lnch f(,<ltllre!>
BUYER DREAMING of !>pendmg the re!>tof mg room, largc Flonda room Thl~ home
Farms Prefer a two car attached garage, the wmter by the fireplace In the family
and natural fireplace Lookmg between I'> mcp]y decordt('d and m the Grosse
room of a four bedroom Colomallocated In Pomte School dIstrict Call today $';0 lj()()
$80,000 and $90,000 (GOOIFRAl 886 4200 Gro!>sePomte Farm'> Willing to spend be
f (G60NOR) R!lh4200 SPACIOUS RANCH ThIS custom hUllt ranch
twren $200,000 and $225 000 Call today' has many features, custom kltchrn With hUllt
LOOKING FOR A LISTING of a three hcdroom (fI-001rOE) 118;-2000
brick ranch With one and one half hath or UNIVER5ITY Wonderful English style ms and eatmg area, over'i1Zed family room wllh
more, famIly room, basement, two car at bungalo\l. \\ Ith loads of charm Beautiful wet bar and flCldstone flreplacp $217,(J()(J47
SEEKING A SEMI HANCU In Gro<,<,ePomte Iv decOlati'd \l.llh natural \l.ood\\ork,large WILLISON, GROSSI': POINT!': !o>HOIU:S
tached garage, and between $12; 000 and Shore'>, Farm,>, or Gro'>sc POinte City bedroom<; and prett, fIreplace ConH'ment OPf:N SUNDA Y 2 'i 886-2000
I~ $165,000 Any where m the Gros'>e POlfltes
(GOOISEL) 886 4200
Would prefer four bedroom'> two baths and
a famIly room 3000 square feet for up to
locatIOn Don t ml'>" thl'> one Call today'
(Ii 82UNIl 8812000
$Z:->o,OOO Ca II today' (!I001KEA' M5 2000 OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
WE IIAVE TWO BUYERS lookmg for a ldrge 15'l6 Brys - Grossi' POintc Wood"
ranch or one and one half story home III the PRIME ARF:A Lo\\c~t pncpd comparable
BUYI-:HS WILLING TO no '>ome of the work hom(' III Ea'>t J)plrOlt Thl'>thr('c hedroom 254 Lothrop - Gro<;'>cPOlllte F,lrm ..
Shores, Farms or Woods f<'amlly room and to achlCve thp dream of havmg a beauti- ~7 Wllh,>on - GrossI' Pomte Shorf''>
SpaCIOUSdesign are a mu'>t' Betwern brick ranch ha<;hard\l.oon floor; \l.et pIa!>
ful 4000 '>quare foot Colomal m Grosse ter anrl alummu m trlll1 fllJ1!>hrn ba<;('ment t9616 Keno<;ha - Harper Woexl,>
$100,000and $150,000 (FOOlAND I 8lI65800 POInte bhores or Farm'> WJlJ go up to 1\12NotrE' Dame - Gro,,-e I'olllll' ( IIY
With lavatory, new('r roof dnn more QUIck
$'l2'>,000for a four or five bedroom home O<'cupant) $;2,lJOO IG 14EGO) 886 4200 468 McKmley - Gro,,'>c POlntc 1"lInn..
(JI OOIMIL) 885200() 801 Lincoln - Gro,>~e POinte ('Ity
t
f,
Grosse Pointe Farms
886-5800
Grosse Pointe "HIli"
885-2000
Ichweitzere~Bettgfnes.
I iIfIIII H Real EJtote.lnc. I and Gardens
Grosse Pomte Woods
886-4200
Administrative Office
268-1000
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Nine-B
Ontu~
'r=~tT21
'1LTJ J UU
When you list your home with
CENTUR Y 2 J LOCH MOOR we
place a picture of your residence OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
S~ 20439 MACK AVENUE
LOCH MOOR
In the Macom b M L S book as well
as In the Grosse POinte Exchange
book You can double your home'~
281 Beaupre - GP F
&,1<, g'~ ;eea~ Grosse POinte Wood!:> 884-5280 exposure by IIstzng It With us'
460 LABELLE - APPEALING - Large (2,100 sq fl ) Colomal m a great locatIOn of the Farms Two
'"rJJII,rl) Sai"s alld f'r;"IH/,~ tn' Had,,' 886.8710 and one half baths, famIly room, updated kitchen, excellent floor plan, fireplace, ba5>ement, garage
12949E OUTER DR - EXCELLENT value on thiS three bedroom, two bathroom reSidence FIrst
floor laundry, den, updated kitchen, second floor terracE'. 5>creened m porch I ,
OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 "GREAT OFFERING - 1750VERNIER - APARTMENT No 7 BEAUTIFUL first floor two bedroom,
two full baths, condomInIum In Grosse Pomte Woods Ex<.ellent condillon Central aIr, flreplace
~~ 19316WOODMONT - VERY CLEAN three bedroom ranch In d good locatIOn of Harper W<>Od,Large
room sues, newer carpetmg extra InsulatlOn I I Nicely land5>caped, good (DndltlOn'
B 1~ • 9'250BOLEYN - BEAUTIFUL three bedroom, two bdth bungalo\\ m a super location of DetrOIt Rect'nl
Iy updated and decordted, new central aIr, kitchen, electriCIty Cdll for detalb
#i 9~,J I1J '~:
I '7:,;I~ ~ ,,,f,, '.;..~t,:,; ~
IHO VEl{I\'If<~){HOAD Located dllOS!> from 23011 COLONY CondommlUm located neal
LOl hmoOi GoB Cour!>c ThIel' bedrooms, Grosse Pomte E Mack - S 9 Mile "All on BHING A LITTLE PAINT & ELBOW CANAL PROPERTY - BUild your dream
I1JtUIdl !Il epldcc 111 h Vll1groom Den, roof five one !,'loor .. Two bedroom!>, central air, ap GREASE - GET A GREAT !,'AMILY home on thIS 80xlJO foot vacant lot com-
\1'.11" old Hoo! on g,lId!!<>l1e\\' l{e<'lf',lllOn phances Included Terr ..Ice\\lth door I', .Ill 0'. cr HOME With four bedroom" two ilnd one plett' With <,tl'l'1<;l'!lWi\lI
loom Immedl.lte OCCUpJIlC\, lookmg beaullful court yard Pnce redu(ed half baths, paneled famIly room With IMMACULATE INCOJ\IE - Verv dedn and
fireplace, bUilt m the 60's WIth good Sized well mall1tamed two family m Grosse
rooms and a ternflC floor plan Pomte Park Each umt has three bed-
SPACIOUS ENGLISH - featurmg large rooms, natural fIreplace and separate
rooms, and solId old fashIOn quality With utilIties
four bedrooms, three and one half baths, FABULOUS CANAL HOME - With three bed-
a paneled library, a screened terrace, a rooms, one and one half baths, library,
large recreatIOn room With fireplace and modern kitchen and spacIOus family room
an attached garage \\ lth cathedral cellmg, fireplace, wet bar
HUNTINGTON - You'll be surpnsed at the and door\\all to large yard and pallo area
spacIOus room, custom kitchen, second Also an 80 fool5>eawall WIth covered hOIst
floor laundry, and most of all that you can Call for detaIls
own thIS four bedroom, two full bath home
With den wlln wet bar, FlOrIda room and
ESTATE ~ALE - Large Flench Country of BRAND NEW HOUSE - Custom bUIlt by Bay recreation room for Just $113,000
tellng SI'I( bedroom!>, four baths plus powder Pomte DeSign Co Cape Cod sllll under con CONSIDER a family room, a lIbrary, and a
loom Thl ee fIreplaces, den, screened mud structlOn Features Include great room, three hobby room all on the mam floor ThiS IS
also a well landscaped 250 foot deep lot
Youngblood
porch HecrcatlOn room With la\'atory, bedrooms plus 20x14studIO, library WIth closet
bm gular alai m, ne\\ er bOIler dnd roof Two car or fourth bedroom FIrst floor laundry Jacuz- complete With a banked runnmg track Call Realty Inc.
gJI.lge immediate occupancy ZI In master bedroom Generous allowance for for more details
unflllished Items GREAT FAMILY HOME' THREE MILE
DRIVE - Four bedrooms, three and one
VACANT LOTS - GROSSE POINTE FARMS - Two chOIce lots for sale or WIll bUild to SUIt Located half bath Colomal has plenty of room for
In Hose Ten ace Bay Pomte DeSign Co PrIced at $75,000 and $85,000 your family acllvltles
987 LAKESHORE RD . GROSSE POINTE SHORES, two bedrooms, one
and one lIalf baths and family room All on one floor AUDUBON - Delightful fIve bedroom three EDGEMERE - ExceptIOnal Colomal on 235
INCOME PIWPERTY &12614 ALTER ROAD, two famIly brIck and two and one half bath English Updated kit- foot privately landscaped yard With pool,
bedrooms e(jch Ulllt chen Large famIly room With fireplace greenhouse and garden house Library and
JacuzzI off famIly room Flmshed base- garden room SIX bedrooms and four and
VACA \IT [01 121'\167 Jeffer5>on Ave, corner of UNIVERSITY PLACE ment Three car garage Adjacent bUIld- one half baths RecreatIOn room, central
able lot mcluded • aIr, lawn spnnkler and two car attached
JJo~n,$. ~OI)~man'NC WASHINGTON ROAD - ImmedIate posses-
sion Over 7,000square feet Coloma I 16x19
garage
Computeflzed - Mult/llsted BALf'OUR - Four bedroom, two and one half
library 18x21 drawmg room Heated
93 KERCHEVAL 886-3060 GROSSE POINTE garden room Newer kitchen Nine bed
bath center entrance Colomal on 123xl72
lot Updated kitchen and baths Second
Established 1951 rooms and five baths AdJommg bUildable floor FlOrIda room RecreatlOn room Two
lot avaIlable WIth house car attached garage
MERRIWEATHER ROAD - Great locatIOn NEFF ROAD - One and one half story re5>l-
Five bedrooms, three and one half baths BELLE MEADE - Four bedroom Colomal
dence With den or bedroom and full bath WIth both a lIbrary and famIly room FIrst
LIbrary Glass enclosed and heated terrace on first Three bedrooms and bath on sec-
Recrealton room With fireplace SecurIty sys floor laundry First floor la vatory With stall
ond Paneled recreatIOn room 1'\\0 car shower Paneled basement has lavatory
tem garage 50x156 lot $70,900 WIth stall shower and a sound proofed room
SOMERSET ~ Two family brick flat Three for band practIce Central air Cm;:le dnve
WINDEMERE - ettstorn blill~detached con- - T\\lo'cat garage~ \\)()X'fll'91ot . --
bedrooms In each umt Updated kItchens dommlums Umque and exclUSIVe Located
Alummum tnm and gutters Separate util- In Grosse Pomte Farms off Lake Shore
Ities Two car garage Owner occupIed SOMERSET - Two family brIck flat Two bed-
$79,500 RIVARD - Enghsh styled condomll1lUm town- room5>III each umt Natural fIreplace Rec-
house First floor library Four bedrooms reatIOn room Separate utIhlles Two car
and two baths on second plus two bed- garage $79,000
HARVARD - Charmmg three bedroom, one
rooms, bath and storage on thIrd One and
and one half bath Colonial WIth 20x15 fam- of
Th1l1k1l1g relocating to an unfamiliar area?
one half car garage
Ily room Paneled recreatIOn room Central Call or slop 111 our office and we will be glad
all' and two car garage Near Chandler ON BEAUTIFUL PROVENCAL ROAD - to have informatIOn on your new area sent
Park.Drlve 111 DetrOIt Priced rIght Stately reSIdence on profeSSIOnally mam- to you WIthout obligatIon We are members
cured 2 27 acre lot With pool Large gallery of one of the largest relocatIOn servIces In
VENDOME - Outstandmg Enghsh Tudor In hall WIth open staIrcase and two powder the United States and Canada
ternflc Farms locatIOn Oak \Ii oodwork and rooms Beaultful paneled IIbrarv with fire-
oak banmster on open staircase Library place Updated kItchen Screened terrace Other flUe Grosse POinte propertIes available
With fIreplace FIve bedrooms and four and With awmng Five spaclOUS family bed- Il1 all Pi Ice I anges
one half baths RecreatIOn room Three car rooms, each WIth bath and two WIth fIre-
PROVENCAL,
~ ~ ~
GROSSE POINTE FARMS
garage Many amemtles for the particular
buyer
BUILDER'S OWN HOME built m1980 only 500
feet from the lake on a prIvate dead end
places MaIds rooms Games room With
fireplace m basement A truly outstandmg
reSidence
KERBY ROAD On a GOx161 thiS one and one
lot
DIDS3 Kercheval Ave.
The seltmg for thIS magmflcent residence IS WIthout peer' Located across
from the country club. thIS charmIng Colomal IS graced by some of the
fmest appomtments EnJOy wmter by one of the fIve fIreplaces sum.
street Oak paneled library plus a 26x26
foot family room WIth fIreplace and hot
tub Four bedrooms (master bedroom has
fIreplace) and three baths Two powder
half story residence offers three bedrooms
and two baths Kitchen has table space
Thel e ISalso a bedroom, third bath and an
mGBIE 886.3400
mers admirIng the garden With surroundmg bnck wall Butlers panlry and
apartment over four car detached garage Seven bedrooms $625,000
(H 80POH) 8852000
rooms Heated garage Cedar shake roof
offIce In the basement Two car garage
Only $89,500 MAXON
FIRST OFFERING LARGE FAMILY ROOM Four bedroom on pop-
ular Lakeland, near the "VIllage" shops WATERFRONT HOME
Nearly 3,000square feet of hvmg area With
special features such as a 2lx17family room
With fIreplace and wet bar Three car gar-
RESOLVE TO LIVE WELL age, sItuated on a SpaCIOUS 60,,183 lot
THIS YEAR
WASHINGTON ROAD - Enghsh Tudor In WATERFRONT - EnJOy the sunnse from your
pnme area of Grosse Pomte CIty Meticulous own attractlve wood deck on lakeside of house
condItIon, natural woodwork hardwood floors, Four bedroom, two and one half bath Coloma I
newer Mutschler kItchen breakfast room and Central air, updated kitchen, electncal, and
lIbrary Four bedrooms, two and one half !led- plumbmg Steel sea\\all plus boat well Great lo-
rooms baths Early occupanc} All apphances catIon for sports mmded famIly
mcluded
Charmmg Falin ('01011\.11 10<'<ilcdclo<;('to the Lake' and pnvate park, on
one of Ihe <..,hOJ 1110'" populilr '>lrel't" f<'ourbcdrooms, two and one half
1'''
OPEN SUNDAY 2') - Designed for great famIly
liVing and Ideal for entertammg, you must
see thIS home A paneled famIly room, a
FARMS COWNIAL - Three bedrooms, two and
one half bath Many specm I features mclude at.
tractIve decor, newer carpet, double closets 10
FINANCING
bath" phI'," n "It r<1('tl\l' faml h room \\ Ith natura I fireplace, plus a cozy library and two recreatIOn rooms allows two of the bedrooms, attractlve landscape and With Interest rates dropping to 10 25% on Fixed
den phi" a Iloran or offlc<' !'erft'cl for the profcs<;lOnal or executive who each famIly member theIr lMn space f'our more Rare opportumty for two full baths at a Rate finanCing and 85% on Vanable Rate we are
docs hI" hOll1el\ork <it hom<> large bedrooms three full baths, three most compelltIve pnce, $17,000down and $740 seeing buyers saving hundreds of dollars per month
natural fireplaces. newer kitchen, and cen- per month Will buy thiS home over what they were paying Just one year ago
OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 E
tral aIr condltlOmng 16.'>5,') Jefferson You may be surpnsed to see that your ability to
borrow has Increased dramatically In recent months
1845 KENMORE - Grosse POinte Woods TRADITIONAL NEW ENGLAND COWNIAL ThiS IS probably the best tIme In 5 years to obtain
Gredl .,tarler hOlN' propert .. abuts (rhe<;qllire Park Sharp Colomal,
thn'e o<>drOOlr1" ne and onl' hillf bath" covered porch, two car
o
Ide.<JllocatlOnfor the growmg family, for ex.
ecullve enlertammg, for warm and cogemal SOLD mortgage finanCing Most buyers can borrow much
more on tlXed rate finanCing today, than they could
garage Only $ll7,'ion IIvlllg Paneled library WIth fireplace plus McBREARTY have one year ago
four to five bedrooms Secluded yard and We have up to date Information on all local
4820 GRAYTON, DETROIT - $22,000 patIO plus so much more Call for details lenders and are more than happy to share that In.
~ formation With you
{'07Y o
cla"IC bncl.. bung:lIO\\ ~outh of Warrl'll '1\.. 0 h<>droom<;, ne bath. den ilEAL'0-5
Intl'llDr rederordler! IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - Four bedroom,
two and one half bath newer Woods Col-
omal, famIly room With fIreplace, attached ONE OF GHOSSE POINTE'S TRULY OUT-
IlaI IllS- garage, central aIr, convement floor plan,
transferred owner
STANDING HOMES ClaSSIC(korgian ar-
chitecture, desIgned by R 0 Derrick, fea.
"--G-eo-r-ge-P-al-m-,,-- ( ) lICe t 1~W-a"lIa-c-e-G-u.er.lI.er--" FIRST OFFERING - Attractive mcome prop-
tures SpaCIOUSrooms, Circular staircase
handcrafted fireplaces, finely carved
Wilham Queen '''-I PEAL TOf<S Gerald Leone erty, located Just one half block from Ker- 16845 KERCHEVAL "IN THE VILLAGE" moldmgs and decoratIve plaster, ~ensa-
Gloria Barker Herb Lorenz cheval shoppmg and pnced at only $62,000 tiona I new kItchen French doors lead
Leo L'rolshagen Jr
17646 Mi\CK
Traci Tapert
886-4444
!,'eatures mclude fresh decoratmg and car-
petmg
882.5200 graCIOusly to expanse of gardens, stalely
trees and brick patios adjOInIng the tennis
court
-
Page Ten-B GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986
Grosse Pointe Real Estate Exchange
~E PROPERTIES LISTED ON THESE PAGES ARE OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY
- BY MEMBERS OF THE GROSSE POINTE REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE @'
SINE REALTY
Thle- Tax •.. . .. IT'S WORTH YOUR TIME
TO CALL SINE ...
GROSSE POINTE FARMS
_ AI'lO
336 STEPHENS - Attractive, three bedroom,
H~~510w two bath ranch with attached two car garage
OUR on cui de sac, natural fireplace, master
1l:L.f;-TAX
WOf?t:=S
bedroom With bath, gIVes owner a taste of coun-
try hvmg m the city
,,""''{M_t:'-
~''''",' TORREY ROAD
IIt\RVARU
Stunmng center entrance Colomal \\ ltl1 taste- Beaullful three bedroom, two and one half bath
GROSSE POINTE WOODS ful upbedt decor Five roomy bedl oom~, three r.lnch Huge liVing room With natural fireplace,
and one half baths Step-down famll~ loom with marble and slate hearth Central all',
2209 HAMPTON - Three bedroom, Colomal,
umque paneled ceding aluminum tnm Attached garage New reduc-
newer kitchen, no-wax floor, new roof, natural
fireplace, nicely decorated, full basement With ed pnce OPEN SUNDAY
lavatory, low $5O's BEVEHL \' ROAD KENOSHA
Distinctive vmtage manOl home m convenient Tnm three bedroom ranch With large kitchen
HARPER WOODS Farm!> location Refreshing custom Paneled recreatIOn room With extra bed-
20476DAMMAN - Beaullful, bflCk ranch With lk~UI dtlJlg tu i>dlll~1I lllc II lIIlCI oluc:. loom or olUte Lavatory In bd£>ement
natural fireplace,
three bedrooms or
maculate, move-In
kitchen With eating area
two bedrooms and den 1m:
condItIOn '
Beautiful floor plan, high lellll1g~, spacIOus
rooms, numerous fireplace£>, gleammg
hardwood floors throughout Lovely three berlr"~
dItion -
CLOVERIV
~Dn
move-in con-
eakfast room,
19660COUNTRY CLUB - Pflce reduced, three spaclOLSO c~ .. cJed family room
SOMERSET
bedroom, bnck bungalow, Grosse POinte Excellent two-family bflCk mcome ofters thl ee Hardwo ••"urs
School District, large kitchen With appl1ances, bedrooms each umt, hvmg rooms v.Ith FORDHAM
a recorded tax mformatlon service family room, finished basement, two and one natural fireplaces, formal dUllng 1'00ms Cozy three bedroom bnck bungalow With two
which may be able to answer your tax half car garage, newer roof and furnace, qUick Separate basement!> dnd utilities full baths near Seven Mile - Kelly area
and some refund questIOns The occupancy Convement to Easlland shopping
telephone number and a list of topiCSIS WAVHURl\ ALTER
m your tax package
SINE REALTY ChOice two-family Income Tv. 0 bed I ooms SpacIOus and clean two family fla t near WlOd-
.. public ~rll£U m~NtJfI(! from lite IRS MULTILIST SERVICE lower, three bedrooms upper Good rental mill POinte Separate new furnaces New
FARMS OFFICE 884-7000 area Separate basements and fUln.lces roof
THINKING OF SELLING YOUR HOME?
Give the ProfeSSIOnals a call for your real estate needs At SCHULTES REAL ESTATE we
customize our market 109 plan for each home we sell for maximum effectiveness i
JOHNSTONE & JOHNSTONE, INC. SUNDAY OPEN HOUSE 2-5
1540 TORREY ROAD
SCHULTES REAL ESTATE
710 NOTRE DAME
881.8900
FIRST OFFERING of thiS outstandmg Interior GROSSE POINTE PARK - We have JUST NEW ON THE MARKET
designer's own home on a lovely landscaped LISTED thiS SPARKLING bnck Colomal offer-
site near the lake SpacIOus accommodations 109 four large bedrooms, two and one half
'
include five bedrooms, three baths plus two baths, paneled den, family size living room
half baths, umque two-story family room With With fireplace, spacIOus dining room, lots of
fireplace, upper gallery and reading room, nice closet space, carpeted recreatIOn room,
super kitchen With breakfast room and adJOin- central all' condltlomng on deeper lot with brick
ing garden room and countless custom extras patio and two-car garage Very attractively
for gracIOus family IIvmg 884-0600 priced' Details at 884-0600
IOPEN SUNDAY 2-51
38 S DEEPLANDS - A touch of elegance In five bedroom, three and one half bath French Colomal
With library and family room 884-0600
581 F(SHER - Larger three bedroom, two and one half bath multi-level Huge family room - nearly
3,000 square feet' 884-0600
796-8 TROMBLEY - Exceptional larger two-family on prestige rental street Three bedrooms, two
baths, libraries, fireplaces In each umt Substantial pflce adJustment'
ltbrary, newer kitchen, fmlshed basement, attached garage
881-6300
630 WESTCHESTER - Four bedroom, two and one half bath Colonial Family room with fireplace,
884-0600
.~
21406 BRIERSTONE - Three bedroom Harper Woods ranch With assumable Land Contract '881-6300 INO HANDYMAN NEEDED' ThiS IS a true "turn key" home Every lOch has been exquISitely decorated
m the best taste We)) located 10 the heart of the Farms the home IS situated on a large well land-
scaped lot Four spacIOus family bedrooms and four and one-half baths plus a three room suite for
offices or children ThiS beautiful home has many amemtles mcludlng security and sprmkler systems
~ \' • 1 H ,.' /' l
A' r":
l~~f(
I'
(
\.
J.
106 VENDOME - PRESTIGE FARMS AREA 10 SYCAMORE PLACE - SPECIAL FINANC-
and a spacious four bedroom, two and one half ING available for thiS traditional Colonial built lo
bath classic Colomal Large beamed ceiling famJly 1983 Custom features lOclude huge two-story IIv-
room With fireplace, den, fli1ished basement With 109 room, convemence deSigned Island kitchen, PROVENCAL ROAD - ThiS beaullful Colon- LONG AGO BUT NOT SO FAR AWAY! ThiS
tap and billiard rooms- nearly 3700 square feet outstandIOg first floor master suite With luxury lallS graced by fine archltectura I detail and a flOe older home IS located on a convement pn-
of gracious accommodations 884-0600 bath plus three bedrooms, two baths and open well deSigned floor plan The house has large vate road 10 the Farms and has been extensive-
library overlookIOg hvmg room on second floor room SIZes. a paneled libraI') With pegged oak ly remodeled and decorated Characterized by
A very speCial value! 88H)600 floors and a heated garded room There are large room SIZes, Its a great home for gracIOus
five fireplaces, mcludIOg two lo bedrooms SIt entertalnmg It has a large well eqUipped kit-
ISHOWN BY APPOINTMENTI uated on a large walled lot, It IS one of the fe\\ chen and a first floor laundry Many new
UPDATED PARK COLONIAL has four bedrooms, den, two-car garage and Irresistable pnce of $53,900' smaller houses on Provencal Four family storms and screens and reflmshed floors It has
Transferred owner anxIOus to G-O I 881-6300 bedrooms, three baths plus third floor and gar nmc bedrooms (S1Xfamily) and SIXbaths
age apartments
OUTSTANDING COLONIAL near the lake features sparkling new decor and mcludes a gracIOus 22'
foyer, new gourmet kitchen, five bedrooms, four full baths plus two half baths and paneled library
OLD
all on lovely large site Formal assumption available 881-4200
UNIVERSITY - Popular centrally 1"5" n-Cen bus and the Village offers well
mamtamed three bedroom bflCk llassed terrace, new decor throughout
and affordable 80's pnce tag' 88
LAKEPOINTE - Well malntamed bnck and aluminum two-family With great updating Perfect for
owner occupancy Includes oversIze garage With MANY EXTRAS - a car buff's delight! 881-4200
BUCKINGHAM - An attractive four bedroom, two and one half bath Coloma I offenng a mce big family i .•
room, new kitchen and lovely patio on large lot $129,900 884-0600 ~ f!f' ~ " 51£S Mfi' *
SOUTHERN COLONIAL Y'all come and see THIS HANDSOME COLONIAL ISan attractive
IN THE PARK handy to Kercheval - walk to everything' Excellent three bedroom bflCk two-story buy Newer kitchen and furnace, natural wood.
It thiS Sunday The kitchen and bathrooms have
with SpaCIOUS rooms, fireplace, updated kitchen With breakfast room and more Exceptional value work, hardwood noors and secuflty system,
been remodeled and recent decoratll1g I~ 111
at $59,500 Il84-OOOO neutral colors Modern furnace WIth five bed Lovely 32 x 16 pool With ca bana hidden m back
rooms, three baths and a family room, ItS a yard of thIS attractive four bedroom home
LAKELAND - Nothmg to do but move 10' ThiS three bedroom, two and one half bath Colomal With great famIly house See It Sunday at 717 Bed-
library and brand new kitchen IS hard to resist I New decor and large prIVacy site add to the charm
ford
of thiS offenng 884-000<1
HARCOURT - Professionally decorated 2-FAMILY has three bedrooms, two baths, fIreplaces and
family rooms in each umt New furnace In fmlshed basement plus many additIOnal amemtles
OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
881-6300 590 Barrmgton - Lovmgly carcd for four bedroom, two bath home Extra half lot
CHARM! SPACE' LOCATION' This three bedroom, two and one half bath Colomal has It all' Huge 404 RIvard - SpeCIal farm house \\ Ith contemporary mtenor Three bedrooms, one and onc half baths
family room With fireplace and beam ceJlmg and fimshed basement all on 6OxI75' centrally located plus a studIO apartmcnt
1498 Anita - Thrf;'e bedroom bungalo~ WIth central all' condltlomng PTiced under $70's
Site handy to the VIllage 881-4200
234 Lothrop - Yamasaki deSigned contemporary 011 wooded cui de sac SIx-seven bedrooms
NEW OFFERING of chanmng old farmhouse In 12 Mile-Jefferson area' Updated throughout, It in- 1424Torrey - NIcely loc;Jted one and one half <;tory ",Ith family room WIth fireplace Three bedrooms
cludes three bedrooms, one and one half baths, family room, new furnace, new electrIcal, new and one bath
decor' All terms mcluding Land Contract Extra acre available for your own "country setting'" 2286 AlJilrd - Clean attrach\'e starler home WIth two bedrooms and one bath Big famIly room
737 Bedford - Beautiful Colomal With remodeled kltchf;'n and baths See above
Details at 881-4200 1429 Three MIle - Attractive Colomal \~Ith four bedrooms Lovely 32 x 16 pool See above Tight
POPULAR BALFOUR SQUARE complex near Eastland offers one bedroom umt With all new decor
including new carpeting Perfect for the career person who likes to GIO' $54,900 881-6300 BORLAND-JOHNSTON
IB;;a
AlWiOelates or
=c:-::::.,-~:::(:,_>/~_:,-';,~ Many, Many More by Appointment
0", 1ii "cliing or Buymg
:ue ready to help Call Today
395 Fisher Road
Our Full Time ProfeSSionals
20647 Mack Avenue
O!I!Joqte (,I' \rmlh II'RIl ~OIJIJOql('I'(/nelf~ 'ichoo/
(i)
GROSSE POINTE FARMS GROSSE POINTE PARK GROSSE POINTE WOODS
16610 Mack 881-4200 19790 Mack 881-6300 _ Tile Help ..... People I 886-3800 884~6400
82 Kercheval 884.0600
Thursday, January 16, 1986
GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Eleven-B
~.Edgaf &CWiOdaIes
114I<ERCHEVAl 886-6010 REPORT TO ADVERTISERS
This minI-English m<lnSlOnlook:. so good from
the street you're gOing to be pleased as punch
when you step Inside Drmk 10 the nch panel-
109, the hbrdry, the step down hvmg room
garden room dnd new kitchen three car garage
and plethora of bathrooms Fea:.t your eyes on
the appollltment:. and re:.erve the sWlmmmg
pool for that dip . The toa!>t of the neighbor-
(in-'teg-rat-e) n. rigid adherence
hood" we might e;av m pdl tylllg
to a code of behavior, honesty_
Integrity is critical to a world. Nearly 5,000
Priced a great deal below most of the other
homes on thIS prestIgIOus street III the Farms newspaper. It begins advertisers, advertiSing
Better stIll IS Its locatIon Just a short block to
the Lake Shore All the charm expected In the with ethical news agencies and
olrlpl' hOI'''!:''', yet t'IYtaf('{! In every respect "..:th
splendId famIly room kitchen combmatlOn, gathering and reportIng publishers have ~olned
garden room, bathrooms and major redecora-
tIon Just enough yard for complete privacy and extends to the together to make ABC
With a reflectmg pool and smart boxwood
hedges Early occupancy IS available advertising sales the standard for
department as well. circulation integnty.
Advertisers must Before you buy any
THINK AHEAD - capture the regal lifestyle believe in the Integrity advertising, ask to see
befitting an Enghsh Tudor In thIs grand seven
bedroom manor situated In Grosse Pomte of circulation a copy of the latest
Shores close to Lake St Clair ThIs beauty of-
fers privacy III the vast IIvmg and dmmg room, information.-.-the basis ABC Audit Report.
and large bedrooms atop a dramatic staircase
The spacIous lot Will eaSIly accommodate a for intelligent advertising We'll be pleased to
sWlmmmg pool or tenllls court
buying decisions. show you ours.
That's why we subject
our cirCUlation records Grosse Poi nte News
THIS LOVEL Y ENGLISH TUDOR, With lIttle
more than cosmetIc Improvements, wIll prove
to independent 99 Kercheval
to be a remarkable Investment as well as an
excellent home m whIch to hve. SItuated near
verification by the Audit 882-3500 - DISPLAY
the lake, It offers fIve or SIX bedrooms, four and Bureau of Circulations. 882-6900 - CLASSIFIED
one half baths and that much needed three car
garage, plus large den and a second floor of- ABC is the oldest-and 882-0294 - NEWS
e
fIce that could be used for separate lIVing
quarters largest-not -for-profit Member
circulation auditing C Audit Bureau
of Circulations
organization in the
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 OPEN SUNDAY 2-4
341TOURAIi'ffi - A great family home featur-
109 three famIly bedrooms and two full
baths up plus a den or an office Large hv-
mg room with fIreplace, dmmg room and
garden room Secluded pnvate locatIOn
PRICE REDUCED & IMMEDlATE OC
CUPANCY'
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4
226 MORA~8981e-"brick:-centel' hall Col-
omal offers paneled library with fIreplace,
comfortable hvmg room, sun room, large
master bedroom, three more bedrooms, ad-
ditional space on third floor, two car
garage
BY APPOINTMENT
Large traditional four bedroom English Tudor,
den, Flonda room, attached greenhouse,
remodeled kItchen, security system, many, BY APPOINTMENT
many extras Immediate PossessIOn A RARE OPPORTUNITY I Two famIly flat
$145,000 perfect for the famIly movmg from a large Place a match
Immaculate three bedroom, one and one half house seek 109 tranSItIOn to an easIer life- between the arrows
bath Colomal, den, large beautiful back- style SpacIOus IIvmg room With a natural and read to yourself.
yard, excellent location close to the Village fIreplace, formal dmmg room, paneled
- A "must see" at $117,000 library, three bedrooms and three baths
and a new kItchen, WIth many optIOns of
GREAT INVESTMENT I Full term LAND closmg off bedrooms If desIred The down-
CONTRACT offered on thiS well mamtam- StaIrs flat has a hvmg room, dmmg room,
ed two famIly flat 'l\vo bedrooms, hVlng kItchen, two bedrooms and a bath and pro-
room, dmmg room, kitchen, ceramic hIed VIdes an INCOME plus SECURITY Phone
bath III each urnt Separate basements, cen- for detaIls
tral air condition Phone for detaIls IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on thIS clean and
St ClaIr Shores - MAINTENANCE FREE - comfortable three bedroom brick ranch
Custom bUIlt brick ranch Three bedrooms, Hardwood floors, updated kitchen "Hth
,one and one half baths, kItchen With eating large eating space, double lot With frUIt
space, new recreatIOn room WIth bar, patio trees In backyard and Circular dflve m the
WIth gas gnll Call for further detaIls front Near shopplllg, schools and transpor-
$64,000 tatIOn $41,000
~~<l GREAT NEWS' You can stIll purchase a house
f£l
for a bargam pflce in Grosse Pomte Woods
r. ~ ThIS restored two story offers super poten-
- ~ .....
'" '..... tIal for the fIrst time buyers who want to
I 'tr_'"W_ personalize theIr new abode Features Ill-
clude hving room With fireplace, famll).
,
(
room, sun room, three bedrooms, two
~ baths, modern kItchen and more $65,900'
-~--:::!".-
WATERFRONT PROPERTY - ST CLAIR
SHORES Newer bflck ranch With three ,.---------WANT AD ORDER FORM---------,
....-~"'>----_
-==:>-- ----~-
<C2::.~ ~~ bedrooms, two baths. family room WIth
I
fireplace, attached garage, fIrst floor laun-
YORKSHIRE - Four bedrooms. two and one dry and modern kItchen Call for a prevIew Schedule my GROSSE POINTE NEWS Want Ad for I
half baths, unIque family room today' I
~br~~ I
~K: ~ •. Date --- Classification Desired ---- - --- I
I
~~
'P'(. -
I
Enclosed is my check or money order for $ _ I
I
NAME _ ADDRESS _ I
CITY _ ZIP PHONE _
Mail to: Classified Advertising Dept. Grosse Pointe News, 99 Kercheval
Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. 48236
Write Your Ad Below or on a Separate Sheet if Desired
Minimum Cost is $3.25 for 10 words - Additional Words 25c
1 2 3 4
,
5 6 7 8
RIVARD - Condo four bedrooms, three and I
one half bathe; 9
. 10 3.25 11 3.50 12 3.75
13 4.00 14 4.25 15 4.50 16 4.75
CHAMPION~BAER 17 5.00 18 5.25 19 5.50 20 5.75
REALTORS 21 6.00 22 6.25 23 6.50 24 6.75
102 Kt.n. ht'Val Ave GI"O'iSefbmte Farm", MI. 48236
I 25 7.00 26 7.25 27 7.50 28 7.75
(5) 884.5700 lB.
...- ------------------------------------------~
29 8.00 30 8.25 31 8,50132 8.75 etc.
t
-- -~-----------~-
Feature Page Twelve-B
Thursday, January 16, 1986
f!J-Dt1z!e Ernest Scanes: A half century in art
By Elsa Frohman created a lot of change," he said
Counter PointsBy Pat Roussea¥
Ernest Scanes and the Scarab
Club are practically synonymou~
A member for almost 52 years.
.'It used to be mostly the claSSIC
011on canvas Now we have col.
leages, sculptures,
and tempra
watercolors
We have all the
the Grosse POinter has ~een the
Getting Engaged? ... You both should see the hun- club through the Great Depres- media "
dreds of styles at edmund t. AHEE jewelry co. sion, a World War, booms and In someways, change has come
busts and a half a century 01 ar slowly to the Scarab Club
From the traditional solitare to a contemporary look "The Scarab Club has been con-
tIstIc change
of a diamond in a setting of baguettes. There are gold This month, the Scarab Club I~ servatlve, compared to some ac-
wedding bands, engagement and wedding ring sets and celebratmg Its 75th year of ex tlVltles m the art field," Scanes
diamond wedding rings. You'll be pleased with the high Istence With a retrospective ex- said
quality and the wide price range at 20239Mack Avenue hlbltlOn Founded in 1910 as the Scanes explamed that Amen-
at Oxford. Open Fridays until 8 p.m .... 886-4600. Robert Hopkin Club, named after can artists m general used to be
* * * the well-known Michigan manne qUite a bit behmd their counter-
pamter of th(' penod. the club, parts In Europe
ThInk Ha"'{ai[ . Budget of Lux- and Scanes have come a long "Modern art is about 115 years
ury we've got what you want. Prices way old," Scanes said. "But It was the
for one week from $638, includes your
...
Scanes jomed the Scarab Club 1913 mternational exhibition in
air fare and hotel. Call the Travel New York when AmerICan artists
agency your friends recommend. Wal- were first exposed to modern
lace/Willmore Travel, 886-8805. art" .
For Scanes, It [S impossible to
I )'Jointer
... talk about the history of the
The Pomte Fashions ... is offering 30%to 50%01£ fall Scarab Club WIthout mentIOning
and winter fashions. There's also a selected group of
~. ~N dresses with 70~ 01£ sa:ings a~15112Kercheval,1I22-l818. the famous Scarab Club Ball, that
was once one of the premier
'~RJ~~
Starting Planning Now ... for the tailgate of SOCial events in Detroit Dating
back mto the "teens" the
of your hfe! U-M football and Hawaii in '86. ~ costume ball was first held at an
Yes Michigan ~lays Hawaii in '86. Come and
root for the Maize and Blue and relax in para-
dise. December 2 thru 15, 1986.Space limited
.!Jnterest amusement park near the shore
Side of the Belle Isle Bridge
Later it was held at Ihe Greystone
to 100persons All inclusive tour. Call Travel Ballroom and still later at the
Galerie, 886-0111.Ask for Karen. GO BLUE! Scarab Club's historic building on
Farnsworth
* * * "It was your typical artists'
JANUAR Y LAMP SALE ... at Wright's Gift and at the urging of Sid Walton m 1934 ball," Scanes said WIth a touch of
Lamp Shop offers 20% off and more on most lamps. After a high school career as an Photo by Elsa Forhman mischief, "lnvolvmg a small de-
art student at Cass Tech High Ernest Scanes holds a sculpted penguin he made. The hole in gree of nudity The Scarab Club
Still bargains on Christmas items too' ... 18650Mack School, Scanes attended John B
A Venue. FREE PARKING next to the building. the belly is the result of a knot in the wood, but Scanes said he Ball was where the movers and
WIcker Fine Arts School in De- the shakers used to go."
• • • trail and net Walton, who had a finds it makes a good handle for the piece.
Today, Scanes enjoys his retire-
Vitabath Special ... at the Notre Dame Pharmacy, 21 OlS. of contract to produce reproductIOns tendency to spill over IOta hiS One of Scanes faVOrite media IS ment With travel and a continumg
Bath and Shower Gelee with a free sample of Vitabath Moisturiz. of Mayan vases for the Albert work as a fine artist - in unex- watercolor He was a foundmg
.
interest m drawing, pamting and
g
ing Aflerbalh Splash. ChllOlie reen, lemon or pink the $25size for $20. Kahn-designed Fischer Theater. prcted and sometimes humorous member of the Michigan Water- sculpture He accepts an occa-
' WhIChwas just bemg bUIlt Scanes ways HIS first gold medal at the color Society. But he also paints SIOnal commiSSIOn to do a pamt-
Winter Sale Time at the School Bell, 17904 got a Job painllng the vase:, That Scarab Club was for an "abstract m Oils, and recently, since hiS re- mg, but generally paints for hiS
>!~
was in 1928 or '29. as Scanes re- approach" to a technical drawing tirement. he has gone back to own pleasure He IS currently
Mack Avenue. Great values in toys and supplies ! members H was fIve vear~ Inter of a BUICk Dvna-flow transmis- school al the Center for Creative working on a painting of a 1964
~ .. * * * ... ,.
c.i
beforE' Scanes Jomed ihl:' Scar,:b "IOn Ill' tltled'the work. "Torque Studies 10 If'.lrn sculpture HIS Corvette that he owned until It
Planning A TV Super Bowl Get Together? ~ 0'2. Club Converter Schematlsm " home IS a gallery of artworks of was stolen in the 1970s He is
.. Vintage Pointe has your party supplies in- The Scarab Club is practIcally Scanes and hiS family moved his own and of other artists he ad- working from a photograph of the
eluding cold beer, pop and a variety of • I •
umque In Its support and en- mto Grosse POinte Farms 10 1~ mires. car, taken during a vacatlOn in
couragement of local arllsts Ac- and have made their home here In a half-century as a Michigan the upper peninsula
delicious snacks and will deliver in the area, ever smce Scanes said that the artist, Scanes has made the ac-
cording to Scanes, it IS the only "It's a photo With the Mrs. in it,
885.0800 ... Kercheval at Notre Dame. Open artists' club in the midwest that Scarab Club has always had a quaintence and friendship of taken during a rare October
seven days a week evenings too. has its own building and studIOS high percentage at Grosse Pointe many well-known local artists He snowstorm," Scanes said.
• • • Members of the club Improve Members counts Marshall Fredencks He often works from photo-
SAVE •.. 25~ to 50% off aU fall their skills With drawmg and Though It started out as an ex- among hIS friends and has a graphs, though he also work from
and winter merchandise. Check tile painting classes and have access clUSive club for men, in more re- plastet cast of a Fredencks bas- life, sometimes startmg to paint a
sale again at Miner's of Grosse Pointe, to the bullding's studios. The club cent years, the club has opened its relief in his living room. scene he sees from hiS motel
375 Fisher Road. holds regular exhibitions and an- doors to women. For Scanes, the Scarab Club room door while on vacatIon.
• • • nually awards a Gold Medal to Its "It was onginally all male," has been a connectIOn With the "The only thing that separates
best artist. Scanes has held that Scanes said "But post-World War Michigan artistic community artists from other people ISartists
Unique Optique .:. One of the most ob-
and best ways to VIOUS
honor three limes m 52 years
But far from being a dlletante,
Scanes has devoted hiS hfe to
11, we started to thmk maybe we
should open up the membership to for me, has been the associates
women"
"(The Importance of the club)
Actually, It was the I've met," he said "And also the
are using their eyes all the time"
Scanes said "It's a matter of
observatIon Learning the techm-
update your look is new eyeglass frames. Unique Op- draWing and pamtmg - though In 1960s before women became Interest of the younger artlsts cal skill IS very faCile It's havmg
tique has an excellent selection for men and women of a more techmcal vem than the members, but smce then, several coming up. It has prOVided the mterest to use It "
imported and designer frames including, Tura, ~phia work he has displayed at the club have held the ofhce of president stability and directIOn and has Scanes thmks of hiS art as a per-
He worked for General Motors for and there are generally women on given arllsts the opportumty to manent record of the things he
Loren, Menrad, Logo, Vuarnet, Anne Klein, Bolle and 40 years, ending with hiS retlre- the board of directors show the exercise their wares"
more at 20339Mack Avenue between Country Club and has seen /
ment In 1972, as a technical illus- "I thmk It has been beneficial," Scanes has seen many changes "When you talk about art with a
Lochmoor. Most insurance accepted. Tuesday- trator he said "The place was gettmg In the direction of art over hiS 52 capital "A", often art is the only
Saturday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., 885-0541. Scanes' work as a technical ar- seedy The ladles have kept It up years m the club remnants we have of past
* '* '" tist over the years has had a better" "The women artists have clvlhzatlOns," he said
No Need ... to look at the world through broken
window glass. Call J and T Stained Glass. experts in
repair and restoration of stained and leaded glass. 1007
Maryland corner of Jefferson, 823.2255.
Casseroles go oven to table for siInplicity
A casserole can be a nIeal In It (Takes about 30 to 40 minutes) combmatlon of cold sweet frUIt chicken bouillon
• • • self with fresh hot bread. a salad When pork ISbrown, add It, whole, With a heavy mixture ISmost plea- 1 ba) leaf
nettle CREek ...only to the 30% of January
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end
off custom
and afrtHt, or It may be the memo
orable dish of a more elaborate
to the pot of beans
In the meantIme, blend ground
sant. Makes about 12 cups - at
least 16 Clverage servings
1/!. tsp. fines herbs
1/.. tsp. coarse ground
orders and in.stock window treatments, bedspreads, ~ meal, beginning With hot 110rs pork With sage and allspice In a black pepper
furniture ... Youcan also save 20%offin-slocklamps,
bath accessories, pillows and more. Come see all the .
d'oeuvres and a clear soup and
ending With a masterpiece dessert
smkll skillet brown the pork,
omans and garlIc unhl the onions
Turkey-Ham Combme peas With remalnmg
mgredlents mgredlents excep.t
savings at 17110Kercheval. 882-0935. PreparatIOn of casselOles can are lightly browned Add the Casserole Supreme bacon and bring to a rapid bOll
I take tIme, or they can be asc;em sauteed pork mixture to the kettle 1/2 cup chopped onIOn Reduce heat to low, simmer 30
• • • bled quickly uSing canned or With the beans Cover beans and 2 Tblsp. margarine, melt{'rl mmutes Turn peas mto a
Mutschler customers ... are selecting Wood-Mode frozen prepared foods 3 Tblsp. flour 211-quart casserole dish; place
The follOWing IS a :>electlOn oj 1/4 tsp. salt Canadian bacon m peas Cover and
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choosing this cabinetry and furniture for dining rooms, 1/4 tsp. pepper bake in preheated 350degree oven,
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Grey
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2 Tblsp. dry shel'l'y
tinue baking 30 mmutes, If neces-
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with Grapes
A substantial
meal In one casserole
and Interec;tlng
IS thiS Slm-
Eating 1 can (5 ounces) "ateI' chestnuts,
drained and sliced
1 cup lean chopped ham
serole and slice Arrange slIces m
cente~ of casserole, surrounded by
peas Makes SIX servings
1/2 cup cholesterol-fr('e cheese. Calones about 379 per serving
* * '" plijied CalljornlQ versIOn oj
coarsely shredded Cholesterol about 93 mgs
French.type cassoulets It may be
~ .• ISHNL¥L-=-~)'" It's time to prepared ahead oj time. rejrlg 1 cup soft breadcrumJ>"
order your Super 2 Tblsp. grat('d Parmesan ch('ese
""'--.J[!SlIDWICI ~ erated. or jrozen ready jor Jlr1al
Saute omon m two tablespoons
Sunshine Bean
Bowl Party subs or party trays. Great sandwiches, our baking
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.
able also ... 19341 Mack Ave., 885-5122.
Introducing Nail Bonding ... a unique process
'" ..
6 cups water
3 to 3'l-pound pork loin roast
2 onions. sliced
2 cloves garlic, minced
bOIlgently for 2 hours Add carrots
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