Lake laps at top of Pointe seawalls - Local History Archives

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--------.- ~ _' :; ,I 7-. "0 1._~J \',HOur PoIOU News / I ' ~~/ rosse Pointe ews VOL 47-No 3 Grosse POinte, MichIgan, Thursday, January 16, 1986 30 cents 38 Pages Park plan to merge police, fire approved By Pat Paholsky Il's all systems go for the con ~ohdatlOn of the polIce and fire de- pal tments In the Park mto a pub!1l.. !>atety umt The counCil adopted cI resolutIOn :'IIonday mght mstrucl- II1gthe adminIstratIOn to begm the proce~s The vote was unammou::. The council dbo approved an 01 dmance amendJl1g the eit) (hariel III reference'> to the chlCf of polIce 01' fire chlel, !>ubstllulIng dlrectOi of public safet) a~ head of the com bmed deparlmenls The ordmanre \\ III tdke e!feel Juh I The operdtlOnal plan ~ubmltte<.J b) the admllll!>trdtlOn prOjects that the department'> wIll be fully con ~ohdated by July 1. 1988 City Manager John Crawford, III lIlllOduClllg the plan, said It \\a::. dN'overed that there would be a co!>1 savll1g::. to the commumty \\ Ilh con::.ohdatlOn The !Irst obJec live, hesaJd, was to deVise the best plan and dfter that determIne the lo~l 'We belle\ e Ihl~ operational plan has met both Ob]l'ctlves," he ~dld l'o~t proJelllon~, ho\\ ever, do not mclude 1:1 o::.~-trallllllg and equipment, ~Illl:e the) dre COli ~Idered to be non-recurnng ddmlll I,,>trallve expense~ Legal and pro feS&lOnaJfees are also not lOc!udeJ III the proJectlOns The fll e contract, \\ hlCh expired J ul) 1, 1 :JH5 I!> l urrenlh bemg negotiated Abo the polIce con tract will expire June .10and the acll11lfilstratlOn I~ negotl8tlllg the pubhc sdfely concept \\Ith the police umon In the plan, PolIce Chief Richard Cdrettl recommends cross-tram Illg police otllcers IIr::.t III teams ot thl ee offIcers and d !>upervlsor The two-week Ill-hom>e traming. proVIded bj Fire Chief PhIlhp C(}~td,!>hould!>allstv b{j hour">of m -;tJ'uctlon reqUlred'!or ba..,lc fir£' fIghllllg Cdrettl then recommend" that the firefighters beglll their cros~- trdlfilng al lhe pohle dcademy In tedm~ of !>IXAll oflJceJ'~ \~II! also be trallled as emergenc) medIcal techmclans "The cornerstone for successtul functional consolidatIOn rests on trdmlOg,' PolIce ChIef Hlchard l'drettl wrote m the plan 'We III tend to concentrdte on lotatmg ever~ ::'lOgle officer through the be~t tralOlOg program~ d\ allable "It should be pOillted out that III achlevll1g thl!> lev!'! 01 excellenCE' thel P 1<., a prICE' to pa) he con tlOlIed . thelt price 1&the amount of service \~e \\ III be a ble to deliver \\hIle the trdll11ng IS laklllg place II h my llltention to ma Il1tam ad€' quate level'i of service. mcludmg the dblhtj to respond to eXlgell1 Clrcum&tance">thaI might occur L\ the prudent use of overllme .. In the case of police or fire pel ::.onllt'l..... ho are unable to complet •. uos,> tra Illlllg beca U&l' of aCd demlc flgor" or a ft'ilr of height-. for example City :\Ianagt'1' Cra\\ ford ~aJ(l those emplo) ees \\ IlIbl de!>lgnated a~ speCIalists, a PO~I tlOn that WIll be phased out OW'l the VE'ars "i v.ould draw a dl,,>tInctIOnbe t\\ een the employee \\ ho has at tempted to qualify and has not Ix ">uccessful and the employee who says, 'I WII! not try, 'he said Cra wford added tha t the ope I'd tlOnal plan did nol cOllslder dl.., ml'ismg or demotmg any persOIl nel About a half-dozen reSIdent'> spoke for or agamst consolidatIOn, however. the effort was almost anti-climactic after two years 01 movmg m that directIon The en- tire proceedmgs took about 10 lTIlllute'i PhOlu by EI"'n Fronnn \ The proposed rates may change because of yesterda~.!> publIc hearing and they have to be ap- proved by the Board at Water CommiSSIOners and the DetrOlI City CounCil As proposed the decreases ma) not be slgmhcant enough to mean a change m the rate the Park charges Its reSident!> and busl nesses for wa tel' and sewage treat. ment, OrtIs I added The city's water and sewer fund IS out of the red, however OrllSI said the fund IS no\~ well off WhIle the water rate I!>schedul- ed to decrease, the Woods won'l start calculatmg a reSidentIal ra te until after confIrmatIOn of the pro posed rates, accordmg to City Ad mmlstralor-Clerk Chester Petersen The city Willdbo have to wall and !>eewhat happen~ to the sewer rate, he added WhIle the Wood!>, Shores and Harper Wood& are part oj the Northeast Dlstnct Sy~tem thl' propo~ed !>ewerrate decrease mdY end up bemg swallowed by the ad- mlllistermg agency for the sy~lem, Petersen added DetrOit and Wayne County charge cItIes throughout southea"t JlvlIchlgan for the water and sewer service they prOVide Cltle!>m lurn must calculate their mamtenance constructIOn and other costs and add that mto the figure before de cldmg what to charge reSident'> and busme~~es for water and sewer use lance, Woods Detecllve Cdll Schuster said A car With three male youth~ pulled up and one boy got out and \~alked up to the hdu<.,e \\hen he spotted the sun'ell- lance team He got back In the car and drove off The police got the license number One boy admitted to the scam and durmg the Investlga- tlOn, police learned three other name", Schuster said The m- vestlgatIOn IS contlnumg The package conSisted of three Video diSCS totaling $l4.'i rhey had heen ordered b)-' fIll I'll', according to a company rcprc~entiltlve The merchan- dIse wa~ charged to an em- ployee In the Wayne Counly Prosecutor's Office. who told pohce he had not oJ'dererl the diSCS ~'~f-.a.~.j ...-..- .... ,-J•• ;.1!r""" ~- ~ Four youths suspected of credit card fraud Wood'i pohce suspect four IOCdl youths of slftmg through garbage for credit card receipts and ordeflng merchandise charged to an account on the dl'icarded slips The case was uncovered when a resldenl alerted polIce to a note on a va- cant house The note on the front door In- '>tructed that all package~ be de 11\ered to Ih(' rear and I,\oasdiS- covered In 1 hI prospeclI ve buver of the hll... on Ford Court which has bE'cn hI ml for the past four months Pohcf' put out an area broad cast to UPS drivers, one of whom responded that he had JU&ldelivered a package from Instant Replay, a Video com- pany In Waltham, Mass The house was put under ">urvell- The water department gave several reasons for the Increase, Kenyon saId The department said that, although the Shores' peak period usage had dropped, It hadn't dropped as much as sur- roundIng commUnItIes In addi- tIOn, the dIstance the department must pump the water to the Vil- lage's center has been recalcu- lated, he saId The water department at one time applIed a cre'dlt to the vil- lage's rate because It was pump- mg water downhIll to the VIllage, Kenyon saId That credIt has been ehmlllated, he added The proposed water rate m- crease that the city charges the Shores Will be offset partIally by a proposed se ..... er rate decrease of about 33 cents, accordmg to the chart of rates The rate for Harper Woods, Grosse Pomte Woods and the Shores may drop from $6 55 to $6 22 under the proposed rates Se\\er rates for the Farms, Park and City are also slated to de- crease under the proposed rate schedule The City and Farms are to have their rates fall from $6 55 per 1,000 cubIC feet of sewage treated to $6 22 for the same amount startmg July 1 The Park's rate ISschedul ed to drop from $4 33 to $4 28 for 1,000 cubiC feet of sewage treated Whether the proposed double de crease Willmean lower rates III the Park IS unclear, accordmg to Clerk-Comptroller NunzIO Orllsl .., .... ~u 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 look tOi another moormg The Park taces the potentially blgge~t problem VII'lually all of the land ~outh of Jl'fler!>on I~ des- Ignated c1~ d Hood plalll b) the :'\a tlOlMI Flood In~ul dnce PI Ogl <1m \lthough lhe hOll&e,>don totten end up under \\dler lhe Idnd ell' \ <ltlOll J dllgp~ on I) Ollp to tll () fed Looking back Ernest Scanes of the Farms compares a photograph he took to the painting he is making from it. Scanes has been a member of the Scarab Club, a local artists' group, for more than 50 years. Cars have always been a favorite subject for his paintings. He was a technical illustrator for Gene- ral Motors for nearly 40 years. Scanes reflects on his half century In art in the Pointer of Interest column on Page 12B. get decreases m the pl'Oposed rates of about 8 and 1percent respective- ly, the Shores Will be hit \\ Ith a 15 percent lIlcrease and Hal-pel Woods would have ItS rate hiked 13 percent The rate the city charges the Shores for 1,000cubIC feet of watel IS proposed to Increase to $4 42 from $3 85 Harper Woods Will pay $3 10per 1,000 cubiC feet under the proposed new rates, up from $274 The Woods rate per 1,000cubiC feet of water \\ould drop as of Ju- ly to $2 19, down from thiS year's $2 21 The Park's rate would fall to $3 06, a near 9 percent cut from the current $3 31 per I.UOO cubiC feet VIllage offlclals have already met once \~Ith representatives of the water department and were to have a representative al ye!>ter- day's publIc hearing lo formdlly appeal the hike, according to Supenntenot'llt ?>Ilchael Kenyon Pho'( If'" Lake laps at top of Pointe seawalls above the current level of the lake when the lake water washes over manent Improvement!> along the and It IS common for streets to the seawalls and enters the clty'~ shore that would ehmInate the flood combIned sewer system, It can flood plaIn," he said The lake also floods the sewer cause an overload The result IS Ellmmatmg the flood plam I!> ..l system A hve-year-old Corps of that untreated Se\\dge dumps mlo lall order mvolvIng lmprovemenh EngIneers study addressed the the lake to seawall!> and some dlkmg ami problem of mterceptor sewers Although the Park refu!>ed the landfIilmg The city IS now con along the lake "One of the Issues Corps offer to bUIld a ~v~tem of sldenng fIihng along the shore of of the draft was whether our pump- cnbs to break up the \\ave actIon, Patterson Park, 100feet back from ing !>tatlOnWdSadequate to pump some actIOn does need to be taken, the \\ater, to a depth of four feet back Lake St Cl,m," !>ald Park Crawford said . (We refu!>ed The ~hore dlong the tormer :'\Ike Clt) Mandger John Crawford because) It wa~ ae!>thetlcally unat- !>Ite I!> 10 .... and hned now v,lth The pumpmg station has d gate lrdctlve and nol dppedllJ1g but \\ e blOken concrete Almost 800 feet 01 vdlve to keep the lake out, but ~tated thdt we were mfdVOl 01 per fence at the site was lost thIS jear to wave actIOn, accordmg to Cra\\ tord The park at "IndmIlI POInte pi 0 Jects mto the lake, so that lIttle can (Continued 011 Page l"IAl 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 walls and flood backyards No- where have there been evacua- tions or massive property damage as have occurred further norlh along Anchor Bay It's Just an aCCIdent of geography that protects the Pomtes They are less exposed to the lake and less vulnerable to wmd-drIven high water than St Clair Shores Probably more Im- portant, the Pomtes are not pene- trated by a network of canals Last spnng when the Army Corps of Engmeers contacted the Pomtes - along With all governments along the lake - about constructmg a system of dIkes to hold back the water, all fIve declIned But the nUIsance ISreal With the lake already 34 Inches above Its long-term a verage for November (the latest month for which statistics were avaIlable) and threatemng to add another SIXm- ches by spring, floodIng remains a concern. And officials refuse to take a rosy VIew, saYIng any flooding or lack of It depends en- tirely upon the weather Although most of the waterfront m the POIntes is protected by sea- walls, many of them date back to the 1920s and '30s Some are In crumbling condition and many were built With an ornamental brickwork on top that is not strong enough to fend off the lake when It IS high Much of the property, especial- ly In the Park and the CIty, IS 10\\ where It abuts the lake Land along the Detroit border of the Park, bounded by Fox Creek, ISalso low According to the Army Corps of Engmeers, however, most of the senSItIve property IS eIther mUnICIpally owned park land or marInas Public and prIvate dock owners along the lake are faced with mak- ing expensIve Improvements to keep the docks out of water and serVIced, With utilIties Several Watet; sewer rate changes proposed By Mike Andrzejczyk Although city offiCIals say it's stIli too early to know for certam what WIllhappen, two of four com- munitIes locally receivmg water from DetrOIt have been socked WIth rate mcreases of more than 13 percent by the DetrOit Water and Sewerage Board The proposed rates, which take effect 10 July, are set by the city board based on a complicated for- mula of use, tImes of peak usage and dIstance the water must be pumped, Four communities, Grosse Pomte Woods, Park, Shores and Harper Woods are among the more than 100cities and townshIps that receIve water from Detroit m southeast MIchIgan The City re- ceives water from the Farms, whlchs pumps and punfIes lake water While the Park and Woods Will A hill, a sled , . , and thou. It doesn't take much to bring a smile to the face of a little one. Shown coming down the hill Sunday morning near Morass and Lakeshore is 3-year-old Laura Zoufal and her sister, Natalie, 8, of the Farms. Their babysitter, Jennifer Thomas, 16, of the Park, is hitching a rrde with Laura for your mformation By Tom Greenwood fyi Out of Africa Every once In a while, when I'm feeling fat and !>assyand oh- so-pleased with my hfe, 1 need something to come along and put things back In perspective That happened Monday morning, on my fIrst day back from vacatIOn On my desk was d letter trom Pat and Vh'ginia Patten, of Manchester Road They're the parents of Father Pat Patten, a flY10g medIcal miSSIOnary sta tlOned In Olkokola, Tanzama You ma) remember Father Pat I wrote about him two years ago when he returned to the US on a quest to raise enough funds to buy a good, us- ed airplane to bnng medical re- hef to the nomadic Masal liVing In hiS 23,OOO-square-mlle parish m AfrIca Through hard work and with the help of prIvate and pubhc donatIOns, Father Pat got hIS plane The work 10 Tanzania IS hard and he doesn't have much tIme to WrIte The Pattens sent me a photocopy of hIS last letter, which covered a lot of ground It wasn't what he saId that im- pressed me, but more what he dIdn't say Father Pat IS tired Very, very tIred. Mostly from the hec- tIc schedule he keeps, but also because part of hIS staft IS leav- mg, whIch pIles more work on hIS shoulders. I also suspect he Isn't eatIng propel'ly He said it was a very good crop for corn and beans thIS year and that some places don't even need tood aid for a change I talked to hiS brother, Mike, who vIsIted him recently, and he said Father Pat eats mostly beans It's prepared dIfferent ways, but mostly it's beans morning, noon and night Oc- casIOnally there'll be sotne WIld game, but not much Father Pat said there's abso- lutely no gasoline, cooking or dIesel fuel available at all Any- where He's hmlted to buymg 25 gallons of gasolme a week for the aIrplane My car holds more than that He was very grateful to hIS parents for the supphes they sent, He saId the soap and can- dles would really be appreciat- ed, as well as the dental floss, pIzza mIxes and granola bars, whIch help supplement his dIet when he's on long airplane fhghts or motorcycle safarIS to VIllages needmg medical care He said he really enjoyed read10g an old Time magazme sent hIm, comparmg the dress styles and pnces of that time WIth no\\ He also saId It was sad to see that the trouble spots of years ago are the same as to- day A speclallreat was a six-pack of Vernor's, a box of GIrl Scout cookIes and autumn leaves pre~sed In book!> I guess gold, red and orange maple leaves can do a lot to bnng Grosse Pomte to Tanzama So far, he estimates the plane has another 240,000 mIles on It sll1ce It was purchased It's easy to see how In a typical week, Father Pat vlslb more than 400 people \\ ho are trea ted for res- pIratory InfectIOns, malana, paraSites. bUl ns, snake bItes, TB, spear wounds, diarrhea, malnutntlOn hon attacks and leprosy HIS presence there has made a difference More and more people are beIng helped What Impre~sed me was hIS attitude He \~asn't complaIn- mg, nor \\ d~ he askl ng for more help It \~as Just a compilatIOn of facts It's the ..... ay lIfe IS III much of the Third World, mom and dad, so ho\~ are you? How was ChrIstmas back home" Was there a lot of snow? DId evervone receive some mce presents? Anyho ..... , I'm gomg to try and remember Father Pat the next time I bItch because m} steak ..... as cooked wrong, or I have to hoof It two blocks to the local Lawson s for a gallon of mIlk But I'm human, and I'm sure after a whIle I'll convemently forget Father Pat can be reached through the Flymg Medical Ser- Vice, DIOcese of Arusha. Box 3044. Arusha, Tanzama, East Africa I beheve I'll send him a letter Or maybe a six-pack of Vernor',,> + ,

Transcript of Lake laps at top of Pointe seawalls - Local History Archives

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7-. "0 1._~J\',HOur PoIOU News /

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rosse Pointe ewsVOL 47-No 3

Grosse POinte, MichIgan, Thursday, January 16, 1986 30 cents 38 Pages

Park planto mergepolice, fireapproved

By Pat PaholskyIl's all systems go for the con

~ohdatlOn of the polIce and fire de-pal tments In the Park mto a pub!1l..!>atety umt The counCil adopted cIresolutIOn :'IIonday mght mstrucl-II1gthe adminIstratIOn to begm theproce~s The vote was unammou::.

The council dbo approved an 01dmance amendJl1g the eit) (harielIII reference'> to the chlCf of polIce01' fire chlel, !>ubstllulIng dlrectOiof public safet) a~ head of the combmed deparlmenls The ordmanre\\ III tdke e!feel Juh I

The operdtlOnal plan ~ubmltte<.Jb) the admllll!>trdtlOn prOjects thatthe department'> wIll be fully con~ohdated by July 1. 1988

City Manager John Crawford, IIIlIlllOduClllg the plan, said It \\a::.dN'overed that there would be aco!>1 savll1g::. to the commumty\\ Ilh con::.ohdatlOn The !Irst obJeclive, hesaJd, was to deVise the bestplan and dfter that determIne thelo~l

'We belle\ e Ihl~ operationalplan has met both Ob]l'ctlves," he~dld

l'o~t proJelllon~, ho\\ ever, donot mclude 1:1 o::.~-trallllllg andequipment, ~Illl:e the) dre COli~Idered to be non-recurnng ddmlllI,,>trallve expense~ Legal and profeS&lOnaJfees are also not lOc!udeJIII the proJectlOns

The fll e contract, \\ hlCh expiredJ ul) 1, 1:JH5 I!> l urrenlh bemgnegotiated Abo the polIce contract will expire June .10and theacll11lfilstratlOn I~ negotl8tlllg thepubhc sdfely concept \\Ith thepolice umon

In the plan, PolIce Chief RichardCdrettl recommends cross-tramIllg police otllcers IIr::.t III teams otthl ee offIcers and d !>upervlsorThe two-week Ill-hom>e traming.proVIded bj Fire Chief PhIlhpC(}~td,!>hould!>allstv b{j hour">of m-;tJ'uctlon reqUlred'!or ba..,lc fir£'fIghllllg

Cdrettl then recommend" thatthe firefighters beglll their cros~-trdlfilng al lhe pohle dcademy Intedm~ of !>IXAll oflJceJ'~ \~II! alsobe trallled as emergenc) medIcaltechmclans

"The cornerstone for successtulfunctional consolidatIOn rests ontrdmlOg,' PolIce ChIef Hlchardl'drettl wrote m the plan 'We IIItend to concentrdte on lotatmgever~ ::'lOgle officer through thebe~t tralOlOg program~ d\ allable

"It should be pOillted out that IIIachlevll1g thl!> lev!'! 01 excellenCE'thel P 1<.,a prICE' to pa) he contlOlIed . thelt price 1&the amountof service \~e \\ IIIbe a ble to deliver\\hIle the trdll11ng IS laklllg placeII h my llltention to ma Il1tam ad€'quate level'i of service. mcludmgthe dblhtj to respond to eXlgell1Clrcum&tance">thaI might occur L\the prudent use of overllme ..

In the case of police or fire pel::.onllt'l.....ho are unable to complet •.uos,> tra Illlllg beca U&l' of aCddemlc flgor" or a ft'ilr of height-.for example City :\Ianagt'1' Cra\\ford ~aJ(l those emplo) ees \\ IlIblde!>lgnated a~ speCIalists, a PO~ItlOn that WIll be phased out OW'lthe VE'ars

"i v.ould draw a dl,,>tInctIOnbet\\ een the employee \\ ho has attempted to qualify and has not Ix">uccessful and the employee whosays, 'I WII! not try, 'he said

Cra wford added tha t the ope I'dtlOnal plan did nol cOllslder dl..,ml'ismg or demotmg any persOIlnel

About a half-dozen reSIdent'>spoke for or agamst consolidatIOn,however. the effort was almostanti-climactic after two years 01movmg m that directIon The en-tire proceedmgs took about 10lTIlllute'i

PhOlu by EI"'n Fronnn \

The proposed rates may changebecause of yesterda~.!> publIchearing and they have to be ap-proved by the Board at WaterCommiSSIOners and the DetrOlICity CounCil

As proposed the decreases ma)not be slgmhcant enough to meana change m the rate the Parkcharges Its reSident!> and buslnesses for wa tel' and sewage treat.ment, OrtIs I added

The city's water and sewer fundIS out of the red, however OrllSIsaid the fund IS no\~ well off

WhIle the water rate I!>schedul-ed to decrease, the Woods won'lstart calculatmg a reSidentIal ra teuntil after confIrmatIOn of the proposed rates, accordmg to City Admmlstralor-Clerk ChesterPetersen The city Will dbo have towall and !>eewhat happen~ to thesewer rate, he added

WhIle the Wood!>, Shores andHarper Wood& are part oj theNortheast Dlstnct Sy~tem thl'propo~ed !>ewerrate decrease mdYend up bemg swallowed by the ad-mlllistermg agency for the sy~lem,Petersen added

DetrOit and Wayne Countycharge cItIes throughout southea"tJlvlIchlgan for the water and sewerservice they prOVide Cltle!>m lurnmust calculate their mamtenanceconstructIOn and other costs andadd that mto the figure before decldmg what to charge reSident'>and busme~~es for water andsewer use

lance, Woods Detecllve CdllSchuster said

A car With three male youth~pulled up and one boy got outand \~alked up to the hdu<.,e\\hen he spotted the sun'ell-lance team He got back In thecar and drove off The police gotthe license number

One boy admitted to thescam and durmg the Investlga-tlOn, police learned three othername", Schuster said The m-vestlgatIOn IS contlnumg

The package conSisted ofthree Video diSCS totaling $l4.'irhey had heen ordered b)-'

fIll I'll', according to a companyrcprc~entiltlve The merchan-dIse wa~ charged to an em-ployee In the Wayne CounlyProsecutor's Office. who toldpohce he had not oJ'dererl thediSCS

~'~f-.a.~.j...- ..- ....,-J••;.1!r"""

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Four youths suspectedof credit card fraud

Wood'i pohce suspect fourIOCdl youths of slftmg throughgarbage for credit card receiptsand ordeflng merchandisecharged to an account on thedl'icarded slips The case wasuncovered when a resldenlalerted polIce to a note on a va-cant house

The note on the front door In-'>tructed that all package~ be de11\ered to Ih(' rear and I,\oasdiS-covered In 1 hI prospeclI vebuver of the hll... on FordCourt which has bE'cnhI ml forthe past four months

Pohcf' put out an area broadcast to UPS drivers, one ofwhom responded that he hadJU&ldelivered a package fromInstant Replay, a Video com-pany In Waltham, Mass Thehouse was put under ">urvell-

The water department gaveseveral reasons for the Increase,Kenyon saId The department saidthat, although the Shores' peakperiod usage had dropped, Ithadn't dropped as much as sur-roundIng commUnItIes In addi-tIOn, the dIstance the departmentmust pump the water to the Vil-lage's center has been recalcu-lated, he saId

The water department at onetime applIed a cre'dlt to the vil-lage's rate because It was pump-mg water downhIll to the VIllage,Kenyon saId That credIt has beenehmlllated, he added

The proposed water rate m-crease that the city charges theShores Will be offset partIally by aproposed se .....er rate decrease ofabout 33 cents, accordmg to thechart of rates The rate for HarperWoods, Grosse Pomte Woods andthe Shores may drop from $6 55 to$6 22 under the proposed rates

Se\\er rates for the Farms, Parkand City are also slated to de-crease under the proposed rateschedule

The City and Farms are to havetheir rates fall from $6 55 per 1,000cubIC feet of sewage treated to$6 22 for the same amount startmgJuly 1 The Park's rate ISscheduled to drop from $4 33 to $4 28 for1,000 cubiC feet of sewage treated

Whether the proposed double decrease Willmean lower rates III thePark IS unclear, accordmg toClerk-Comptroller NunzIO Orllsl

.., ....~ u

cItIes are conSIdering ralsmg theirdocks, the Yacht Club has InstalleddeVIces aimed at preventmg andcontrolling Ice bUildup, and the\\ ood~ 1<, \\ arnmg boa t 0\\ nel s tolook tOi another moormg

The Park taces the potentiallyblgge~t problem VII'lually all ofthe land ~outh of Jl'fler!>on I~ des-Ignated c1~ d Hood plalll b) the :'\atlOlMI Flood In~ul dnce PI Ogl <1m\lthough lhe hOll&e,>don tottenend up under \\dler lhe Idnd ell'\ <ltlOll J dllgp~ onI) Ollp to tll () fed

Looking backErnest Scanes of the Farms compares a photograph he took to the painting he is making from

it. Scanes has been a member of the Scarab Club, a local artists' group, for more than 50 years.Cars have always been a favorite subject for his paintings. He was a technical illustrator for Gene-ral Motors for nearly 40 years. Scanes reflects on his half century In art in the Pointer of Interestcolumn on Page 12B.

get decreases m the pl'Oposed ratesof about 8 and 1percent respective-ly, the Shores Will be hit \\ Ith a 15percent lIlcrease and Hal-pelWoods would have ItS rate hiked 13percent

The rate the city charges theShores for 1,000cubIC feet of watelIS proposed to Increase to $4 42from $3 85 Harper Woods Will pay$3 10per 1,000 cubiC feet under theproposed new rates, up from $274

The Woods rate per 1,000cubiCfeet of water \\ould drop as of Ju-ly to $2 19, down from thiS year's$2 21 The Park's rate would fall to$3 06, a near 9 percent cut from thecurrent $3 31 per I.UOO cubiC feet

VIllage offlclals have alreadymet once \~Ith representatives ofthe water department and were tohave a representative al ye!>ter-day's publIc hearing lo formdllyappeal the hike, according toSupenntenot'llt ?>Ilchael Kenyon

Pho'( If'"

Lake laps at top of Pointe seawallsabove the current level of the lake when the lake water washes over manent Improvement!> along theand It IS common for streets to the seawalls and enters the clty'~ shore that would ehmInate theflood combIned sewer system, It can flood plaIn," he said

The lake also floods the sewer cause an overload The result IS Ellmmatmg the flood plam I!>..lsystem A hve-year-old Corps of that untreated Se\\dge dumps mlo lall order mvolvIng lmprovemenhEngIneers study addressed the the lake to seawall!> and some dlkmg amiproblem of mterceptor sewers Although the Park refu!>ed the landfIilmg The city IS now conalong the lake "One of the Issues Corps offer to bUIld a ~v~tem of sldenng fIihng along the shore ofof the draft was whether our pump- cnbs to break up the \\ave actIon, Patterson Park, 100feet back froming !>tatlOnWdSadequate to pump some actIOn does need to be taken, the \\ater, to a depth of four feetback Lake St Cl,m," !>ald Park Crawford said . (We refu!>ed The ~hore dlong the tormer :'\IkeClt) Mandger John Crawford because) It wa~ ae!>thetlcally unat- !>Ite I!> 10.... and hned now v,lth

The pumpmg station has d gate lrdctlve and nol dppedllJ1g but \\ e blOken concrete Almost 800 feet 01vdlve to keep the lake out, but ~tated thdt we were mfdVOl 01 per fence at the site was lost thIS jear

to wave actIOn, accordmg to Cra\\tord

The park at "IndmIlI POInte pi 0Jects mto the lake, so that lIttle can

(Continued 011 Page l"IAl

By Nanc)' ParmenterOn a scale from annoyance to

disaster, Lake St Clair high waterlevels rank as a nUIsance m thePowtes, thredtemng to break seawalls and flood backyards No-where have there been evacua-tions or massive property damageas have occurred further norlhalong Anchor Bay

It's Just an aCCIdent ofgeography that protects thePomtes They are less exposed tothe lake and less vulnerable towmd-drIven high water than StClair Shores Probably more Im-portant, the Pomtes are not pene-trated by a network of canals Lastspnng when the Army Corps ofEngmeers contacted the Pomtes -along With all governments alongthe lake - about constructmg asystem of dIkes to hold back thewater, all fIve declIned

But the nUIsance ISreal With thelake already 34 Inches above Itslong-term a verage for November(the latest month for whichstatistics were avaIlable) andthreatemng to add another SIXm-ches by spring, floodIng remains aconcern. And officials refuse totake a rosy VIew, saYIng anyflooding or lack of It depends en-tirely upon the weather

Although most of the waterfrontm the POIntes is protected by sea-walls, many of them date back tothe 1920s and '30s Some are Incrumbling condition and manywere built With an ornamentalbrickwork on top that is not strongenough to fend off the lake when ItIS high

Much of the property, especial-ly In the Park and the CIty, IS 10\\where It abuts the lake Land alongthe Detroit border of the Park,bounded by Fox Creek, ISalso lowAccording to the Army Corps ofEngmeers, however, most of thesenSItIve property IS eIthermUnICIpally owned park land ormarInas

Public and prIvate dock ownersalong the lake are faced with mak-ing expensIve Improvements tokeep the docks out of water andserVIced, With utilIties Several

Watet; sewer rate changes proposedBy Mike Andrzejczyk

Although city offiCIals say it'sstIli too early to know for certamwhat WIllhappen, two of four com-munitIes locally receivmg waterfrom DetrOIt have been sockedWIth rate mcreases of more than 13percent by the DetrOit Water andSewerage Board

The proposed rates, which takeeffect 10 July, are set by the cityboard based on a complicated for-mula of use, tImes of peak usageand dIstance the water must bepumped,

Four communities, GrossePomte Woods, Park, Shores andHarper Woods are among themore than 100cities and townshIpsthat receIve water from Detroit msoutheast MIchIgan The City re-ceives water from the Farms,whlchs pumps and punfIes lakewater

While the Park and Woods Will

A hill, a sled, . , and thou. It doesn't take much to bring a smile to the face

of a little one. Shown coming down the hill Sunday morning nearMorass and Lakeshore is 3-year-old Laura Zoufal and hersister, Natalie, 8, of the Farms. Their babysitter, JenniferThomas, 16, of the Park, is hitching a rrde with Laura

for your mformation

By Tom Greenwood

fyiOut of Africa

Every once In a while, whenI'm feeling fat and !>assyand oh-so-pleased with my hfe, 1 needsomething to come along andput things back In perspective

That happened Mondaymorning, on my fIrst day backfrom vacatIOn On my desk wasd letter trom Pat and Vh'giniaPatten, of Manchester RoadThey're the parents of FatherPat Patten, a flY10g medIcalmiSSIOnary sta tlOned InOlkokola, Tanzama

You ma) remember FatherPat I wrote about him twoyears ago when he returned tothe U S on a quest to raiseenough funds to buy a good, us-ed airplane to bnng medical re-hef to the nomadic Masal liVingIn hiS 23,OOO-square-mlle parishm AfrIca

Through hard work and withthe help of prIvate and pubhcdonatIOns, Father Pat got hISplane The work 10 Tanzania IShard and he doesn't have muchtIme to WrIte The Pattens sentme a photocopy of hIS last letter,which covered a lot of groundIt wasn't what he saId that im-pressed me, but more what hedIdn't say

Father Pat IS tired Very,very tIred. Mostly from the hec-tIc schedule he keeps, but alsobecause part of hIS staft IS leav-mg, whIch pIles more work onhIS shoulders. I also suspect heIsn't eatIng propel'ly He said itwas a very good crop for cornand beans thIS year and thatsome places don't even needtood aid for a change

I talked to hiS brother, Mike,who vIsIted him recently, and hesaid Father Pat eats mostlybeans It's prepared dIfferentways, but mostly it's beansmorning, noon and night Oc-casIOnally there'll be sotne WIldgame, but not much

Father Pat said there's abso-lutely no gasoline, cooking ordIesel fuel available at all Any-where He's hmlted to buymg 25gallons of gasolme a week forthe aIrplane My car holds morethan that

He was very grateful to hISparents for the supphes theysent, He saId the soap and can-dles would really be appreciat-ed, as well as the dental floss,pIzza mIxes and granola bars,whIch help supplement his dIetwhen he's on long airplanefhghts or motorcycle safarIS toVIllages needmg medical care

He said he really enjoyedread10g an old Time magazmesent hIm, comparmg the dressstyles and pnces of that timeWIth no\\ He also saId It wassad to see that the trouble spotsof years ago are the same as to-day

A speclallreat was a six-packof Vernor's, a box of GIrl ScoutcookIes and autumn leavespre~sed In book!> I guess gold,red and orange maple leavescan do a lot to bnng GrossePomte to Tanzama

So far, he estimates the planehas another 240,000 mIles on Itsll1ce It was purchased It's easyto see how In a typical week,Father Pat vlslb more than 400people \\ ho are trea ted for res-pIratory InfectIOns, malana,paraSites. bUl ns, snake bItes,TB, spear wounds, diarrhea,malnutntlOn hon attacks andleprosy

HIS presence there has madea difference More and morepeople are beIng helped

What Impre~sed me was hISattitude He \~asn't complaIn-mg, nor \\ d~ he askl ng for morehelp It \~as Just a compilatIOnof facts It's the .....ay lIfe IS IIImuch of the Third World, momand dad, so ho\~ are you? Howwas ChrIstmas back home"Was there a lot of snow? DIdevervone receive some mcepresents?

Anyho ....., I'm gomg to try andremember Father Pat the nexttime I bItch because m} steak.....as cooked wrong, or I have tohoof It two blocks to the localLawson s for a gallon of mIlkBut I'm human, and I'm sureafter a whIle I'll convementlyforget

Father Pat can be reachedthrough the Flymg Medical Ser-Vice, DIOcese of Arusha. Box3044. Arusha, Tanzama, EastAfrica

I beheve I'll send him a letterOr maybe a six-pack ofVernor',,>

+

,

Thursday, January 16, 1986

nved mmutes later. He was takento Bon Secours Hospital where hewas pronounced dead on arnvalseven minutes later, reports said

Cross' body has been turned overto the Wayne County MedicalExaminer for an autopsy, policesaid No cause of death ha~ yetbeen determmed

One of the ambulance techni-cians reported suffenng a poSSiblelower back stram while attendmgto Cross, who was 6 feet tall andweighed more than -too pounds, ae-cordmg to police

problems are presented by expertsIn these fIelds

Hospice volunteers are !>peclal-Iy tramed to prOVide phYSical,emotIOnal and spmtual support tothe terminally IIIperson and hiS orher famIly through the Illness,death and a perIOd of bereave-ment

There currently are over 80 Cot-tage hospice volunteers helpmg pa-tIents and their famIlies In the hos.pital and In their homes, but moreare needed to assist patients III avanety of neighborhoods

For more mformatlOn and to reogister, call Julia Arango, hospIcevolunteer coordmator, at 884-8600,ext 2464

plicatIOn should be made at leasttwo weeks before the start of theterm. Family discounts are avail-aWe J

For informatIOn and registrationmaterials, call 577-4268

Dance Lab students wIll be mtro-duced to the fundamentals ofmovement - time, space andenergy - and encouraged to de-velop new movement skills TheyWIll experience movement as anart form, and as a form ofself-expressIOn, USing Imagery,music, poems, stones, art, props,games, the 3 R's, good exerCIseand lots of fun as springboards forcreative exploration

There ISnow an extension of theUniversity Dance Lab at the Lake-shore Y m St Clair Shores For In-formation, call 778-5811

SPORT COATS - Shetlands, camels. Hams Tweeds Models for men and young menWere 13000 to 13500 NOW 9500 Were 20500 10 22000 NOW 160.00Were 16000 fa 17000 NOW 130.00 Were 22500 to 23000 NOW 17500Were 190 00 to 19500 NOW 150.00 Were 27500 to 28500 NOW 21500

Were 34500 NOW 265.00OUTERCOATS - Erllire stock of topcoals and overcoats and selected Zip Irned all

weather coats

COLLEGIAN SUITSA speCial group of sUlls styled to fit the youngman who needs a smaller waisted SUit With a

trimmer fitting trouserWere 21500 to 23500 NOW 17500

SUITS - Selected group from our regular slock of H Freeman, Oakloom and 5t Clair clothingWere 27500 NOW 21000 Were 350 Db to 35500 NOW 28000Were 32500 to 33000 NOW 250.00 Were 36500 to 395 00 NOW 290 00

Were 47500 NOW 37500HICKEY.FREEMAN SUITS - A selectIOn of hand tailored SUitS from one of the country s

finest makersWere 53500 NOW 425.00 Were 56500 to 58000 NOW 465.00

Were 59500 to 600 00 NOW 475 00

FOR

MEN - BOYS - lADIESTHREE DAYS ONLY-THURSDAY, JAN,16THROUGH'SATURDAY, JAN. 18

OPEN 9.30 to 9:00 THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, SATURDAY 'T1L 5 30

InvestigatIOn continues Into thedeath of a Detroit man Sundaymght, who collapsed on CharlevOiXat Maryland m the Park.

Accordmg to repOl ts. GregoryCross, 38. of BeWick In DetrOIt, wasdnvmg hIS 1975 Ford two-dooralong CharlevOIX when he stoppedthe car, got out and collapsed,police said HIS29-year.old passen-ger was able to flag down a Parkpollce offlcer, who called for anambulance

Cross had no signs of life whenPark ambulance techmclans ar.

Cottage plans cancer care classesFamilies and fnends of cancer

patients who want to leal'll moreabout the disease, as well as mdl-vlduals who are mterested m be-coming hospice volunteers, are m-vlted to attend the Carmg PersonProgram at Cottage Hospital Thetree four-week wmter sessIOn be-gln~ Monday, Jan 20, at6'30 pmHo~plCe volunteer training con-tinues an additional four weeks,through March 10

The Caring Person Program of-ters instructIon m many aspects ofpdtIent care and comfort Chemo-therapy and radiation therapy,pre~cnptlon management, nutn-tlOn, pam control and respiratory

WSU dance lab classes to begin

->it: ~'.t-;YW~;~A$.t~<~~ '"¥J~ /)~~~,(>~",,~.y::;. .~ ... t'Y ....",.$ ~ ... (' ..... ",«'" ... (><, ".co,<,,

ANNUAL WINTER SALE

The winter term of the WayneState Umverslty Dance Lab clas-~es for children and adults isscheduled to begm Saturday, Jan18, In Old Malll on campus. Clas-ses Will run every Sa turdaythrough Apnl 26, With a springbreak on March 29 The cost of the14-week sessIOn is $49, payable be-fore the first day of class.

Classes are offered for 3- and4-year-old beginners at 10am, for4- to 6-year-olds at 11, and for 7- tolO-year.olds at noon. Eleven- to15-year-olds meet at 11, and 16- to18-year-olds at noon An adult classIS offered at 10 a.m

A parent lounge IS available, aswell as free parkmg In the lot be-hind Old MaIn off Warren west ofCasso Some scholarship money ISavaIlable for needy students Ap-

.,/

I)

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

Detroit man dies in Park

H..,. you DPtMd &/lIRA?Ate you l,jndtc~ -.boY1 ~ OM

lochoose1'You"llWOrll RHd. t:rytol.a.l bAll to Nlp)'O\J

chooM OUt IF<A.(OJ II[S ~... ~ .. n ... I(IRA

...~..;:", e ~ fOo,J '" ~~ "'''''''Y c:o-me.. .... >01'1cIS U mc-"'Ia<: c"~ •• ..,... "".e,

A 1 ... 4 ..,~_ "'11:11:01>'" l'Ofln910Ij.%"..vs, f()JJIl:\I ...lU.e~l ACCOUNT'S

_"_11W~.a.:(~.... COII".- SlcJc:l A.:e- I fblo.>I tN~ 'LO(ul

.... '1~ ..... S\.QC~""=(O<>ftlIWQOriJlotr9'lWC\lt1 ...

J, 11"'-6<1 ""co;- .... I ,IQ(:U w.<ll ~,~r'l •

HELPWANTEDPart or "ut "0... ~

Full-TIme. ~'-JtL};Remees.\ •

welcomeCall before A\

3pm ~Mrs Mehr

885.0800

. ----- ..---------~ -,

GrossePointe News

(USPS 230.400)Published every Thursday8, ,\ntet'bo Pubh!>her!>9'9 Kerthe\ aJ henlll'

(,ro!>se POinte, '11 4l!216

Phone 882-6900SeCOnd Class Postage pa d at

owo t M en gooS ubscnphon Rate 5 $15 per \leaf

VIA ma I $17 out-of slate

Address all Ma I S\,Jbscr pIonsChange 01Address Forms 3,79 to 99Kerene laJ Grosse Po n1e FafmsMch

The ejeadllne lor ne\o\'s copy sMonday nOOf\ 10 InSure ~nsert on

All advert S "1g copy mt,JS1be In lheNew", 01'~ce by , 1 a m Tuesday

CORRECTIONS AND AOJUSTMENTS 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 enn t ml? lor correct u-r n the fol 0 Ii 9

Isst,...e N~ assume no respons 1) I,(; fne samf' alee 1ne f ,,1 nser on

a service of the~ichigan Dental Association

ANOTHER BIGCUT IN PRICES!

ON EVERY ITEM IN OUR STORE FOR

THE LAST DAYSOF OUR STORE CWSING SALE

picQl'd--71ol'tonFine Quality Men's Clothing and Furnishings

LOCATED AT

92 KERCHEVAL AVE.ON THE HILL IN GROSSE POINTE FARMS

INVENTORY STORE FIXTURES, EQUIPMENTTO BE SOLD OUT TO THE BARE WALLS

PRICES CUT ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK IN A •••

GREAT STORECLOSING SALE

Complete Dental Care for Senior Citizensb) Licensed ~f.ichigan DentistsFor f:ligibility Requirements Call

Toll-Free 1-800-292-4708

FULL SERVICE FLORISTS

399 FISHER RD 885 8510GROSSE POINTE -

SENIOR-DENTREDlTCED-FEE DENTAL CARE

r------------------,I FRESHCUT I! DAFFODIU iI $2.99 Bunch iI 2 Bunches For $5.00 I,-------------------

Page Two-A

ALL SALES FINAL - ALL ITEMS ADVERTISED SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE

,,

1t

,j,,4,,

~*'y t'. ,

NOW 37500

NOW 4750NOW 5750

NOW 2750NOW 35 00

ALL SALES FINAL

THE HICKEY LADYSSelectpd Groups

SLACKS SKIRTS SUITSJACKETS TURTLENECKS

BLOUSES SWEATERS'13 10 '12 OFF

NO EXCHANGES

SINCE 1900

THE BOYS' SHOPSelected Groups

SPORT COA TS . OUTER JACKETSKNIT AND FLANNEL SHIRTS

GLOVES SWEATERSVa 10 lf2 OFF

Selected GroupsGLOVES MUFFLERS NECKWEAR

V~ PRICE

NOW 25% OFFBURBERRY ZIP COATS - Single and double breastedWere 370 00 NOW 300.00 Were 465 00

SLACKS - Selected group of fancy wools and corduroysWere 3750 to 4500 NOW 30.00 Were 6500 to 70 00Were 5000 to 6000 NOW 37.50 Wpre 7500 to 8000

Were 9500 to 100 00 NOW 6750DRESS SHIRTS - Selected group of Hathaway and Hickey shirts

Were 2850 to 3500 NOW 1950SPORT SHIRTS - Group of long sleeve shirts both knits and wovensWere 2250 to 2650 NOW 15.00 Were 3500 to 4250Were 2750 to 3250 NOW 22.50 Were 4500 to 5250OUTER JACKETS" CAR COATS - Selected group

V, PRICE

HATS" CAPS - English Cuffley caps Suede caps assorted wool hats including IrishWalkers Were 25 00 to 2750 NOW 1999Assortment of wool caps NOW 999

SHOE DEPARTMENT - Selected group of Cole Haan French Shriner Nunn Bush SebaqoSperry Top Siders. Rockport and Walkover shoes

NOW 1990 to 89 90E'ntlre stock 01 hand crafted Allen Edmond shoes

NOW 15% OFF100;. DISCOUNT ON BALANCE OF STOCK

NO PHONE ORDERS • NO LAY.AWAYS

17140 KERCHEVAL AT ST, CLAIR • GROSSE POINTEVl~a OPEN 9,'30 to 9:00 Thursday and Fnday, SalUiday '1,11 5:30

,l

J.I

TO $155.00

SPORT COATS

$8999

TO $45.50

DRESS SHIRTS$1788

While these lasl - one IDt10 sell out at the low price01 only -

Entlrpslacksof dressshirtsto be sold out at only -

PRICES AT NEW LOWSWe lIave again cut pflees on every Item In our store for tile lastliars at our stare closing sale. Wemust and will sell out every Item,store fixture, office fixture and all eqUipmentto the bare walls with.In tile next 'ew liars. Time is shart - buying must be last. we haveleft no stone unturned to make this store closing sale complete.Come these last dars 'or bargaIns 0' a lifetime.

SANK CARDS WELCOME

- SORRY NO ALTERATIONS _

TO $18.50 UP m TO $45.50

TIES SWEATERS~~88 60%off ~";,::,~;:,':::v'"'~1188

STORE AND OFFICE FIXTURESAND EQUIPMENT FOR SALE

TO $45.00

DRESS SLACKS$1788

Outof a group- Ihesewill $12888sell out at the low priceofonly -

Outof a grouptheseWillsellDul fast at the low price ofonly -

We Have Been MarkingDown Prices OnEvery Item ForThe Last Days

DAILY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. - TUESDAY AND THURSDAY 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

TO $350.00

SUITS

SELLING CONTINUES 9 A.M. TO 8 ~M. THURSDAY

Outof a grouptheseWillnot last long atonly -

Thursday, January 16, 1986 GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Three.A

Fire departments m thePomtes urge reSidents to clearsnow away from fire hydrantsSnow 10 some locatIOns IS al-ready startmg to pIle up andcover the hydrants Shovelingmay avert a disaster

Uncover them

teachers may be called away,leaving behind an unsupervl!>edclass, he added

Summmg up, Tonks said therewas no grounds to uphold thegl'levance Also, the teacher!>hadn't done all they could to UTI-prove safety in the classroom

"There are steps they can taketo lessen these hazardous &Itua-tlOns," he saId "When you thll1ksafety, It usually results '

Trustee Joan Hanpeter reque!>t-ed the admll1lstratlOn for\\ arc! In-formation about the cost of thephotography program and con-Sider alternatives to allo\\ betel'superVISIOn One POSSlblhty maybe elImlllatlllg photography cla!>-ses at North and havmg them atSouth only, where the phySICdlplant IS different, she added The!>ystem run!> ltS dental aide pro~ram that way

Trustee Carl' Anderson who WithCarol Marr, voted to uphold thegl'levance, told trustees that theheanng raised some vahd con-cern!> about safety and supervI-sIOn Unsupervised students can doSilly thmgs, he said, addlllg. "Weare dealmg With a different kmd 01al1lmallll the 1980s and I thmk \\t:'have to recogmze that"

lVIaklllg the motIOn lor demalwas board Vice PreSIdent VlllcentLoCIcero, seconded by SecretaryFred Adams

The umon had failed to show thecontract was violated by the i>ltua-tIOn, LoCIcero told trustees

Votmg to deny the gnevancewere Hanpeter, LoCicero, Adam~.board President Jon Ganelot andboard Treasurer Dorothy Kennel

"WhIle the board had demedyour grIevance, we have heardyour problems," Gandelot told theUl1lonoffiCials and teachers

The Idea of addmg aides mayormay not come back before theboard, depending on what comesout of the mformation the admll1ls-tratlon IS passll1g on to the board,school offiCials said

teachers said they didn't reqUIre"tudent!> to wear safety glasses orlab coats The glar:.ses obstructedVISion whlie working on certamequIpment m the darkroom, both"aid Marche!>1 added he asks hiSstudenb to bnng lab coats and rub-ber gloves to protect themselvesfrom the film developll1g chemi-cals

Although there have been no~enou!> Il1Junes to students m thec1d!>",Marche'>l added he !>ufferedthu'd degree chemical burn!, to hi!>ldce when he wa!> splashed WithundIluted chemicals

, It", my concern that !>tudentsMen t ~dfe," Hayei> saId "I'venever had to face thl" kmd of !>Ilud-tlOn, wa lklllg mto another roomdnd lea vmg ~tudents III a cla!>!>-room \\ It/1 thmgs \\ hlch they canhurt them!>eh Ci> with"

The vanetv 01cuttmg and heat-lIlg equipment III the room posedceltam dangers, both teachers!>dld l\ldrche"l saId that m one Ill-cldent, dlter returl1lng from theddl'kroom he lound mark!> madeb) cutllllg kl1lve!>on photographson d \Idll It appeared three stu-dents \\ ere throwmg their cuttlllgtoob at the photo!>, he added

Hdyes said she ha!>had studentsentel her room from the adJolmngcla!>~room When a substitute tookover the cldss, thl ee "tudents leftthe room Without superVISIOn, sheadded

In both case!>, diSCiplinary actIOn\\ a~ taken, supported by the"choo!'!> admll1lstratlOn

The addition of aides to theclasses .'\1ould be wonderful,"MarcheSI said Aides could cut theamount of \York the teacher nowdoes, help cla!>sroom superVISionand enhance currIculum

Aides are used III other depart-ments at the school, m sCIence andother classrooms, to help teachers,GPEA Vice PreSident RichardUnderwood pOinted out

John Kastran, North pnnclpaLtestified that he has VISited thephotography classes on several oc-casIOns and found them to be wellorgal1lzed and well-behaved Theaddition of 3ldes for superVISIOnpurposes IS not done In other de-partments and could set a costlyprecedent, he added

Aides III classes such as com-merCIal foods help students Withpi eparatlOn of dlshe!>, Kastran~ald Also, 111 some cases, all

Two wonderful things will happen for youwhen you come to the January Sale at The

Campus Mens Shop.First of all, you'll save 40 percent on

clothing,sportswear and accessories-allfrom our regular, in-season, in-stockcollections.

And, second, when you come to ourJanuary 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 savings0ppol1unities month after month.

So come to our great January 40% OfF!Sale and save on terrific things.And join The Terrific Club and nlake ourJanuary SaJe last as long as you like.

Photogmph.lJ classes unsafe, union says

Board denies teacher grievanceB) Mike Andl'zejcz) k

The BOdrd of EducatIOn l\londaymght demed a teachers' umongl'levance thdt claimed Idck of!>upel\%lOn III photogrJphy cia sse!>at North High School endangered!>tudents dnd VIOlated the umon'!>contract

The board voted:> 2 to deny thegl IC\dnce af tel' an hour-long hear-mg, but Ieque!>ted the admIJll!>trd-tlOn to fonlard mformdtlOn next\1eek about the (o!>t of the photogrdph~ progrdm at the "chool and\1 hdt the dddltlOn of aIde!> l\Quldco~t. altel native mean!> of !>uperVI-..,Ion and \\ hat other dl~tnct!> do to:>upen I~C,>tudent~ III photograph}c1a~se~ \\ hlJe tedcher!> al e occu-pied 111 the ddl'kroom \\ Ith other!>tudcnt~

The gllevance. filed edrlIel thl!>~ehool ycar, center~ 011 photogI'dph\' tedchel <.,c1dllll<;that change<.,111 the Iall lone them and theil' 1mmediate !>upervl~or~ to bear thebrunt 01 legal dctlOn should a "tu-dent be InJUIed 111 c1as~

AddItIOnal ~ectlon!> and largercld!>~~ILe~mdke !>upelVISIOndilfl-cuJtbecdu"eteacher!>cannotbelnthe cla!>~1oom and ddrkroom'>lmultdneou!>l} The vanety 01dangerou!> chemicals and eqUIpment Illcrea!>e the P0i>Slblht\ of 111-Jury to student!>

The GI'o!>!>ePOlllte EducatIOnA!>soclatIon asked that, were thegnevance upheld. additIOnal !>afe-ty equIpment dnd teacher dlde~ beprOVIded for the clas"c!>

Photography teachers RenatoMal chesl and Eileen Hayes testi-fIed at the heanng that the set-upof North's photography room caus-ed certdlll pi oblems It I~ a room\\lthlll a room. Illth a !>eparatedarkroom as well as a fire doorleadlllg to a courtym'd, they said

When thev are III the darkroom\llth studellb \1 hlch happens atled!>tthree day !>a week. the rest ofthe class IS left unsupervIsed, theteachers saId

\Nhile both teacher!> Said thevinstituted safety rule!>and expect-ed students to be \\ orki ng on classdS!>lgnments whIle they \\ ere cl"e-\\ here acce!>s from another class-room and to out~lde the bUlldlllgmdde thdt lack of supervI~lon dan-gerow,

Under cros!>-examlllatlOn byDirector of Pel sonnel and LaborRelatIOns Ronald Tonk~ the

U ~l t'(

HOW"lo~canaJanuary SaIelast?

Plotn 0, (I;at rl' ( ...1J1"r u l u"" G il

ul1l1.wdby I eSlden!':> the !>t,ltement('onclude;'

Gro,,!>e POll1te ('Ity ManagerThoma!> Kressbach said thIS 1&theCd"e at Nell I\lemonal Pdrk whIchhd!>a total of !>IXdcres and that 111-cludes the parkll1g lot The greenspace I!>about half of thdt or ahout10resIdential lots, Kre!>sbach saidLake frontage of the park ISaboutthe \\ Idth of 212 resldentldllot!>. he"did

Cltv Admllll!>trdtor ChesterPetel:sen !>ald the situatIOn 1ll the\\;L1odsIS dIfferent than the otherGrosse [-'omte cltle!>, slllce LakeFront Park IS !l1 St ClaIr ShOl'esThe Woods Den<; tdX!:."to ~t ClairShores and -It; school dl~tnct

Petersen SaId that years ago theWoods attempted to have the taxwaIved on the ba"ls tha t CitIes arenon-profIt orgam7atlOn!> The at-torney general ruled that the onlyway the Wood" can mamtam apn,'ate pdrk ISto pay taxes, Peter-sen said Otherwl!>e. the parkwould have to open to the public

Agedi~crimination

The Age Dlscnmlll-atlOn 111 EmploymentAct of ]lJ67,as amend-ed. pI OhlbltS dlscnm-lnatlOn on the ba"ls ofage agall1st any pel'son bet\\ een the age~of -10and 70 There ISno upper age Jlmlt\\ Ith respect to employment In the federael government ThE'la\1 applIe!> to all pubIIc employers, pII\Jteemployers 01 20 ormal e emplo~ ee" empl()~ ment dgellClc ...servlllg covered emplayer!>. and Idbolumon!>of morE' than 2)memhers. accordlllgto A \\ 01 klllg Woman'!> GUIde to Her.Job RIght!>. pubiIi>hedhy the \\ omen '>Bureau of t!w V S Drpartment 01 Labor

that he hasn't I'ecel ved any cdlls mthe past two weeks

The mterest prompted Park of-fiCials to ask city attorney HeroldMcC Deason to prepare a state-ment The four-paragraph state-ment reads that the parks "havebeen developed and mamtamed atall times smce their mceptlOn bythe !>oleuse of funds generated bytaxation of Grosse Pomte Parkre!>ldents or user fees ,.

Il also says that the two parkstotahng 28 acres service a popula-tion of 13,600or a ratIO of two acresper 1,000reSIdents, less than the 10acre!> per 1,000 people recom-mended bv the NatlOnal Recrea-tIOn A!>soc'latlOn

Restncted to reSidents onlysmce 1931, the pohey contmuesbecause the parks qre at theIrmaXll11Um capacity dnd fully

after an arbitrator's rulmg 111December upheld a Ulllon gnev-ance filed last year regardll1g thefilling of a school SOCial workervacancy at South High School

The arbltra tor upheld theumon's argument that the schoolsystem Ignored Its own postmg byhll'lng Gall Enckson for the SouthSOCIal worker post, althoughanother school SOCialworker, whobetter met the reqUIrements, alsoapphed

ErIckson has esta bhshed anumber of support groups for-students at the high school Abouttwo dozen students appearedbefore the board Jan 6 to ask thatsome provIsIOns be made to keepEnckson at the school to contmueher work m aldmg students \\ Ithsubstance abuse problems

While the pOSitIOn appearstaIlored for someone of Enckson 'squahflcatlOns, she has no lock onthe pOSitIOn Like other openmgs,the new one will be posted and can-didates mtervlewed Should amore qualifIed candidate comealong, the school system Will be re-qUIred to Ime that person or facethe pos'llbli.ty of another unIOngnevance

BUY ONE PAIRAT 20% OFF

SECOND PAIR *FREE

IA Sunday morning stroll

. , . on the Ice at Farms Pier Park is what this Farms family is enloYln9. Kathy and Jeff Jensenget some exercise while 2V2-year-old Michael gets a ride.

Cities get few park queries

Board creates positionof drug abuse counselor

B~ Pat Pahol!>k)The I('cent vote 111 Dearborn

IUTIltmgcel tam parks to resIdentsonl~ and the resultmg controversyhas generated !>ome Illterest IIIGro!>'lePOll1te !>park system Thepark!> here have alway!> been re-!>tncted to re!>ldents' and theIrgue!>ts l\lo!>t of the mterest, however hd~ been bv the media

OtllcJals ot the Woods, Shores,Farms and CIty report that the on-ly mqUlne!> they've receIved ha vebeen from newspapers and radIOand televl!>lon statIOns

Pal k OfflCld!!>say they were re-celvl11gahout a cdll a day after theconlrovers\ first arose III Dear-bol'/1 In No'vflmber About half ofthe call:, were from local peopleand some from DetrOIt and Dear-born reSident!>, \\ lth the other halfcllmll1g from the media CIty Man-ager John Crawford saId. addmg

The Board of Education Mondaymght establIshed a new pOSitIOn,counselor/coordll1ator of studentassistance programs

The new person Will coordmateand expand the student substanceabuse support group program atthe hIgh schools and help the dls-tnct prepare ItS master plan todeal With chemIcal dependency

The board acted unammously onthe admll1lstratlOn's recommendatlOn to create the new pOSItIon,which was posted for applicantsearlier thiS week and should be fill-ed to serve the balance of thISschool year

"ThIS \\ III enable us to keep oursupport group programs at SouthfI1gh School, extend those groupsto North fhgh School and WOI'kto

support one of the board'sgoals for thiS school year," Super-Il1tendent John Whntner saId

The new coun!>elor/coordmator\\11l !>pend t\\O days at each highschool and one da\ on dlstnet-wldeplannmg, Whntner ~ald There Willbe a tranSitIOn penod for thecounselmg ~tatf until the pOSitIOnI" fIlled and the coordmator hastaken up hi!>or her dutieS

The admml,>trdtlOn deCided onpo'l'>lhle creatIOn of the POSition

ON All SPf CIA! CI' ARANCf SHO,<;

,d-

'Buv on!' at 20% OFF regular price get a second pair of equal or less value FREE

We're going to help you look terrific.

Woodward ,md Maple, Birmin~halll 642-1%.') Kercheval, in the Villa~c. GrO'>'ie Pointe RR4.0701

New HoursM-T.W, 10:00-6:00Th.-Frl., 10:00-8:00

'l"1 , 10:00-5:00

19483 Mack Ave.G.P.W. 884-2447

FIT ~t qua Ir tv /Hell ~ & lI'OflU'!I <; ~hO(',~ & boohThe Cll/Tl'flt ~('(f~()n <;(V{('8 (rom

~~~g~~H~fR .Nkkelsh.m-PK.'OllC. 8ffOOJ)Q selby

---~-~---------------;'-------- __ l"'IIIIIf_"'" ...

Thursday, January 16, 1986

Roberto Clemente Center for theCIty of DetrOit RecreatIon Depart-ment;

- and 10 the unbUllt category,awards were presented to GunnarBlrkerts and ASSOCiates, LeonardP Marszalek, AlA, ArgonautArchitecture, and TMP ASSOCiatesIIIassociatIOn With Aros and Gold-blatt ArC'hltectc;

Two, 25-year awards for build-lOgs whose deSign were consideredby the Jury to have "Withstood thetest of llme" were the GeneralMotors Techmcal Center designedby Eero Saarinen In associationWith Smith, Hinchman & Gryllsand the Wayne State UmversltyMcGregor Conference Center de-Signed by Mllloru Yamasaki andASSOCiates

The awards were presented byHerbert McLaughlm, F AlA of SanFrancl<;co chaIr ofthe jury, at theDetrOIt Institute of Arts Dec 7,

A man in Bristol, England, re-cently was fined for dehvering hiswife's baby, That nation's Mid-wives Act of 1951 makes such Il-legal without medical help.

an architectural study that re-sulted m the "DetrOIt Hlstonc Dls-tncts Style and Color GUide" ThiSgUide, produced a~ a Jomt ventureby Schervlsh, Vogel, Merz, Car-doza, PC, and E B H DeSign,was developed to prOVide home-owners and the Hlstonc DlstnctCommISSIOn a usable tool forchoosmg color schemes appropri-ate for DetrOIt's ~even IHstorlcdlstncts

Others honored were- Smith, Hinchman & Grylb'

deSIgn for the U S Customs & Im-mlgratlOll IIlspectlOn FaCIlity atthe DetrOll/W1I1d~or border,

- Straub As~oClates/ Architects'deSign of the Oakland/Troy Air-port Terminal,

- Rossetti Assoclates/ Archi-tects Planners for the Traveller~Tower~ expansIOn 111 SouthlJeld,

- Lockenbach/Zlegelman andPartners, Ioc for the HandlemanCompany 01 TI'OV,

- TMP ASSOCiates, Inc lor acollege dormitory at Suomi Collegem the Upper Pemnsula,

- Jlcklmg Lymdo & PowellASSOCiates [nc lor a techmcalcenter at Oakland Commumty Col-lege,

- Robert Margerum Inc for the

one of 10 two week HawaIIan triPS for two, worth$5,000 Trip Includes round-trip airfare, sevennights each at the Hyatt Regency Walklkl and theHyatt Regency MaUl, free rental car. $500 spendingmoney; and rnore Or you can choose a cash prizeof $5.000 instead For more details, see your lotteryagent So play TICTac Toe Somebody's ~going to Hawall, Why not you? ~

Park reSident Robert C WakelyJr , AlA, receIved one of 15 honoraward~ from the DetrOIt Chapterof the Amencan Institute of Archl'tects recently, He was honored forIllS adaption of the Grosse PomteShores MUniCipal Building

He was also the recipient of aMichigan Society 01 ArchitectsHonor Award for hiS project ThebUilding had been deSIgned In 1918by Albert Kahn, but had gonethrough at least SIXalterations thathad erased much of Kahn's deSIgnReplacmg the ongmaI13-foot-hlgharched wmdow~ that had beenaltered to accommodate 9-foot ceil-Ings mdke the bulldmg look morelike Kahn's onglnal deSIgn

Other reSidents honored mcludeWilham Kessler & ASSOCiates whoreceived two awards for hlstoncpreservatIOn/adaptive re-use proJ-ects The firm was honored for theKresge FoundatIOn Headquarter~In Troy ThiS pr01ect preservedand adapted a claSSIC 1852 farm-~tead m toe midst 01 the BigBeaver Road bUlldmg explOSIOnThe re~ult IS a three-acre farmamid several hundred acres ofmirror glass

Another wlOnmg J Irm washonored not for a bUilding but for

Local architects honored

lfyoJ'l want to wina Il:iP to ail,ve got no time to lose.

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

You've only got 2 weeksto send in a losing TIC mc TOE

instant lottery ticket.Simply fill out the entry form below send It in With alOSing TICTac Toe ticket It must be receIVed at theaddress listed below by January 31 You could win

r----------------------------------.I Send in a losing Tic Tac Toe instant lottery ticket, II and you could win a trip for two to Hawaii. II rntry rulE'S II 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 I

11 1( r 10f' In tnnllotle,y ticket WIth an offICial entry 101m0' copy Or InslPOd at on entry form

I r" t vour nome mdross and telephone number 00 a plain pIeCe of pape' 3 Entoes musl be'Thll('(j n 1 plo ...(nv('lope no larger lhan 4",10- 4 Do NOTuse the sweep,'akesoddress below I'r, ( 'V I 011"11' CCHiPsponden,e or pnze claims EnvelOpes WIllnot be opened It not selected os a

I 'we' , Ilok", W nner 5 rntnes must be recerved by Joruory 3\ 1'186 6 All ent'l(,s become the Iprr ~(',ty ,/ thp M chtgan Lollerv and cannot be r('tu'ned 7 A p,!:'1m,no,y drowlng may be

I ('onn Jc!('(J / 0fTl among entnes receIVed 8 The setectlon at WInners Will "* cOflducted onr ( t>runry \-1 !OM 'n accordance wlIh Lollery procedures and drrectrves 9 lhe 10Wlnners WI'l Ix> IpH'\('nlf',j Wile S'J000 by the MichlgOn Stale Lollery Winners can k<>epIhe $5000 and nol take

I Ihf> Inp Or Ih0 Wlnne's can use the tnpotferand poytOllhe Inptrom Ihe$5000 Tflpmu;1 be loken It I' 1)(>,(>mtJP' 3t 19M tl ThE'names of WInner; WIllbe announced'll. Send enlnes to MichiganI II II' 'j InrI 10 f1owo I ~wcepsfa~f>s LanSing MI48690 (Useoddless for sweepsla~e\ only] I

I N/,Mf - INl[)R[ >.~ _

I lilY IAT! liP II TEl rPH~>rif N JMBW I ] I

I ---------_.~----------------_.

, ~.

DETROIT20535 Jamn CllIlzenl HIghway

Hear Nor1hland SIloppl"9 CenterEAST DETROIT

20929 Gratlcl AvenueNur 8 MIIe'Road

WESTLAND7040 Wayne Road

Near Walland SIlopping Center

ttt a

!-or students currently enrolled In grades 5 6 & 7

• Altend classes WIth a ULS student. Meet our teachers

Please let us know you will be our guest by .January 22

Call the Middle School at 886.4220

• D,scover what makes our school a speCIal nlace

YOU CANCHARGE IT

850 Briarcliff Drive, Grosse Pointe Woods

Grosse Pointe Shores Municipal Building

CASUAL SHIRTS $1 ')99• • • •• FROM "

OUTERWEAR ",.1. FROM$4999

BLAZERS I •••••• I •• FROM $11000

SPORTCOATS FROM$9900

S U ITS FROM$14900

SWEATERS 1.' FROM$1499

ALSO SLACKS, JEANS AND MORE

Come to theUNIVERSITY LIGGETT

Middle SchoolVISITORS' DAY

Friday, January 248:15 a.m.-3:15 p.m.

",')fl/II ~radl' \lltdl'l//~ (I/}{I ,!Ielr I('(lt her III (III IIrtheofof!,ICllf dig si/e Dill' ofIhe 11/(/1/1 '1/{lIId\ Oil" le{// III//~ ('\f)(lfll'//( 1'\ of ollr Middle .'It hoof

Page Four-A

UniversIty Liggett welcomes students of any race, religion, sex, <1rethnic ongtn

j

,-----~---~...... _- ----

: , 4 a

Page Flve-A

PRICES IN EFFECTJANUARY 16th, 17th & 18th

FRESH

HALIBUTSTEAK

SPECIALSOUTHERN

PECANGOBBLER'S

$19!xCANADA DRY1 LITER SAI.E

• CWB SODA • SELTZER• GINGER ALE • IDNIC

• DIET TONIC

FRESH

MEDIUM

FROGLEGS

THE WINE THATCELEBRATES FOOD!

ALL VARIETIES

SAVE $400 on 3 litersPLUS SAVE $1.00 on MAIL-IN REBATE

SWORDFISH $498STEAK LB.

FRESH SQUEEZEDPINK GRAPEFRUITNEW A T VILLAGE

FOOD MARKET

CALIFORNIA RHINE WINE SALESAVE $200 on 3 liters

COUNTRY WINE SALE1.5 liters

SAVE $260

TASTE THE QUALITYWHITE ZINFANDEL, CHENIN BLANC,

ZINFANDEL, GAMAY ROSEFRENCH COLOMBARD

THE BEAUJOLAIS BY WHICH ALLOTHERS ARE JUDGED

SAVE $150 on 750 mi.MACON BLANC, SAVE $2.00 on 750 mi.

.370 LB.

.... 680 LB.• •

. . . . . .4 FOA $100

. . . . . . . . $169 EA.

•••

• • • • • • • • • • •

DAILY 8 a.m. - 7 p.m.Wednesday and Saturday 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.

LAMB 99~.PATTIESU.S.D.A. CHOICEL.EAN AND MEATY $12~SHORT RIBSOF BEEFOUR OWNRANCH STYL.E $15~SLICEDBACON

18328 Mack Avenue - In The Farms/

"THIS WEEKS BELL RINGERS"

VllLAGE.MARKET

STUFFED WITH OUR OWN SAGEAND ONION DRESSING

i .J ....

FARM FRESHFRUIT & VEGETABLES

finewinesliquor

GROSSE POINTE NEWS'e.l)

SWISS PREMIUMBROWN AND SERVE 98;'PORKSAUSAGE Y8oz. PACKAGE

EXTRA L.EAN - BONEL.ESS

:~~~ERFLY $298',CHOPS LB.

TAKE 'N' SAKESTUFFED

PORK CHOPS$22~.

FRESH-\ OUR OWN ALL BEEF $289M ~J\MEAT LOAF

, .' READY TO BAKE2LB. PAN

VILLAGE FOOD MARKET HASADDED AN ALL NEW SELF SERVECHEESE COUNTER. CHEESE FROMALL AROUND THE WORLD FORYOU TO SELECT FROM. STOP BYTODAY AND SEE THE WIDE SELEC-TION WITH GREAT PRICES TOMATCH.

[I.'}fj;:~ GUNSSERG~-~-- \~ - J.I CORNED BEEF $159':~~' BRISKET0-. '"

II~'~ AU. FLAT CUTS LB.

#1GRANNY SMITH APPLESORCHID

RED GRAPEFRUITNEW CROP

JUMBO CANTALOUPEFRESH

GREEN CABBAGE#1

CARROTS 3 LB. BAG ••••••••••••••• 980FRESHGREEN ONIONS OR RADISHES. 3'OA $100

Yates is top financialofficer at appliance chain

David CYates of theFarms has beenassIgned thepo~t of chIef fl-na nClal offICerfor HIghlandSuperstores,Inc Yates IS al-ready vIce presl-dent-fll1ance lorthe applIancecham He Jomedthe fIrm m AprIl, Just before its InI-tIal public offenng He has ex-penence m varIOus adm Illlstralive, fInancIal and plannmg pOSI-tIons WIthAvery InternatIOnal andNational Steel corporatIOns YatesISa graduate of the Harvard Bus)-np"" ';chool

\nnouncing .. Patrick L.Bruch of the Park has been nam-ed vIce preSIdent and generalmanager-tnm products for the De-trOIt Gasket dl VISIOn 01 IndIanHead Industnes ... Lynn Allard,formerly of the Farms, has beenappomted natIOnal executIvedIrector of the Canadian Condom 1-mum InstItute, headquartered mToronto Sandra Beal-d, soon tobe of the Pomte, IS regIOnalmanager of the Research Instituteof AmerIca, where her responsIbi-lIties WII! mclude assIstIng attor-neys, accountants and businesspeople WIth theIr legal researchneeds Patrick L. Sweene)' ofthe Woods IS secretary of theEastern Dental SocIety for 1985-86

- Nancy Parmenter

leadlllg IllstrumentalIsts andvocahsts from the metropolitanDetrOIt area and has fIrmlyestablIshed Itself 111 the cultural lIfeof the cIty

TENNIS?RACQUETBALL?

SQUASH?

Business

Kay is namedbank board member

M. Jaul' Kavof the CIty hasbeen appoIntedto the board ofdirectors 01First of AmencaBank-DetroItKay IS vIce pI e-sldent of ad-mInIstratIon atDetroIt Edl~onwIth responslblhty for admllllstra-tlve sen Ices and materialsmanagement She ISactIve m CIVICorgam,mtlons and ISvIce presIdentof the EconomIc Club of DetrOItKav receIved her undt'rgraduatedegree In mdustnal managementfrom the Ulllverslty of DetroIt Shealso holds a master's degree Inpersonnel p~ychology from WayneState Umverslty and a master's IIIbusmess admllllstrahon from theUniversIty of MIchIgan

Vandals hit KerbyPersons unknown apparently

yanked a fIve-foot pIece of fencepo~t out of the ground at KerbySchool and used it to break fIvewmdows over the weekend Ac-cordll1g to Farms police reports,the two-by-four-foot wmdows werelocated behmd bushes III an unhtarea of the school There were nosigns of entry

Thursday, January 16, 1986

Choicesof

Mary-Louise SeloverAssistant Director, Super Shape

Book. ... . Charlotte's Web by E.B. WhIteActor . Jack NIcholsonActre!os . " . . . Blythe DannerMOVie . Jezebel WIth Bette DaVIS and Henry FondaPlay . . .. CatsTV Show . MasterpIece TheatreNewscaster . '" . . . . . . .. . .. Peter JennrngsMagaZine .. .. The New YorkerColumnist . Russell BakerNewspaper . . .New York TimesMusic Broadway show/claSSIcalEntertainer Lily TomlinPel or Animal • . . . DogSport. . .. .... ... . ... " .. . Spectator kindAthlete .. . . TIm Fox. '85 Free Press marathon winnerPro Team.. . .. .... . .. Detroit TIgersMost Admired Person . My momFlower DaffodIlColor . ... . BlueVacatIon Spot. . . Maine UJoodsFavorite Food. . . .. . Lrngurne wzth whIte clam sauceFavorite Drink .. . . Coffee lrghtSong. . . What I DId for Love from Chorus LrneRelaxation or Hobby . ExerCIse/dancePet Peeve People who don't lIsten

Whatever your game ••• we offerThe BESTCWB On the East SideWe have resurfaced latex-ite courts

Special rates for racquetball, squash,senior citizens and corporate memberships

Call Debby at 774-1300FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

WIMBLEDON20250 E. 9 MILE RD. 774-1300

LaGore named artist-in-residenceGrosse Pomte reSIdent Law-

rence LaGore, pJalllSt and teacher,has been named fIrst artIst-m-resl-dence at Marygrove College

A member of the Marygroveplano faculty for i1 years, heteaches plano m Grosse POlllte andISan adjunct professor of plano attwo other local colleges

LaGore has performed exten-sively as SOlOIst, ensemble per-former and accompamst III De-troit's concert halls and III otherlocatIons throughout the UnitedStates and Canada HIS lIst of con-cert achvltIes Illcludes perform-ances on the Brunch WIth BachserIes, the DetroIt InstItute of Artschamber concert senes, the Lau-denslager MemOrIal Concerts,Nightcap with Mozart and Praelu-dlUm Concerts at Orchestra HallIn addItIOn he has also performedon radIO and teleVISIOnbroadcastsand has recorded for Andes andGolden Crest Records

In 1977, LaGore founded thechamber musIc senes, "Saturdaysat Four" The Illnovatlve senes,now III Its mnth season, features

~~---_.---- __ "4...a;......_-- - ... -

Opinions & letters Page Slx-A

Thursday, January 16, 1986

•-T

Audit Rureauof Clrctll.Atlons

WH~N YOUS~~TH~I~~IP~

MOVIN~.~.

knew what I was doing when I vot-ed for the manna referendumAfter all, Grosse Pomte ISa boat-Ing commumty. A project whichimproves an inadequate and sub-standard marma at no expense tothe taxpayers makes sense to my-self and (please note elected offi-clals) the majorIty of the voters.

Walter NikeschGrosse Pointe Woods

the Grosse Pointe WoodspolIce In-formed us that an officer had foundour dog I wanted to thank thepolice offICerwho made our Christ-mas day happy agam, and all theother officers who kept an eye outfor a lost dog on theIr roundsThank you for bemg on duty for ourfamIly thiS Christmas!

Erich and Jane Wilson AdichsVilla Park, III.

gy we-learn that most of our ma-ternal and paternal grandmothers- all the way back - were MI~s(blank) because then maldennames were never used

I suggest we start the new yearby USIngthe malden name m obi-tuarIes and stOrIes about womenUnless a father or brother ISmen-tioned, we have no Idea who theyare

Dorothy <Jones) KilpatrickDetroit

We do not know what the schoolsystem had m mmd when It usedthe phrase Semor Center Thatshould be readily available.

But the most Important Item ofmformatIon we seek ISa lIst of theneeds and interests of seniorCitizens whIch would be prOVIdedthrough a Semor Center, yet arenot currently prOVIdedby Servicesfor Old CItIzens at Ferry SchooLthe Neighborhood Club, CalvaryCenter, GP Semor Men's Club,Senior Women's Club, AARPChapters, the several churches, etal

WIth that mformatIon we wouldthen be m a pOSItIOnto plan thelocatIOn, eqUIpment, staffmg andfInancmg of the Semor Center

.John J. Schonenberg ,Jr.Gro<;<;cPointe Farm"

"f('m~r MIChl~IH'1 P'rf. .." A~~I.atlOnRnd 'JAohonRI Np~ "lpt4~T A~CW>Clatlon

NEWS CLASSIFIED DISPLAY882-0294 882-6900 882-3500

Pat Pahol<t.h JoAnne BllTt8T R~eT Ihgeq~I"w", Fdltor A~"l'lant to Pubhlllher MenAger

~;I", Frohman and CIAIIi"'llfied Menage-f

PM RoU"I-'lf'AUto "alan" "dllor \'lAIn Br0N3ell 'iRI~f1 PromoCmnF'\-(' "fan(' RUTC'sr

re~K\ 0 ( onnor ( 1Tol FI"C"hpT Ch".o.lI ••"'p<>m fdllor Anne \1ulh(>nn r BenJamm (,mffr('\tf'H RI'...ard Kim K01loN<;Kl

\\ lihllr 'ftl~t(n {of"N!'n Slan~ "'t('\C KulickFdltonal \onlilultant

CIRCULATION"lkc ArldU(J{I)k 882-6900Tom (JrttnwO<Xl f rAn BAcha~arH:Y T'armenTtf

To the Editor:My husband and I were vlsltmg

relatIves m Grosse Pomte WoodsthiS Christmas We brought ourAlaskan malamute puppy alongand late ChrIstmas Eve, she ranaway Wecontacted all area polIceand spent the remaInder of themght followmg her tracks beforewe lost them We were frantic

ChrIstmas afternoon, a call from

WoodsmarIna can't accommodateboats larger than 27 feet or boatswith deep draft. Clearly Improve-ments are necessary

It seems to me that the Woodsgovernment doesn't care aboutboaters By ItS mactIon the citygovernment seems to be tellIng thevoters that they made a mIstake,It knows what's best for them.Well, I would like to think that I

Woods police are alert

-

Time to give women credit~

Tq Ithe.~ilor: , , , I '

This is an mterestIng article(profile of MarIan TraInor, Nov21, 1985) The only thing left out IS"who" she is - the fIrst rule of re-portmg Her maiden name is nevergiven - nor that of her father, butwe are told a great deal about herhusband.

Clarify term, senior centerTo the Editor:

The school survey IdentIfies a'iubJect for whIch follow-upmqUlryISmdlcated

Three out of four respondentssupported establIshment of aSemor Center When one considersthat the typIcal respondent wasover age 61, that ISa very slgmfl-cant fmdmg.

Apparently It IS perceived thatmadequate attentIOnISbemg givento the n~ds and interest of semorCItizens,and that the current defi-CIenCiescould and should be metby a Semor Center

If the needs and mterests ofsemor cItizens were, m the opimonof the respondents, bemg proper-ly addressed there would obvIOUS-ly be no mterest m or support fora Semor Center

I thmk it IStime we give womencredit under their own names, notthat of their husbands In geneolo-

Robert G EdgarPublisher

BUT If \ ~ONtTUS~THE PO~V~RAPH,

HOWCM l T~~~'tIH~NANYONE is LYlN~ H~~E

IN WASHINGTON?

Robert B. Edgar, Editor and Publisher(1940-1979)

from our readers

Grateful

Grosse Pointe News

To the Editor:On Monday, Jan 7,about 4 pm,

a Grosse Pomte Farms reSident,walkmg from Lothrop Road to-ward Brownell School, experienc-ed severe breathing difficultIesand collapsed at the corner ofMount Vernon and Chalfonte

Two women dnvmg by noticedhISpredIcament, stopped to offertheIr help and took him to St JohnHospital The man and hiS famIlyhope that this notIce m the GrossePomte News Will reach the twogood Samaritans as an expressIOnof their gratitude

George Bielski FamilyGrosse Pointe Farm ..

Voters approved Dlarina expansion

Publl.hod W•• kly by Ant•• ho I'uhh.b ....99 KERCHEVAL AVE.

Grosse Pomte Farms, Michigan 48236Sfor()nd CfU!lJ Po'tAIC'f' PAId At Of'1rolt "lrhlliCan

CU!> P!. 23G-411OO I

To the Editor:I enjoyed readIng your Jan 9th

article, "Woods Spent 1985Build-mg, Improvmg " The city govern-ment seems to be domg a good Jobdeciding how to spend our tax rev-enues. Over a millIOndollars wasspent on streets and sewers,S120,OOOon a new fire engine,$25,000 on tenms courts, and soforth. These are, of course, worth-while projects and the funds seemto be well spent The taxpayersmust rely on a sound city govern-ment to make WIsespendmg deci-sIOns SInce It IS impossible to ob-tain prIor voter approval for allmajor expenditures However/when specifICapproval for a proJ-ect ISobtaIned from the voters, Ido expect the city government torespond

About four years ago, the Woodsvoters passed a referendum onmanna Improvements at theGrosse Pomte Woods LakefrontPark StudIes have shown that themarina expansion would be total-ly paId for by the boat well rentalfees It would cost the taxpayersnothing Have there been any ad-ditions, changes, major Improve-ments to the marIna SIncethe elec-tions? Is anythmg planned for thenear future? Has the city govern-ment even agreed on any kind ofa plan for marma Improvements?The answers are all no

The voters approved the marinaIssue because the Woods has theworst marIna and the most boatersof all the Pomtes Many wells re-main unused every year becauseof a low bridge. This adds up tothousands of lost dollars yearlyAnd unlIke the other Pomtes, the

the qualitIes of one of their number, eventhough weekly newspapers in smaller commun-Ities traditionally served as training groundsfor big city journalism. That ISstill true today,even in the era of chain journalism. So we wishTom good luck even as we regret hIS leavingour staff

"Tom Greenwood will help fill the void lettby Charley Manos' death," said BenjamIn JBurns, executive editor of the Detroit News inannouncing the appointment. "He has a gentle,easy wit and cares a lot about people."

Readers of the Grosse Pointe News oftenfound evidence of that wit and that caring forpeople in Tom's column, "fyi," meaning "foryour mformation," which had appeared week-ly on the front page of the News. But he alsoserved as a photographer and reporter for theNews, most recently covering the Woods andthe Farms where he specialized in coverage ofthe police departments.

Tom was one of five Wayne State UniversityJournalism graduates on the Grosse PointeNews staff. He has served in the Marines, in-cludmg duty m VIetnam, has worked as aphotographer for the Associated Newspapersweekly chain m Wayne, and has done free lancephotography for other area publications.

Tom's experIence, writing ability and inter:est in people ought to make his column a fineaddItion to the Detroit News and Tom himselfa worthy successor to Charley Manos. Tom Willstart occupying hiS new space Feb 3 on athree-times-a-week basis.

;

By now most residents of the Pomtes knowthat the Detroit News has picked Tom Green-wood, columnist, reporter and photographer forthe Grosse Pointe News, to succeed the lateCharley Manos as a Detroi t News columnist Inour view, the Grosse Pointe News' loss IS theDetroit News' gain

Community journahsts always are pleasedwhen metropolItan daily journalism recognizes

Mice and the elephantWhen 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 parksthat they remmded him of a mouse trymg to are at their maximum capacity and fully utiliz-sleep with an elephant. ed by the residents of the city of Grosse Pomte

What Trudeau meant, of course, was that Park"Canada always had to be careful In dealIng wIth "The total recreational area available Inthe Umted States sImply because the UnIted Grosse Pomte Park is less than 30 percent ofStates IS so much larger In populatIOn and m the national recommended standard," thethe size of its economy than Canada IS And as statement adds, "The neighborhood parks oc-a consequence Canada doe~ Impose certain re- cupy only 28acres to service a population of ap-strictlOns on U,S. residents, US Investment proXImately 13,600or a ratIO of two acres perand other matters to avoid bemg overrun by 1,000 reSidents, That IS consIderably less thanpeople and interests from the other SIde of the 10 acres per 1,000 reSIdents recommended byborder the NatIonal Recreation Association. Even

To some extent Trudeau',:, comment dppll\.:::> \\hcn one consIders the 11.9 acres of schoolequally to the relatIOnships between the city of playgrounds In Grosse Pointe Park, the ratIO ISDetroit 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 Detroitlimit the use of their publIc faCIlIties by nonre- reSIdents but at all nonresidents. The parks aresidents The recent adoption by the city of Dear- fenced and guarded, admission is limited toborn of an ordinance to exclude nonreSidents those displaying resident passes and to theirfrom the use of some of its parks in a case in guests, and enforcement of the residents-onlypomt 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 officersgrounds that the ordInance was aimed at the ex- The Dearborn controversy has raised theclusIOn 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 policyNAACP who is leadmg the Dearborn boycott, ISaimed at all nonresidents. In fact, the policyhave been quoted as saYing, In answer to a has been in effect in the Park smce 1931, whichnewsman's questIOn, that If they Win theIr case was long before blacks became a majority ofagainst 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 theS1. Clair Shores and the five Grosse Pomtes, Pointes any more than it is in Dearborn or inthat have residents-only parks, because such Detroit. But our contention is that the majorrestrIctions then WIll be "unconstitutIOnal." reason for the residents-only policy in theNobody knows how widely this feeling ISshared Pointes is the sheer size of Detroit and otherby all NAACP members but it ISan opinion that metropolitan area communities in comparisonworries some Grosse Pointe reSIdents. with the SIze of the parks m the Pointes. On

" . that baSIS, we doubt the practicability of theYet the. mformatIo~ we have IS that the proposal by a Detroit reader of the Grosse

Grosse Po~nte~ are not m the same c~tegory as Pointe News that Detroit reSIdents be permit-Dearborn In thiS c?se ~ecause the Pomtes haye ted to use parks m the Pointes by paying a fee.developed and maIntamed their parks. only With If a large number of Detroit residents shouldtht: use of funds generated by taxatIOn .m the be willing to share the costs'of operating andPomtes, by user fees applIcabl~ to reSIdents ma'ntaining the park the increased usage bywho use the parks, or by contrIbutIOns from I'd 'h" 1 d' .Pointe reSIdents. No federal or state funds nonreSI ents mlg t sImp y ~pflve so~e res.I-have been mvolved so fa as we kno . dents of thelr.f~eedom to enJoy parks m theIr

,I' \\, own commUnItles.The city of Grosse Pointe Park has issued a In effect, the suburbs are "mice" in compar-

state~en~ ?f explanation to people who have Ison with the Detroit "elephant" and, it seemsbeen mqumng about the comparIsons made be- to us, Justlfled in raising barriers to the generaltween the Pointes and Dearborn. It points out nonreSident public's use of their park facilitiesHtat' ~'because of the minimum neIghborhood so long as they do not violate,federal and state'park space available," the Park has restricted legal requirements

From one News to another

In the public interestThe New Year puts additIOnal responsIbIhtIes vehicles on state roads declined 47 from the

on Michigan motOrIsts in t~e public mterest. num~er who died in the same period in 1984,As.of Jan, 1, the fme for fallure to wear a seat despIte a natlonal trend of increasing traffic

belt Jumped from $15 to $25, as the mandatory death tolls. So there is evidence that increas-seat belt law entered ins sixth month. And on ing use of seat belts does save lives.the same date, the state required most cars in As for the exhaust tests the chIef complamtsthe Detro!t ~etropolitan area to u~dergo ex- to date have been about the varymg costs and~aust testmg In an effort to reduce all' pollutIOn the varymg results The state permits a chargem the Wayne, Oa~la~d and Macomb counties. of up to $10 for the test, with some stations and

DespIte. some CritiCism, the new seat belt law garages charging less. But several instancesISIncreasmgly popul~r among motorists, A sur- have been reported of cars failIng the test _v~y conducte~ for MIChIgan Secretary of State and passing It at a different statIOnRIchard Austm found that 80 percent of the 600 Owmng and driving a car are heavy respon-persons quefled favor the law now as compared sibllitles They include not just the origmal costwith 67 percent in ~ay, two months before the and the contmumg operatmg expenses but alsolaw became effectIve the many regulations imposed on the owner; a

However, the survey also found that only 58 license for the car and each driver, reqUIred m-percen~ of the respondents say th~y buckle up surance, reqUIred seat belt use, and now re-all the tIme. That figure, however, ISbetter than quired testmg (In the three~ounty area) for ex-the 29 ~rcent who gave the same positive ~aust emISSions Add to the list the many traf-r.esponse InMay, before the law became effec- flc laws motorists are expected to obey.live,. So the percentag~ of people buckli~g up It is true that a sense of responsibility can-has mcre<;tsed subst.antlally "":Ith the law In ~f- not be imposed by legislation But laws that hitfeet. A~d It should rIse even h~gher WIth the In- the pocketbook when people shirk their respon-crease In the pe!1aIty f~r fallIng to buckle up. sibilities do tend to promote compliance. Some

Furthermore, m the fIve months after the law drIvers fall to realIze that cars can be deadlytook 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-AThursday, January 16, 1986

Prime Time for senior citizens

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successfully IS for a group to keepa close watch on key bills that mayaffect their membership Mem-bers of the group than set off aplanned chain reactIon to com-mUnIcations to lawmakers beforecrUCial votes.

For instance, the members of agroup or governmg board chooseslegislative priorities at state andnational levels Issues are thenselected for actIon m upcominglegislative sessions that you wantyour representatIves to brmg be-fore the legislative bodies. DeSig-nated members of the group cancontact the staffs of congressmen,senators or state legislators andask that they be advised about theCrItical stages of legIslative bills,when CItizen OpInIOncan have themost effect

Be speCIfIC. Tell how a measureWill affect you as a semor citizenand generally how it will affect thelocal economy

Spread the word SWIftly WIth apreplanned telephone networkwhere the legislatIve "watcher"calls six members and so on. Wlth-m hours, hundreds of memberscan be contactmg lawmakers Withopmions on legIslation your organ-IzatIOn cares aobut m time to affectvotes.

__ I_s_a_y__ i Wh_a_t_I_d_o_n_'t_s_a_yIt started early mto the New High school IS the last formal edu- What may have started It all IS as well

Year; a disqUieting gnawing cation they receive and It should be the blatant self-adverhsmg the I read further mto the surveyevery time I pIcked up a news- most comprehensive for which news media have been domg and found that, of 442 people ask-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 newswouldn't go away. It got stronger slOn news team that doesn't coverage of their schools WhileIt took me a week to recognize Instead of inflating grade pomt trumpet they "have learned ex- grateful that seven of 10 readwhat made my Jaw muscles averages, why not just guarantee elUSively" or "first reported" school coverage, I also know that

kids in certam classes a minImum d h th kId t ktWitch, my palms Itch and my back somethmg. I won er ow many 6 percent In nee 0 wormuscles clench people have dislocated shoulders harder

from pattIng themselves on the So, anyone who thinks theIt 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 yourpaper. SItting in the printing plant What news medIa forget ISmfor- story Ideas or tOPiCSto me at theporing over the pages, I was ex- matlOn ISour bUSIness Reportmg newspaper If there's an Issue I'vepoundmg on my favorIte subject, somethmg first ISour duty, not our missed, a subject I've Ignored orwhat's wrong With the schools Mike goal a mIstake I've made, let me know.

A little item set me off. It seems Andrzejczyk That brmgs up the Item that ap- I'm not klddmg. An artIcle abouta group offers free exercise classes ) - pea red on last week's edltoflal educatIon wrIters I once read saidat South in the afternoons. I ,j page about how 70 percent of peo- school writers should be driven bywondered out loud why only at " pie surveyed by the publIc schools "anger In the face of the promiseSouth and whether North kIds turn to thiS paper for school news unfulfIlled." That anger shouldcould attend If such an Item belongs In a drIVE' us all, from the superinten.

I added - to no one in particu- newspaper, It belongs on the edl- dent to the parent whose child ISlar - that, since it W,:lSmy turn in grade? BeUer yet, make sure they tonal page, which IS the property starting kmdergarten. We oftenthe 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 andvent a little anger Editor Pat Pa- semester course m which students ideal world, a publisher reframs screaming - to get them to do theholsky turned to me and saId, can memorize past SAT or ACT from taInting news columns be- fight thmg"Mike, when aren't you ventIng tests to improve theIr chances of cause he has the opmlOn page on You know something? Thatyour anger?" high scores and getting mto col- which to express himself knot inSide IS loosemng a little If

MISSInga 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 toI'm asleep" but he won't know Ralph EllIson cogmtlOn and even a lIttle daunted do, a phone to answer and stones

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 anevening of ignorIng the telephone,dlfty dIshes, frozen pipes and laun-dry to be sure. I was in the throesof Impotent rage.

It's been a while smce I've hadan attack. Usually, I focus myanger and only let it show near va-cation No vacation will help this

Shaking, unfocused rage is rareto me. Through experience, I'velearned how to shut out certamthmgs As Richard Pryor's Mud-bone character says, I've learnedhow to deal with the WhIte Man'sWorld

When Ignorance, stupIdity orsuch thIngs threaten, I turn awayWhen they fall in front of me, Iwork around them. I've learned tosmIle and agree and, above all,keep my mouth shut

It's lIke walkIng through a cowpasture, though You can onlydance so far before you step insomethmg Then you get mad.

In the midst of these mfrequentattacks, I want to stand up at meet-ings I cover and give people a goodharangue I'm not supposed to,however, because it will comprom-Ise my objectIVity I say nothmgand seethe

One thIng I wanted to railagamst came up at the Jan. 6Board of EducatIon meetmg. TheadmInistratIOn formed a commit-tee to study grading One poSSibleoutcome could be a weighted grad-ing system

A weIghted gradmg system sup-posedly rewards students who taketougher classes by guarantee10gsomethmg extra on their reportcards Simply put, a grade be-comes a reward for motivation,not performance

The logiC behmd the system isjust as flawed. A weIghted systemassumes that all students who taketough academic classes go on tocollege It also assumes that hIghschools are farm teams In whichcollege students are trained beforethey graduate to the big leagues.

Pubhc high schools can'tbecome the college student pro-ducing factones Into which theirnon-publIc counterparts are evol-ving. From publIc high schools,kids may choose any direction.

ThiS new pattern of providingsecurIty for older citizens will notaffect those receivmg SOCialSecurIty benefIts now nor wIll It af-fect those In their late 40s and 50s

A move towrd privatizatIon ISbemg trIed out in Great BrItaIn Itis a supplement to theIr baSIC re-tirement program

British workers, If they sochoose, may allot a part of theIrSOCial SecurIty taxes to an ap-proved pensIOn plan TheIr em-ployers WIll also pay mto It Theworker's fund balance would ac-company hIm from Job to Job Onhis death, the worker would havesomething tangIble to leave hiSfamily.

Experts belIeve that prIvate pen-sIOn programs are superIOr togovernment programs. Thistheory of prIvatizatIOn IS not onethat those now recelvmg SocialSecurity benefits wIll have to con-tend With, however they will haveto deal With proposed cuts In Medi-care

It IS one that older Citizensshould do more than worry aboutIt calls for concerned action. InearlIer days citizens who dIsagreeWIth government proposals wouldtake to the street corners and pro-claim their displeasure.

Supposedly teleVIsion has takenthe place of those mformal streetcorner forums For those who canafford the money for that kmd ofexposure to vOice their opimons,that's true, but for indiViduals, thecost is prohibItIve.

Letters directed to elected of-fIcials m Washington, D.C., lettingthem know how you personallywould be affected by changes andreductions in Medicare could help.

Your opInIOn IS your vote. Theballot IS Important to legislators Awritten message prOVIdes docu-mentation of your opinion as avoter.

If a measure comes up that youhave not known of previously,eIther because you missed It in thepaper or It was not given muchpublicity and you want to protestIt, send a wire There are twoWestern Union services that WIlIspeed your directive on its way Itcosts just $2 50 for a IS-word mes-sage. There's no charge for-your'name, organIzation, affilIatIOnsand address. Write your opinIon in15 words or less and phone themessage to Western Umon

These messages are sent direc-tly to termmals on CapItol Hill atthe WhIte House or to statecapitals They are delIvered mwrIting.

If you have more to say, send aMatlgram. For $2.80you are allow-ed 50 words to present your mes-sage.

Timmg IS all Important. You'vegot to get your message to law-makers before they vote on keybIlls. Keepmg track of what billsare commg up IS not always easyfor an Individual. This ISwhere thevalue of an orgamzation comes In

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By Marian TrainorAlmost never a day goes by that

along with dlsturbmg news of cata-strophes m the au and threats ofterroflsts that we don't also readof proposed cuts m Medicare orsome prediction that Social SecUfl-ty Will become too burdensome forwage-earners to support becauseof the ratio of those who contributeand those who benefIt ISshrinking

Granted that airplane crashesand threats of SUICIdeattacks aremuch more upsettmg than changem Medicare and Society Security,but to those who need and dependon benefits such news is bad news

It was noticeable that one of thequestIOns that was put to PresidentReagan when he gave his speechon Libya was one that dealt, notWIth that CflSIS,but With the effectsof cuts m Medicare payments tohospitals

It was pomted out that older pe0-ple were bemg sent home beforethey were ready to go because ofthe practIce Instituted by thegovernment In 1983 of paymg astandard amount based on the pa-tient's Illness, glVlng hospitals m-centIves to trIm unnecessary ex-penses.

Honoring the question, the pres-Ident reassured the correspondentthat the problem was bemg lookedInto and then he moved along toother questions concernmg thetopic of hiS speech, which was theUnIted States' boycott of Libya.

It was not an abrupt dismissal ofthe question but an answer, thatcoming from the preSident, con-taIned a measure of reassurance.

It all comes back to a balancedbudget While the goal of a balanc-ed budget is one that we all wouldlike to see achieved, the measurestaken to reach that end should notthreaten the health and incomesecurity of older Americans.

We are told that Medicare is fac-mg legislative cuts of almost $10blllion over the next three years.PrevIOus savings from Medicarecuts came from doctors and otherhealth prOViders This is m linewith the fact that health costs arerising twice as fast as older per-sons'incomes Even so, the cost ofhospItalIzation for Medicare pa-tients IS increased from a deducUIble of $400 to $492 (23 percent).

The fate of Social Security isanother bothersome Item. Al-though it is not tied to the federalbudget, it IS dependent on the con-trIbutIOns of those In the workforce

EconomISts say that as the popu-latIOn grows older and lIves longer,It IS gomg to become mcreasInglydifficult to fund Social Security be-cause the proportion of older peo-ple will have increa&ed to a pointwhere the contribution WhIChworkers must pay will be veryhIgh

We are told that It IS pOSSibleCongress will more toward aphaSIng-out of SOCIalSecurIty andtoward a phasing-in of private pro-grams to protect retirees.

_~l _

____________________ -_-_- •• 4 ~---~~. ~-~

wo.,..""-......

Thursday, January 16, 1986

Catherine F. EngelPrivate services for Mrs Engel,

88, of Trombly Road, were heldWednesday, Jan 8, at the Verhey-den Funeral Home and ElmwoodCemetery

She died Jan. 5 at PresbytenanVillage, In Redford Township .

Born In Kalamazoo, she was pre-deceased by her husband, John HJr and is survived by two sons,John H III and Stephen F , andtwo grandchildren

Interment was at Elmwood Ce-metery

Roland A. BengeServICes for Mr Benge, 83, of

Vernier Road, were held Friday,Dec 27, at the Verheyden FuneralHome

He died Dec. 23 at S1. John Hos-pital

Born in QUincy, Mich., he retIr-ed as vice president of the DetroitBank & Trust Co (now Comerica)and wac;; in charge (If the realestate department. Later he be-came president and founder ofRoland A Benge and Co , a firmdevoted to fmancial services.

A former bank exammer, hefounded the Michigan Bank Exa-mmers Association and was alsofounder of the Bank of Livonia,now part of the Michigan NationalBanks He served as an mvestiga-tor for Judge Frank L. Doty'sgrand jury in 1932durmg the bank-ing cnsls and was a coordinator forthe banks, and sa vmg and loan as-sociatIOns in Michigan duringWorld War II.

Mr Benge was al;;o a lecturer onreal estate appraisals, mcludingthe Board of Assessors m Chicago,and lectured on real estate loans atNorthwestern University, He wasalso a member of the faculty at theHal Stonier Graduate School ofBankmg at Rutgers University andwas in charge of real estate lend-ing at the Graduate School ofBanking at the University of Wis-onsm for five years.

Mr Benge was a member of theLochmoor club, Detroit AthletIcClub, DetrOit Club and GrossePomte Yacht Club.

He is survived by a brother,Richard, and was predeceased byhiS wife, Marvel S , and a son,Roland Jr

Interment was at Battle CreekMemonal Park, Battle Creek.

Petronella (Nell) YoungSerVIces for Mrs. Young, 98, for-

merly of the Woods, lately of StClair Shores, were held MondayJan.,6, at the Verheyden FuneralHome and St Joan of Arc Church.

She died Jan. 2 at the GeorgianEast Nursing Home.

Born m Detroit, she IS survivedby two daughters, Jane Wood-worth and Gerry Blake; one son,John J., 18 grandchildren, and 37great-grandchildren. She was pre-deceased by apother son, Samuel.

Interment was at Mount ElliottCemetery

Police warn ofphone solicitors

Grosse Pointe Park pohce arewarmng residents about a tele-phone solicitation that they sayfalsely represents itself as bemgaffilIated with local police depart-ments as it attempts to raIsemoney

The department was alerted tothe fundraismg, which has beengoing on for the past two weeks,after reSidents called to ask aboutIt, according to Sgt David Hiller,preSIdent of the local FraternalOrder of Pohce chapter

"They are not ralsmg money forGrosse Pomte Park polIce or anyother Grosse Pointe department,"he added

The company IS called PolIcePost No. 1278, accordmg to pohceThe company, when confronted bypohce WIth reSident complaintsdemed they were mlsrepresentmgthemselves, Hiller added

Should reSidents have questIonsabout thiS or other fundralsingcampaigns, they can call theIrlocal police department to mqUirehe added '

First class fareOne-way passage in one of the

best SUItes III the doomed oceanlmer Tltamc, which sank m 1912onher malden voyage, cost $4,350,theeqUIvalent of nearly $50,000 m to-da}' 's funds, says NatIOnal Geo-graphIC

r

ItIIIIIIII OIRECTIONS FROM TUNNELI After cleanng customs on theI Canadian Side of the border turnI RIGHTto the first set of lightsI (Goyeau) then turn RIGHTontoI Goyeau to the next set of lightsI IWyandotte) Turn LEFTonto

Wyandotte and follow to ourI store at 5909 Wyandotte About aI 15 minute dnve

Switzerland tripAn II-day tour of SWItzerland,

sponsored by the War Memorialfrom April 28 to May 8, will be diS-cussed at an mformatIon mghtWednesday, Jan 22, at 7'30 p m

The tour Will mclude three mghtseach m the CItIes of Lausanne,Lugano and Lucerne. Sightseemgtours Il1 each of the CIties WIll givetravelers a view of the distll1ct cul-tures Il1 each Alpine region

The package pnce of $1,349 perpe rc;011 ISbased on double occupan-cy \\ Ith smgle supplements avall-ahle for an additional $95 A $350depOSit Will secure a reservatIonuntil the fmal payment deadhne ofMarch 15

For informatIOn, call 881-7511

James L. PicardLochmoor Club golf profession-

al J1l11Picard died the way he'dalways told fflends he wanted towlule playll1g golf Mr PICard wasstncken on the golf course at Inms-brook Resort III Tarpon Sprmgs,Fla , Jan 8

"That's the way he wanted togo," sdld Lochmoor Club presidentBob Cavanaugh "He was a golfpro all the way

"Jim Picard Will be sorelyml:>sed by everyone at LochmoorWe'll be able to replace the golf pro

but we'll never replace JimPicard, the man He was Just a:>uper, super individual"

Picard, 45, served as Loch-moor's pro for 12 years He was anative of Lafayette, La , who work-ed at Warren Overlake's Tam-O-Shan Golf Club and at BurmngTree Golf Club pflor to hiS arnvalat Lochmoor

PIcard was Michigan PGA Play-er of the Year in 1976,won severalevents III the National PGA WmterSenes, was named Michigan GolfProfeSSIOnal of the Year by hISpeers m 1982and rose to presiden-Cy of the section In 1982-83 He wasv;ldely known as one of the mostpopular pros In Michigan.

"1 have never met a man so well-liked Jm1':>death ISa deep person-alloss to me, to the Lochmoor Cluband to hiS many, many fnends,"Cavanaugh said

A reSident of Sterling Heights,Picard IS surVived by hiS Wife,Madelme, two daughters, Paulaand Amanda, hIS mother, MrsLevee Picard; and four brothers

Services were held Monday, Jan13, at the A.H Peters FuneralHome and Our Lady Star of theSea Church Interment was m Re-surrectIOn Cemetery

Staying sane series"Llvmg WIth Irrational People"

will be the second tOPiCin a three-lecture senes given by SherwinWme at the War Memorial on Wed-nesday, Jan 22, from 9'30 to 11'30am

Most people, ourselves mcluded,find It difficult to be ratIOnal on aconsistent basis, contends Wme, ashiS series, "Staymg Sane m aCrazy World," Will unravel LivingWith someone who ISsubject to m-appropnate outbursts and IssuesImpOSSible or Inconsistent de-mands, ISdifficult, he says. He Willoffer a way to deal With thiS prob-lem and show how to make reason-able demands ourselves

Wille's enthUSiastic approach tohIS subject matter has made hIma popular Councll of Sponsorsguest speaker. TIckets for theWednesday lecture are $6.50 eachThe fmal tOpiC, "Llvmg WithDanger: The Courage to be Bold,"wlll be on Wednesday, Jan 29 Call881-7511 for ll1formatlon

(details and forms at store) Callus toll free for more InfO at1-800-265- 3635

HERBHAS BEENEATING AT

UNCLE HARRY'S& IT HASN'T BEEN

HAMBURGER

~8~~~~K775.3120

George ChristofaroServices for Mr Christofaro, 80,

formerly of the Park, lately of Ea~tDetrOit, Will be held at 11a m to-day at the Verheyden FuneralHome

He died Jan IJ at St John Hos-pital

Born III Worchester, Ma:>s , hewas Ietlred tram the ChryslerCorp He was active m the EaglesClub and the Semor Men':> ClubI\Yr Chn:>tofaro was formerly agateman at the Wmdmlll PomtePark and he wa:>an aVid bowler

He IS ~urvlved by three ddu-ghters, 1\1anon Chnstofdro, GraceSImpson and Llllda Soltensch,four sIsters, one brother, fivegrandchildren. and one great-grandchild

Memorwl contnbutlOn~ may bemade to the Michigan Cancel'FoundatIOn

Interment Will be at Mount Oli-vet Cemetery

LoUIS P. MartzServICes for Mr Martz, 91, tor-

merly of Kenslllgton Road, latelyof St Clair Shores, were held Mon-day, Jail 6, at the Verheyden !"uneral Home

He died Jan 3 at the Bon SecoursNursmg Home

A nallve DetrOiter, he was thepre:>ldent of a brewery

Mr l\1arL~ wal> predeceased byhiS Wife, Berneatha, and ISsurvlved by a son, Lloyd, one grand-child and two great-grandchild-ren.

Interment was at Mount EllIOttCemetery

Patricia Ann MartinServices for Miss Martln, 32, for

merIy of St ClaIr Shores, lately o(St Petersburg, Fla , were held re-cently III St Petersburg

She died Dec 28MISS Martm, the daughter of

30-year Farms pohce Sgt PeteMartll1, IS surVived by herparents, Peter and Pdtncla Ann,three brothers, Denms, Timothyand Michael, and paternal grand-mother, Kathenne Marlm

Interment was m Clearwatel,Fla

Helene DeWitteServices for Mrs DeWitte, 89, of

Grosse Pomte Boulevard, wereheld Monday, Jan 6, at the Ver-heyden Funeral Home and StPaul's Church

She died Jan 2 at Bon SecoursHospital

Born m BelgIUm, she was pre-deceased by her husband, Paul,and ISSUrviVed by a daughter, Bet-ty H, a son, Wilham R, twograndchildren, and two great-gran(ichildren.

Interment was at Holy SepulchreCemetery

Frank William WheelerNo services for Mr Wheeler, 60,

of Notre Dame Road, were sched-uled He died Jan 6 at CottageHospital

Born m West Virgmla, he was anauto worker

Mr Wheeler was a WidowerCrematIOn was at Evergreen Ce-

meteryArrangements were made by the

Verheyden Funeral Home

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GROSSE POINTE NEWS

400z

David Frank QuinlanServices for Mr Quinlan, 36, of

Fisher Road, were held Saturday,Jan 11, at the Verheyden FuneralHome and Grosse POinte Memor-Ial Church

He died Jan. 8 at his homeBorn in DetrOit, he was a guard

for a secunty company.Mr Qumlan IS survived by hiS

mother, Ellen, and a brother, DrWilham C Qumlan He was prede-ceased by hiS fathel', Dr QUilliamQumlan

Mr. QUinlan was cremated andmterred at the Grosse POinteMemonal Columbanum

Marie Van BecelaereServices for Mrs Van Bece-

laere, 84, 01 the Woods, ",ere heldThursday, Jan. 9, at the VerheydenFuneral Home and St Clare ofMontefalco Church

She died Jan 5 at the !,'atherMurray NurSing Home, Center-11nc

A native Grosse Pomter, she waspredeceased by her husband,AdIel, and is survived by a daugh-ter, Joan Parsons a son, John, SIXgrandchildren, one great-grand-child, and a brothel

Interment was at St Paul'sCemetery

Waddell GeorgeServICes for Mr George, 71, 01

the Woods, were held Saturday,Jan 11, at the Verheyden FuneralHome and St Joan of Arc Church

He died Jan 8 at St JohnHospital

Born In Greenvllle, S C , he wasa meat cutter

Interment was at Mount OlIvetCemetery

Frances M. HughesA memOrIal mass for Mrs

Hughes, 84, formerly o{ the Pomte,lately of Newton Square, Pa , wereheld Dec 20 In Newton Square

She died there Dec 19.• Born m DetrOit, she attended the

Convent of Grosse Pomte and wasIt active m convent affairs for years

Mrs Hughes IS survived by herhusband, Victor a daughter,Susanne Landen, a ~on, Victor,five grandchildren, and sevengreat-grandchildren

Memorial contributions may bemade to Meals on Wheels, 300Pflt-chard Lane, Wallingford, Pa19086,

Interment was 10 NewtonSquare

••

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•fJ Edythe Grab• Services for Mrs Grob, 93, a

33-year reSident of Renaud Road,WIll be held Fnday, Jan 17, at 10a m at Our Lady Star of the SeaChurch

She died Jan. 14 in Cottage-Bel-mont Nursmg Center, HarperWoods

•Born m DetrOit, Mrs Grob used

to work With her parents at theSta~dard Candy Co of Detroit, theongmators .1fthe candy cane Shewas a member of Our Lady Star of

• the Sea Altar Society and theWoman's GUIld of the BlessedSacrament Monastery .

She is survived by one son, Emil• C (Jim), three grandchildren,

and three great-grandchtldrenInterment was in Mount Olivet

Cemetery.

••

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We Willbe prepared to APPRAISE and BUY Persian rugs, Gut glass,pocket watches, handmade qUIlts, old mandolms, banJOS, gUitars,VIOlins, any anhque toy or bank, pamtmgs, Japanese swords

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'("'1; Store Hours; Monday-Saturday 8:00 to 5:30Wednesday tin Noon Closed Sunday

van de Post, the fIlm deals WithJung's life Admission IS free formembers and $3 50 for non-mem-bers

Psychologist Sandor Brent andpsychotherapist I<~rederIckThompson Willco-lead a wOl'kshop,Death as an Advisor, Saturday,Jan 25, from 8'30 a m to 5 30pmat MIller Hall The cost IS $35 formembers and $45 for non-mem-bers

ParticIpants Will examine hfeexperIences, such as separatIOn'>caused by dIvorce, Job change~,movmg and growmg older

For more informatIOn on theprograms, call 885.8792

The Informal lessons Will Incor-pUI dte Ihe u~e of VIsual a Ids andopportumtles for diSCUSSIOn Theclass fee IS$55 plus a textbook, ap-proxImately $45 RegIster at thecenter or call 881-7511for addItion-al informatIOn

Begmner and refresher coursesIn contract bridge WIll begIn nextweek at the War Memonal FrankWelcenbach Will gIve one hour ofmstructlOn 10 Standard AmerIcanBndge usmg methods recom-mended by expert Frank GorenAnother hour of playmg time wIllbe Included In the eight-weekclasses which cost $30

An evenmg refresher course wIllmeet on Mondays, from 8 to 10pm, begmmng Jan 20 On Wed-nesday mormngs, from 10a ill un-til noon, another refresher courseWIllbe held from Jan 22 to March12 Beginners may enroll 10 theThursday evenmg sessIOn whIchWIllmeet from 8 to 10pill, Jan 23to March 13

Call 881-7511for additIonal Infor-matIOn

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GROSSE POINTE NEWS

Jung center plans programsShirley Lloyd, local astrologer,

opens the Center for Jung Studies'1986 program Sunday, Jan 18,when she presents her aclionastrology seminar at Miller Hall,ChrIst Church.

The cost of the seminar, WhIChruns from 2-5 p m IS $3 formembers and $6 for non-membersLloyd Will lead particIpants In anexploratIon of theIr own inner solarsystems through indiVidual andgroup exercIses

The second offering of the season- the shOWing of the fIlm, "TheStory of Carl Gustav Jung" - Willbe from 7 to 9 30 pm FrIday, Jan24, at the hall Narrated by SouthAfrican anthropologIst Laurens

Aviation ground school offeredcharts The 15-week presentatIonwill also Include an mterpretatlOnof the federal all' regulatIons anda speCial emphaSIS on weather

A free, two-day workshop "Toolslor entermg the art world' Whatstudents and artIsts need to know,"by two promment New York artconsultants, IS belOg oftered atCCS-College of Art and DeSIgn atthe Center for Creative Studiesfrom 10 a m to 5 p m Saturdayand Sunday, Jan 25 and 26, 245East Kirby

To register by the Jan

"AVIation Ground School" WIllbe offered on Thursdays, Jan 23 toMay 15at the War Memonal Thecourse WIll meet from 7 to 10 p mand Will prepare particIpants forthe FAA-wntten prIvate pIlot~>..am

FAA certIfied ground and flIghtmstructor Don Jones WIll dISCUSSthe aIrplane and ItS systems, air-ports and all' traffIC control, andnavIgatIOn by radIO and aerial

Thols for entering the art worldlIne, call the college at 872-3118,ext 225

ConductIng the workshop Will beCaroll MIchels, sculptor andauthor of "How to SurvIve andProsper as an ArtIst," and DorothySolomon, also a profeSSIOnal artconsultant They will diSCUSSbaSICproblems of launchmg and sustam-109 a career as an artIst, tools fol'

15dead- launching an art career, pubhcrelatIOns and self-promotIOn, exhi-bItion opportunItIes, dealIng Withdealers, pncmg, grants and fellow-ships and reachmg the corporatemarketplace

The workshop IS funded WIth agrant from the MIChIgan Counc!!for the Arts

Learn bridge

PSR to be honoredPhySICIans tor SOCial ResponSI-

bility (PSR l, the metropolItan De-tl'OIt chapter of InternatIOnal Phy-SICians for the Prevention of Nu-clear War, wmners of the NobelPeace Pnze 1985, Will be honoredat a service at FIrst Umtanan-Um-versa list Church, 10 30 am. Sun-day, Jan 26

Guest speakers Will be co-lead-ers of PSR, Dr Molly Hayden andDr Eugene Pernn A receptIonWIll follow the servICe

The publIc IS inVited The churchIS located at 4605 Cass at Forest InDetrOIt's Cultural Center Formore mformatlon, call 833-9107

Photo b) Elsa Frohman

1"" lhr('(' (',ample"of nur nUI,randln~ ulur'

Il II II ....C III \Il ~ (n \ I "-\lld\ I l \

I \1 \ I II \1 t I

""prr4I1H\ prFl ,,11 1.1 1I(J1

I \"()~IIII \I"~ I" " r,I ~ II III 1 I f..: I.

(II \h~II~~1101'1

""pfflalh flr!( r41 \ r 49i ?"".;{!'

____ ~Il\~

The Dale Carnegie ('ourse Will beoffered at AssumptIon CulturalCenter, 21800 Marter Road, on theborder of Grosse Pomte Woods and

There IS no fee, but reservatIOnsat e reqUIred For more mforma-tIOn, call 884 3002

Dale Carnegie course scheduledSt ClaIr Shores, on Saturdaysbeginning Jan 18

The 14-week program developsInterpersonal SkIlls, publIc speak-mg, memory deVices and self-con-fidence 10 busmess and personalPark home robbed hfe A free introductory onentatlOnWill be conducted Saturday, Jan11. at the center For reservatIOns,call 779-6111

A WhittIer Road home In thePark was broken Into sometimeSaturday evening, Jan 11 Thethief escaped With Jewelry and twotelephones, polIce saId

The mtruder got mto the homeby climbing an enclosed porch toa second-story wmdow, broke apane of glass and reacheb throughto unlock it

The InCident was reported laterthat evenmg by the homeownersInvestigatIOn contlllues

Use~ book saleThe Grosse Pomte PublIc LIb-

rary WIll hold a used book sale atthe Park Branch Library, 15430Kercheval, on Saturday, Jan 25,from 10 a m to 4'30 pm Usedbooks, paperbacks, records, cas-settes and magazmes Will be soldat bargam pnces,

For more mformatlOn, call Phyl-lIs Huxley at 343-2071

Thursday, January 16, 1986:;:

Ol,/(1of 1000 II r'i rrd IC( cI 10 1) 50

All SAl ES f NAL

The selectIOn IS phenomenal The savings fantastIc The p"ces unbelIevable

'_7/,. .....7",,"-, I" I, ". ,I,} _It ,I "!",{ ,Iii}

l~On Dollar Fur C~ "'~\, EVERY FUR REDUCED 'lea/:.

~Q,~ ~: 50% 0f f t91J('t9

RetiringDr. Charles Frohman of the Woods retired from the Lafayette

CliniC last week. Above, Dr. Thomas SUllivan, director of clinicalservices at Lafayette and another Grosse Pointer, reads a letter ofcommendation to Frohman from C. Patrick Babcock, director ofmental health for the state of Michigan. Frohman has been direc-tor of biochemistry at the clinic for 31 years. He was one of theclinic's charter employees, hired as the clinic opened in 1955. Aftera lifetime in biochemical research, he is credited with discoveryof the Frohman Factor, a protein now generally accepted as thecause of schizophrenia.

Successful aging programSt I\Ialthew's Adult EducatIOn son's Independence as normal ag-

Department \~IIIpresent "Success- Ing occurslul Aging" Thursday, Jan 23, at 7p m 10 the BIshop Donnelly ActIVI-tIes buIldIng

The program will be conductedby ArchIe Bedell, M D ,Ph D ,andPat SIkora, ACSW, both lrom BonSecours HospItal He WIll speak onthe phySical and psychologIcal ef-fects of the aging process, and sheWill give practical applIcatIonsthat WIll aId In maintaIning a per-

Stop smoking clinicThe PatIent Education Center of

Saint John Hospital has scheduledIts annual Stop Smoking Chmc theweek of Jan 20-24 The fIVe day"cold turkey" wIthdrawal pro-gram Will be held Monday throughFrIday from 7 to 8 30 P m In thehospItal auditOrIum

Each mght varIOUS physIcIans,Drs Arthur Weaver, DonaldSmith, John Burrows and JamesLanders, WIllgive mformation andtechnique trammg for smokmgwllilol awal success The meetmg.,WIll also mclude lIterature andfilms to encourage knowledge'andpositIve steps toward "klckmg thehabit"

Advance registratiOn is neces-sary and a $30 fee is chargedThere WIllbe no regIstratIon at thedoor For further mformatIOn orregIstratIon, call 343-3870

Samt John HospItal ISlocated at22101 Moross Road at MackAvenue

DETROIT ONl Y January 15 19I "' Hl

; SPECIAL SUNDAY OPENING Noon ~ r m-.)0

~~ 01 lIT jH....'(1 H' or.l or ,ro<',(> I '1 J~IY' 14 ,q,"/~llfO _

- ,

• ...... $ • e p

Thursday, January 16, 1986

day, Jan. 29, when It IS at 7 p mFor those who wish to have din-

ner before the performance, theCandlelight Theatre Buffet at theGrosse Pointe War Memonal isavailable at $10per person to thosepreVIOusly holdmg thea tel' hcketsThe buffet Will be served at 6' 30p.m precedmg "The Royal Fami-ly" performanceb Jan. 22-29 and29-31.

ReservatIOns should be made atleast 3 days in ad"ance of perform-ance date Fo!' further mforma-hon, call the War Memonal at 881-7511 The pnce mcludes serVice,tax and gra tUlties

Hawaii filmThe Grosse Pomte Adventure

Series will present "The HawaIIHappening" Monday, Jan_ 20, atthe War Memonal.

An optional dmner Will be serv-ed III the Fnes Ballroom at 6-30p m. Dmers Will partake ofCooper's Ranch punch, Kalua-baked loin of pork With fruit sauceand sweet potatoes Mauna Kea Aluau sundae topped with pmeapplesauce and a macadamia nut Willcomplete the meal m time for the8 p.m. vlewmg of the film

Tickets for the complete eveningare $16.50 per person or $4 15 forreserved seatmg of the film onlyReserve at least three days m ad-vance by check payable to GrossePomte War Memonal, 32 Lake-shore Road, Grosse Pomte Farms,MICh 48236 For additional mfor-mahon, call 881-7511.

Events

For more information. call

Hoffman Jr. and Tony are hertalented chIldren. Janet Roney, inher first major role for GrossePomte Theatre, is Gwen, Julie's m-genue daughter Gigi Gaggini andGeorge Valenta are the evet'-quar-relmg slightIy-ragged-around-the-edges balance of the senior gener-ation, while Richard Vreeland andCharles Doyle are the love inter-ests of Julie and Gwen, respective-ly Dave Keena plays the familymanager, Oscar Wolfe, a p'roto-type of all warm, interested Broad-way producers of the era Round-mg out the cast are Elayne Dressas Della and Manus Nemeth as Jo,both family retamers, and DouglasTobbe, Clif Levin, and Sal DeMpr-curio.

Directed by Chancey Miller andproduced by John Guadagnoh,"The Royal Family" has an ex-perienced and capable crew: MaryLou Johnson, stage managerGeoffrey Proven, technical direc-tor Tom Stem, set designer, Man-anne Casey, costumes, JohnCasey, sound, Blair Arden, hght-ing, Gwenn Samuel and Mae Gal-lagher, propertles and set dress-mg; and Diane Graham and Nan-cy Fisher, makeup. Marie O'Con-nor serves as apprentice directorand Tom Sullivan as assistanttechmcal director.

A few tickets, priced at $6 50,still remain for some perform-ances of the play Reservatlonsand exact mformation may be hadby calhng 881-4004 Curtain time IS8 P m. With the exception of Sun-

THE BLAKE COMPANY19806 Mack Avenue

Grosse Pointe Woods. MI 48236

881--6100

ComDlunit

Dodge Place

'Royal Fantily' opens Jan. 22

An exclusive communityof 18 custom luxury homes set on

the former estate ofHorace Elgin Dodge Ir.

A toast... to the Grosse Pointe Park Foundation which raised $3,000 toward the renovation of the Wind-

mill Park Community Center last month. Hosts for the cocktail party at their home on Ellair Place-were Paula and William Yates, center. Serving them are Councilman John Prost, left, and Mayor'Palmer Heenan, at the right.

---COMING SOON---

Women and financeA lecture deSigned to give

women insight mto their fmancesWill be held at the War MemorialTuesday, Jan 21 from 7 to 8'30pm ,

"Money Management forWomen" Will be presented by fi-nancial planner Sandra Yelensky,who Will prOVide gUidance m fiscalplanmng for the present and fu-ture Re-evaluation and decislOn-makmg regarding investments, In-surance and Wills will be amongthe subjects covered m the lecture

Tickets cost $5 per person. Foradditional mformatlOn, call 881-7511

"The Royal Family I" GrossePomte Theatre's second produc-tion of the season, opens Wednes-day, Jan 22, at Fries Auditoriumof the Grosse Pointe War Memor-Ial and runs through Fcb 1

A comedy by George S Kauf-man and Edna Ferber, "The RoyalFamily" chronicles the commgsand gomgs of Broadway's leadmgfamily of actors of the 1930s, themembers of which bear no slightresemblance to the then-reigningfanllly of Barrymores HandsomeTony IS pursued by women fromHollywood to New York, whtlelead-actress Juhe is the darling ofevery producer m town.

The mother of the clan, still awell-known thespian in her ownnght, is played by Sheila WyattDorothy Katcher as Julie and Bill

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

French G.~On Wednesday, Jan. 22, be-

ginnmg at 7 pm, the GrossePomte Historical Society Will spon-sor an open house and slide/lec-ture, "French Grosse Pomte "

The open house, from 7 to 7 30pm, Will be held at society head-quarters, Room 105, MonteithSchool, 1275 Cook Road, Gros&ePomte Woods, and Will give mem-bers and guests an opportumty tosee new acqUIsitIOns and acquamtthem With the work of the Hls-toncal Society

At 7 30 P m I the slide-supportedlecture Will begm m the MonteithSchool gym Lucy Hamilton andAnne MUSial, society board mem-bers and long-tIme Grosse Pomteresidents wrote and produced theevemng's presentation Refresh-ments Will be served following thelecture

fnformatlOn concermng FrenchPear Trees Will be shared and a&ection of a French Pear Tree willbe available for vlewmg

Also, a Michigan state flag WIllbe presented to the ,)oclety by theLOUisa St Clair Chapter, NSDARMrs. George T Edson, regent, re-cently said, "We' are pleased topresent a State of Michigan Flagto the GPHS whose efforts to com-pile and preserve early records ofGrosse Pomte serve to keep alivethe memory of our ancestors whocame to Michigan over 150 yearsago"

Tickets may be purchased at thedoor, $1 for students, $2 for guests,and no charge for members Park-ing ISaVailable m the school lot oron Chaltonte

Guests are always welcome andencouraged to a ttend GrossePomte Hlstoncal Society func-tIOns For further mformatlOn onthiS program or any other aspectof the society, call 884-7010, Tues-day or Wednesday, 10-4 pm, orleave a message on the recorderand someone will return the call asqUIckly as poSSible

Music seriesThe Ftrst Umtanan-Umversalt&t

Church of DetrOIt Will host the be-gmmng of the MOSIacMUSICSenesto benefIt restoration of Its 70-year-old /<.:; M Skmner organ .

DetrOIt pianist Evelyne ScheyerWill present the first concert Withcompositions by Bach, Beethovenand Brahms on Sunday, Jan 26, at2pm

Tickets are $7 general admiS-Sion, $6 for students and seniorcltlzens They are available at thedoor and the donation IS tax-de-ductible

As the MosaiC MUSICSenes con-tinues on an Irregular baSts, othervanetles of musIc Will be featuredmcluding Jazz, folk, blues and pop

The church IS located at 4605Cass Avenue at Forest m DetrOIt'sCultural Center For more mfor-mahon call the church offtce, 833-9107.

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GROSSE POINTE NEWS

ADVERTISEMFNT

ARE YOUA LOTTERY EXPERT?Test your knowledge of one of themost excltmg departments of stategovernment y,lth thIS two ffimuteqUIz

1. Michigan voters .lpproved the cred.tlOn of d.state Lotterv b) a 11',0 to onemllrgln Inn 1972 [- 1977 r 119832. From Its mceptlOn through thefIscal year endmg Seplember 30,1985 the MichIgan Lottery ha'i created IhlS numberofmllhonalres[l75 I J92 [ ]1l43. Durmg the 1985 fi'cal year, theMichigan Lottl'n pre.,enled thl'inumber of ca,h m~ard., to players_5 millIOn -10 million_16 million

4. In the current fio,cal )car the Lot-lerv expect'i to pre'ient th" totalamount ofpn7e money to pld)ers_ $106 millIon _ $2,}9 nHllion_~'i6Imllhon

5. In the 1985 n',(,d )ear, the Lotterycontnbuled thl'i amount to the State&hool Aid Fund_ $'i!'l millIon _ $112 mIllIOn_ $369 millIOn

6. If thl' contnbutlon to K 12 educatlOn h,ld come from direct !axe'i then mount per :\1 Ieh Ig,1n hou"eholdy,()uld equal_ $10 __ $7'i __ $1l5

7 The Lotterv prOVided thlS percentof the lot-II <;tatl' Schoo) Aid Fund_4', __ 16'1, __ 2.N

.,H \ .....,y,Jo){;,mlJ)y,

] Volf'r"" (1ppTU\'M it con"tltullOnal chanR"e~ nowJng for ,I ,t.ll~ LoUuv In '1.1~ 1972Tlcht, for th, Ii"t Loll' rv game W('nt 00,,~I, Nowmh", 11 19722 Throlll(h "" pll'rrher 10 19% thf' LotIl n h,c_ cr' ,tf'<! 114 m,lIIona,rM IndudlOg~I a<ldeE! m Ih, rh1-1 1I'oC,11V'M1 Ofth, mOT<Lh~n 16 mlilioo co,h Lollf'rvpn/,( ...."on In lh{' la ...! fil..,(;J1 vrar mo<;t came~n In<::tdol g.tmf''''' ",Ilh{,"l~h av.'(lrd ...rang-Ingfrom $210 $1 mlilion Thf' Daoly 1 Dallv 4I otto ~nd ( ud ("mf" provldpd thert mamrlrr ortf,f" ....wRrd~4 Bd~~ on ....11('.., ('...tlmat(~ the Lottery("pl'Ch to a"am ~'ifil million In pnw.InchHtln~ OlAj()r ;'lVw.lrd., palti In annudlIn ...t1:l1mt nil., to pi iyrr .. In lllC' rUTT{'ntf'i"<al yr.n:> R('v~nm .... from <III Loth r.,. g;lme'i are"rm"rk,'Oi f"r Ih, "tal, &h,",1 /\,,1 ~\lOd10 h, Ip '"prort K 12 r<illrat,oo In Ihp I•• Ln~al waf tl"1(> 1.A"~tl('ry...coni r,hutlon to th(>f'lOd r< 'lChed $11>9mIllion6 W,thn"llh, 510'1 mollion Loltf'rv conlnhllllOTl In Ihr 'oll\te '>chool AId ~'und It" .ulll h"r ''''I "1rh MIChl1{1n hou'lCholddnoth{r $11~ In rhrPct f ....U:M to maintainIh, ",'mr l£'Vrlof 'Oillnllon7 Thr I"ll' rv' $.lfi'l mllli"n conlnhuhooto Ihe ,.."••tp ~hool A,ll !>\lOd ,n the '.,tr.,,~1 yf'ilr ilCcollnl,<! (or .pproXlmau.ly 2.1prrCf'nto(lhr 101,,1$1 6 holl,"n hl,dj(pt""nr! vour I"tlny qu,,,,t,oo LoWmorr« emir MlChlJ(an Lollf'r)I'() 1kJx 30077["''''lOl{ MI4R'J09[fyour qll' ,lion I< ll<ed vou" 011receive 'iOfrE'('Imlaot I{ame t"ket,

Notre Dame and the Amel'lcan Ca-thedralm Pans, and, l!l England,at Salisbury Cathedral, Yorkmllls-tel' and Westmmster Abbey

DeHaven, III additIOn to hIS res-ponSIbIlItIes as orgamst-cholr-master, IS profes!>or of organ anddirector of church musIc degree atOakland UllIversltv and musIcdirector of the Rackham Sym-phony ChOIr

The roster of Men's ChOIr mem-bers lllcludes Roger Fitch, KeIthGeyer, Monte Jahnke, BasIl J ohn-son, Oswald LeWIS, Jim Llsosky,DaVId LudWig, John NICholson,Nell Presnell, Greg Roach,Charles Tighe, Bary WIlkmson,Bruce WIlklllson, Pahl Zllln BoysChOIr members are Grady Avant,

T.W. KressbachCity Manager Clerk

RICHARD G. SOLAK,CITY CLERK

Church choir to join symphony in concertRyan Baller, Tom Best, BenBraun, Alex Crenshaw, JonathanCruz, Ulysses Cruz, Vlllcent Cruz,Van Fox, Jeff Huebner, BrentJahnke, Ryan McCormIck, Dun-can McMillan, Chl'lstopher' Moore.Weston Norton, Randy O~ann,Todd Osann, LIam Ryan and Wil-son WehmeIer

Following the concert, whichWill conclude WIth the plaYlllg ofCesar Franck's Symphony III Dmlllor, the audIence IS mVlted tomeet the artists at a receptIOn ar-ranged by the Grosse Pomte Sym-phony Women's AssocIation

TIckets are $6 for adults and $3for students They are avaIlable atthe door or call 886-6244to order madvance.

The Christ Church Choir of Men and Boys, directed by Frederic DeHaven, will sing with the GrossePointe Symphony at the orchestra's "Music and the Spirit" concert, Jan. 26, in Parcells Auditorium.

The Grosse Pomte SymphonyOrchestra, under conductor FelIxResllIck, will present a "MUSICandthe SPll'lt" concert Sunday, Jan26, at 3 30, m Parcells AudItorIUm,Mack at Verl11er

The program WIll open WIthFranz Joseph Haydn's "ManaTheresa Mass" (Mass III B Flat),which WIll be sung by the Chl'lstChurch Choir of Men and Boys.directed by Fredenc DeHavenFour solOIsts - Margaret Rees, so-prano, Sharon Babcock, alto,MIchael Henncks, tenor, andDaVId LudWIg, bass - WIllbe fea-tured

The ChOIr of Men and Boys hasbeen the pride of Chmt Churchand a cultural asset of the commu-mty for more than 50 years Itregularly smgs at the church onSunday mormngs, performs chOralworks WIth orchestra and makesappearances for various orgamza-tlons Its successful 1985Europeantour Illcluded performances at

GPN - 1/16/86

CITY OF (&rnsse 'ninte MICHIGAN

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGJANUARY 20, 1986

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 MUnICipalOffices 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 ItSclhzens as well as mdlvlduals or representatives of neighborhoodgroups to submIt Ideas and comments concernlllg projects for the1986applIcation Fundlllg between $63,000'$65.000 may be avaIlablefor approved projects for 1986

Financial fitnessThursday, January 16, 1986

"Financial Fltnes!>," an indIvid-ualized program conducted by ateam of professIOnals, wl!l be of-fered at A!>sumphon CulturalCenter beglnmng Wednesday, Jan22

John M Poplawski, 5t JohnAssociates, E David I\Iarande,and a tax attorney and CPA wIllteam up to develop a conftdenhalfinancial plan based on tax mml-mization, Investment maXImIza-tIOn, budgehng, retlrement andestate plannmg and benefitsassessment

Whether tax savmgs, collegefunding or retIrement mcome areyour goals, thIs expert, mdlvldualplannmg program con!>lshng ofthree classes and one persondl con-sultahon wl!l help you

For reservatIOns, call 779-6111

MACLD will meet

The CounCIl adopted a re,;o)ullon thallmm('dwtely follo\\lI1g adJournmentof the Hegular M('elmg a ('Jo,ed ~e<;SIOIl "hall he held for th(' purpo<,e ofdl'icll<;'img Ihe pllrchd"e of real propert)

Upon proper motion made ,;upported and cameo, the Mer! mg ad lourn('dat 10 15 P m

JAMES H. DINGEMAN,MAYOH

MIchIgan Assoclatlon for Chl!-dren and Adults With LearmngDlsabditlcs, Inc \\ 111 presentauthor and educator Dmghy SharpTuesday, Jan 21, at 7 30 P m IIIthe Grosse Pomte Central Library

Sharp IS the author of "TheBucket Brigade," an establIshedset of games and learmng aids tobe used III the home to help chl!-dren master necessary sk1lls SheWIll offer practical advIce on howto help children with their home-work and skl!l bUlldmg Remedia-tIOn techmques m game format tomake routme practice more funwill also be presented

Born WIth a severe learnmg dIs-abilIty called dysleXia, Sharp ISsensItIve to the learmng needs ofall chIldren and adults She hasearned master'!, degrees in pre-school and early chJldhood educa-tion, speech and language path-ology, audIOlogy and teachmg ofthe deaf, remedial readmg andlearnmg dIsabIlities, and ha!>taught m these varIOUs fIelds formore than 35 years For more m-formatIOn about this program orMACLD, call 343-9168 or 886-9547

GPN 01/16/80

Also Present Mrs Kathleen Gallagher Le\\ lS, Counsel. Me~sr~ , AndrewBremer, Jr CIty Manager RIchard G Solak, CIty Clerk and Robert KFerber, PolIce ChIef

1\Iayor James II Dmgeman preSided at the 1\leetmg

Counulman Kae'o~ \\ as e"\cu'ied from allend1l1g the I\Ieet1l1g

SUMMARY OF THE MINUTES

CITY OF <&ross£"ointt lJiarms MICHIGAN

DECEMBER 16, 1985The Meetmg was called to order at 8 00 P m

Present on Roll Call Mayor James H Dmgeman, Councilmen Joseph LFromm, Bruce 1\1 Rock\\ell, John M Crm\ ley, Harry T f~chlm and MaryAnne GhesqUlel e

Those Absent Were Councilman Gall Kaess

The MlI1utes of the Hegular MeelIl1g \\ hlch was held on December 2. 19R5were appro\;ed as 'iubmilled

The Council. actll1g al> d Zonmg Board of .\pp<'als, approved the i\Imute'oof the Public Hearmg held on December 2, 1985 and further granted theappeal of!\lr <t !\Irs Donald Sullivan, thereb\ authorl7lng Issuance of <1

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 agreement between the Clty and Under HIli Enterpnse'i thereb) determ1l1111gthat Under Hilt Enterpn<;es meets the term'o for provldll1g parkmg for thePunch & Judy Deyelopments a ...reqUIred bv SectIOn 1')(14 9 Ic) of the Clt" t>Zonll1g Ordll1ance

The Council approved pa) ment of a ~tdtement from Dlckll1'ion WnghtMoon. Van Dusen & Freeman Counsellors at L.I\\. In the total amount of$7,9174J. for sen Ice'i rendereo on behalf of the CII\ of Grosse POll1te

, Farm,;

The Council approv('d <lno propo<;ed Schedule of Heguldr l\Ieelll1g ...for theCalendar" e,lr 11)86 a ...amended 'ochedulmg the commencement of w( hmeetll1g~ at 7 ,W P m

The CounCIl appro\ ('(j the "aldl) ,lIld henefltllllfea<;~ for the Clt) ...ClerlcdlPer,;onnel

The CounCIl apprm ('d the 6 month mIen m agreement for the Clt \ '0 PollceDepartment

The CounCil appro\('d the 10\\ bld \\hlch met or (''{(eeoed all ')lCclflcatlOn'i of Roval Oak fo'ord for nme pollcC' and <ldmll1l<,(ratIYC' \ehlcle ... 111the total amount of $1l8,li42 ()()

The fo)JO\\ II1g HC'port \\a<; rccel\C'd 11) th(' Council and ordered placed onfile

Police D('partment HC'port for Ill(' :\Ionth of No\C'mbC'r 1<J8'i

The CounCIl appro\;ed a kttC'r of commcnddtlon recognl7lng the \'olunl('erGro,;<;e POll1le Clo", n Corp ...

TI1(' COIlI1cII appro\('d illack AH'nu(' BU"lI1C''''' & Prof(' ......lOllal \""?Clclilon ...rcque<;t tor a $')00 contllbuhon to hC'lp dcfr<l) th(' co,t of Ihe 19M f JrC'\\ork'oto be held June 2'1 1980

Photo bl Kay Photography

*

Thursday, January 16, 1986

The children have returned toearth, and Via bus, to their clas~-room where they spend the rest ofthe afternoon m diSCUSSIOnWIththeir teacher, MarCia Ferguson Inaddition to spoutmg newfound Ill-formatIOn, they say they hked"Mr Planetanum." He was Intelestmg, pohte, and funny

And wha t was the best part 01the VISIt? Why the triP to Mars, ofcourse.

Grosse POinte North's planet-arium IS used 10 to 15 times pE'1'week, mostly for school programsSchool districts other than Gros~ePointe's, and commulllty groups,can) enJoy It, also People mter-ested in takmg advantage of It, orone of the planetarium's SIX tele-scopes to spot Halley's Cornet.may call Halley's Hothne from3 30 P m to 7:30 a m. to find out Ifthe skIes are clear and amenableto sightings. Skomeczny says thatJanuary Will be a ~ood month fortrackmg the comet The number tocall IS 343-2289

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(Jupiter, Mars and Venus), howhot the sun's surface IS (11,000(l!!gress F), what causes thel'oorthern Lights (sun spots), whichstar IS the laZiest because It nevermoves (the North Star). about Hal-ley's Comet. 'the dirty snowbaJl"seldom seen more than once III aIJletJlue plus a \\ hole host of otherI11ght sky wonders

"One moon of Jupiter looks hkea pIzza," Skomeczny says as heshoob ItS Image on the screenabove "It's easy to spell. It's call-ed 10 Can anyone guess how tospell It?"

There's a momE'nt of silence, andthen, like several hghtbulbs bemg

t turned ana once, a handful of stu-dents venture "I-O?"

"Yes " Skomeczny says as hepu~hes a button on his computer toflash the image of Mlmas, aSaturman moon He likens It toDeath Star III the movie "StarWars," and the youngsters mur-mur their agreement A couple ofthem add that It looks hke a gaitball

Caring and sharingStudents and staff at Mason Elementary School were very much into the spirit of caring and

sharing this holiday season. The student council sponsored an all-school food collection fordistribution to local families, while the staff and kindergarten classes contributed clothing andtoys to the L1NCprogram. Above, from left, Mason principal William Mestdagh and secretaryJeanne Fisher, show the collections by kindergarten students with Marc Dula, Shane Conlan,Jeffrey Morawski and Kelley Griffin to Frances Tauoularis, Mason kindergarten teacher anddirector ot the LlNC drive.

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Kerby students enjoy Martian tripB) Nancy Solak

"Do you want to !>ee the mghtsky as If you were JI1 the city or thecountn? Tim Skomeczny recent-ly asked a group of thIrd" gradersfrom Kerby Elementary SchoolThiS \\ a" thell second VI~lt toGro~se Pomte ~orth ihgh School':,PlanetarIUm. ,,0 the) knew whatthev liked

, 'The countn sk\ I The eoulllnsky r" came th'e ch'orus of eXCitedvOices The IJght~ dimmed to ca\ e-IJke darkness, and slowly. as evesadjusted, milhons of starts ap-peared on the dome overhead

Skomeczny. who IS the directorof the facllltv and allows studentsto call him "Mr PlanetarIUm" forSimpliCity's sake. IS pleased withtheu' enthUSIasm He IS doublvpleased when a review of theIr fIr;t~esslOn reveals that thev have re-tamed a plethora of galactiC m-formatIOn

The two hours at the planet-anum was a supplement to theIrregular classroom ~tudJes of theumverse They learned whIchthree planets can be seen WIth thenaked eye dt thIS tuue of J ear

MARYLAND BEVERAGESHOPPE15015 MACK 882-7229

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GROSSE POINTE NEWS

North Highorientation

HOW TORENTA CARFORLESS:Ca'l 772 8003 Because Vielease thousands of cars on along Ifrm baSIS and some areturned In early (belore Ihelease exprres) Vie can affordto rent them 10you dallyweekly or monthly for lessthan the resl'

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The following events WIll tdkeplace within the Grosse PomtePublic School System through nextweek Friday

Sunday Jan 19- Open house at2 p,m. at Trombly

Tuesday, Jan 21 - School-agemovies at 4 p m at the Parklibrary

Wednesday, Jan 22 - School-age movies at 4 pm at the Woodshbrary

Wednesday, Jan 22 - Parentpeer group meeting at 7 30 P m atBrownell

Thursday, Jan 23 - School-agemovies at 4 pm at CentralLibrary

Fflday, Jan 24 - ReCOrds Day,no school

Department chairpersons, coun-selors and admlmstrators 01NorthHigh School Wednesday, Jan 22,at 7 30 P m In the Performmg Artsbuddmg WIll pre~ent IIltormatlOllm course selectIOn, schedule pldnmng and pupil adjustment forstudents who Will attend NorthIn the fall

Cople~ 01 the 54 page 198&-87Program of Studies have beendeltvered to the private and parachlal schools m Grosse Pomte. andcopies have also been sent to all In-coming eighth graders fromBrownell and Parcells Pdrenbmay Wish to bring the!>ecople~ tothe presentatIOn

:\ftcr the form~l! prcscnt:J.tlOn.parent~ and students \\ 111hdvc theopportumty to walk around thebuddmg and view some of theroom!>and the actiVities that takeplace III them Department chair-persons and teachers wIII be avail-able to answer questlOn~

)lefreshments Will be ~ef\'ed b\the CommerCial Foods department Students and their pal ent~are asked to attend

School events

Science displayThe Detroit SCience Center Will

present a dazzling display withlasers, lights, electricity andfrozen balloons in a hands-on pro-gram at the Harper Woods PubltcLibrary Saturday, Jan 18. The45.minute program begms at 2' 30and is open to chIldren In gradesK-8,

A gondolier rows hiS gondola onone Side only. The little boatdoesn't go in Circles, because It'sbUIlt especially unsymmetrIcal tocompensate for the one-Sided row-ing

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spnng, many boat owners willhave to fmd alternative dockagenext summer Petersen said thecity Will send out warlllngs to thateffect m la te January

"We want to gIve them ampletime to make other arrange-ments," he said

In a sense, people who choose 10live near the water have to expectthese ups and downs FarmsPublic Work~ Director John Defoe.who says the city plans to raIse thecat~alks on the docks, IS philosaphlcal

"Some years \\le raise 'em. someyears we lower 'em," he saId

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

Learn a languageThe University of DetrOit ISnow

registering adult students for eve-nmg foreign language classes inJapanese, Spanish, ArabiC,French, German, Italian, Portu-guese and Russian, to begm Jan21

The 12-week evening classes willbe offered at the U of D mam cam-pus at McNichols and LIvernOIs,the downtown Renaissance Cam-pUS on East Jefferson and at theBerkshIre Middle School m Birm-Ingham Designed for several pro-ficIency levels, mcludmg begmner,the classes will be conducted m theDartmouth RassIUs method devel-oped by Professor John Rasslus ofDartmouth College

These U of D language cla~~e~have been ~elected by local and na-tIOnal corporatIOns to preparetheir executives for ~ork abroadLearnmg accelerates under theDartmoulh-RassJUs method becau~e the mstructor create~ ad} namll. dd:>:>lOUJIl d Imu::.phcI ethaI allows students to speak atleast 100 tlme~ dunng a c1a~~penod and receive Immediate er-ror correctIOn The result IS thatstudents become fluent m thelanguage With mmlmum effort Asthe cla~sroom expenence IS so m-tense, no outSIde homework I~given

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Groesheck Chapel ofThe Wm. R.Hamilton Co.

The Woods IS not ~ale fromwater woes by bemg located 111-land The cIty-owned park III StClaIr Shores IS already floodedalong the shore .

But the real problem ISthat boatowners who have always docked IIIthe city manna will probably haveto look for a new spot The waterIS already only three feet below thebridge over the acces~ to the lake

"It's gomg to play havoc WIthboaters trymg to get undel thebndge," said CIty Adlllll1lstratorChester Petersen "The majontyof docks are on the othel Side of theroad"

Smce only a rowboat WIll lIkelybe able to fit under the bridge by

Over A Centwy of Service. to the Eastside Communities

226 CROCkf'.R HI" n.\lnunl ( irmrn~ 4R()(, ~

463-0577"m R Hamilton H

1903.19RIlla\ld M lIamlll .. n .John \\ RrorkmanRonald I) IIrrkmann r lo\d R. Monraltue

A"orlillr J)lrrrIM\ ~\1( 1111)(, In 1111allUmJ OI'SJW

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OffiCIals are now reViewing thepossIblhty of ralsmg both walls atleast a foot and a half, accordmgto City Manager Thomas Kress-bach An ImmedIate problem ISerOSIOnbehind the seawalls, caus-ed by water washmg over andaround

Of equal concern is lhe CItymanna, where water IS lapping atthe bottom of the docks The docks,whIch were raIsed once m 1973,when lake levels were at anotherrecord hIgh. ~ III be completelyunder water 1£ levels keepmcreasmg

As m the Park, property alongJeffer~on dlOPS :::.harply to thelake Several of the houses in thatarea were sandbagged m 1973,Kressbach said, but ha ve Improv-ed their seawalls since that time

"(High water) does put a stramon sewers and buildmg footings Inthose areas, so we kmd of haveour fmgers crossed," Kressbach

J said. "But we don't have the typeof SItuatIOn where folks are walk-Ing around in waders"

At the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club,management IS trymg to stayahead of the problem ASSIstantManager Ralph Mason said theclub has mstalled 16 Impellers,underwater agitators to keep theIce from forming

"They relIeve pressure, so whensurges occur, they cause less dam-age," Mason said

The club has also expanded ItSbubblIng program to 60 boats ThISalso helps keep the harbor free ofIce and allows the pressure tobreak through m deSignated areas,according to Mason

"We can't do much about \\lmd-driven Ice across the lake," hesaid "We just allow It to come upover the seawall In that sense,high water IS almost a blessmg -the Ice goes over the wall msteadof crushmg It .,

PERCH SANDWICHOnlv 82.45

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Father-daughter eventOur Lady Star of the Sea High School recently held its first Father-Daughter Mass and Break-

fast, with the liturgy celebrated by the pastor, Father Ralph Kowalski, and fathers and theirdaughters serving as lectors and gift bearers. At the breakfast held at the Grosse Pomte YachtClub, the tables were decorated in blue and white, the school colors. Some of the participantsincluded, from left, George Petersmarck, Andrew Rider, standing next to granddaughter Melis-sa Petersmarck, Joy Jensen and Don Jensen, chairman of the event. Rider celebrated his 75thbirthday the day of the event.

Thursday, January 16, 1986

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(Continued from Page 1;\)

be done to protect It ConSIderabledamage has already been done tothe marIna facilIty there.

"Much of the mam pier and mostof the fmger pIers are under waternow," Crawford SaId "The fIngerpiers are being pushed up, themain pIer IS beIng pushed down."

The electrICIty and water hnesservIng the docks were severed bySimilar actIOn last year CItyworkers relocated the Imes to lhetops of the piers, but thIS year theywere severed agam

"We may just have to cut off theutIhties," Crawford saId

Meanwhtle .. F'ox Creek IS bnm-mIng only mches from the top ofthe berm along Alter Road Someof the reSIdents on the other, lowerside have sandbagged theIrproperty

When the creek crests, It floodsthe parking lot at the park Thathasn't happened yet, but Crawfordwasn't feelIng optlllllstic.J,'Once Itgets over the top (of the berm), It'Sstraight downhIll to Grosse POintePark," he said

Department of Public Worksemployees m the Shores are spend-mg all theIr spare tIme fillIng sand-bags for a wall to be built at thepark by March. The Village tookdelIvery of a truckload of sand and5,000 bags m December Approx-imately 600 to 700 feet of frontagealong the VIllage park shorelme ISexpected to flood

"We deCIded to start early so wecan fIll the bags Without over-tIme," explamed VIllage ManagerMichael Kenyon. "We have to getit done before the Ice breaks up "

The City's improvement projectIS hkely to be much more exten-SIve Seawalls at two cIty-ownedpropertIes are old Already. lake.water is lappmg wIthm t\VOmchesof the top of the walls, WIth levelsprojected to nse at least SIXmches

Page Fou rteen-A GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

u.s. professionals see real world of People's Republicalways askmg you questIOns,"Everett said

The exchange works the otherwav too Some of the money rais-ed through parllclpant fees ISusedlor scholaJ'shlps to bnng Chineseprote!:>!>lOlwlsto the United Statesfor a year 01 study DelegatIOnsIrom the Chme~e mllllstnes alsomake \%It!>

The t\\ o-way exchange of under-standmg has promoted good feel-lIlg between the two countnes,Everett believes It may also havebrought dLout d change In the waythe Clunese clo thmg!>

'When I flr!>tstarted thiS, I u!>edto \\ nte letters all over the worldand Ju!>t\\alt to "ee who would re-!>pond" 1<.:vel etl said "Chlnddll\ dyS u!>edto \\rlte and say there\\ ere no room!> Imagme a countryof a billion people - and no!'ooms'

PhO'o by Elizabeth Carperller Lions Gate Unl mlled

department m Apnl after success-ful completIOn of the 440 hours oftrammg, the department said

EffectIve Jdll 15. offIcers JohnSchulte and Steven Johnson werepromoted to the rdnk of sergeantSchulte. JO. has been a pollee othcer !>lI1ceApnl 1978 Johnson, JI,,>tarted \\ Ith the department 111'\[aJ 1977 Both officers havereCel\ ed letter" of recommenda-tIOn for theu' \\ ork dUring theIrtenure. police :.ald

Both men \, III begm tralnlllg 111umform officer superVISIOn andplamclothc!> mvestlgatlOn, accord-1I1g to the department

J 1 P m Thm ~da:-. Jan 9. accordlIlg to rcpOI h 1I0meo\\ ners calledpolice to "a~ the:- had ~potled ,1man near th('\r "hed which \\ dS dtI'llhcd 10 1111' g,lI dge and aldl m.,\.,tem. Ofl1ccr" '>I'-Hltledthe man near

the gdrclge dlHI gd\ e eha"e ,\ :.lll\ellldllCe tedlll captured the mclnnedl/)\

Fill ih('1 111\ ('.,tlgdllOIl .,h(medIh(' hd....p \\ d" hI o"en Oil Ihe ....h('d

at the right time With deSire andenergy."

Thus far, the delegatIOns havekept relations on the purely profe!:>-slOnal plane DespIte the enormousrespect for and Illterest In familyhfe in Chm3, the Chmese tend to betoo reserved to mVlte people totheir homes untli the\ havedeveloped a deep fnendsfllp

But now, oW1I1glal'gel) to thecomplex network evolved throughseveral years ot organlllug.Everett IS start1l1g to work homeVISitSmto the Itlneral y . Ju!>tlortea, for example," he !>a1d . It'snot the custom to mVlte (casual)VISitors to the house"

The usual thmg for bU!>lIle!>~dC-quamtances IS to mIx !>ocldhllngand business 111 a more fOlmal settmg "In Chma. you're dOlllgbusllless all the llme - people arc

The temperature climbed... to 40 degrees Saturday, a near heat wave follOWing a week

of biting cold, and Mike Bourgon of the Farms decided to washhis wife's car after he paid $5 to get his own done. The warmspell was short.lived, however, and temperatures dipped againSunday night.

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23515 NINE MACK DRIVE, St. Clair Shores~ OVER 50 YEARS SERVING EAST SIDE EJL.:.::-J Open Mon Thur<; 9 6 frl 9 7 Sat 95 Masooreonl

Police foil shed break-in

A Park reSIdent, Kretzschmar \\ asone of the successful apphcants 01the examinatIOns gIven dunng lastfall

Attendlllg Macomb County ~pohce academy program beglllnmg Jan 27 Will be Chn:.tophelPowell and Stephen Let thropPowell, a Park reSIdent and lJlIl-verslty of Mlchlgal1 graduateworks With the department a~ aclvlhan dispatcher Lathrop dPark reSident, WIll delay hiS fmalsemester at MichIgan State Ulll-verslty where he ISsludymg polleeadmInistratIOn, to attend theacademy Both wlil 101ll the

A DetrOIt man awaIt'> pr(']lmll1ary exammauoll m Pdrl-. ;\TuniCIpal Court on charges of Il1dIJC10U"destruction of property under $100111 connectIOn \\Ith an dtlempledbredk-1I1 of a shed connected to dBuckmgham Road home poll('('saId

The man \\a!> alTalgned Id"t\\ eel.. on the charge and rel(,d"cdon SIOOper~onal bond

The lI1C'ldentoecm red dt dbolll

SINCE1911

It takes mne months to orgamzea delegatIOn "1 work slowly,"Everett said "I don't want to takea delegatIOn WIth less than thebest"

What takes so long IS that theleader of any prospective delega-ItlOnhas to submit a proposal to thelappropnate Chmese mmlstry,Iwhlch - upon approval- Issues aIlormallllvltatlOn and suggests an \ltl11erdry

The proces!> had resulted 111 anextensive network of Chinese gov-ernment and embassy offICials forEverett, who works With themmJ!>tneb 01 sCience and tech-Jlology, l'<l1lways,performlllg arts,light Illdustry, bankmg and who-evel ebe I!>necessary to deSign aml""lOn to SUIt IlldlvldualexpertIse

By nO\l, Chma-U S ExchangesI~ the bIggest such orgamzatlon IIIthe !>tate Everett says It's Justgooa fortune "1 was lucky to getthe Idea at a lime of upswmg 111Chll1ese relatIOns," he said .. 'I'mju!>td bloke on l\1ack Avenue, there

What the open house can do IS.'build SPll'lt and pnde in the Trom-bl~ commumty." Joyce adds Em-phaSIZing the commullity part ofthe open house thiS year Will be anappearance by Park MayorPalmer Heenan, who Will speakbnefly about the school system as\\ell as talk about the millage,!>chooloffiCial" say

The open house Willalso show offprograms at the school, With theclassroom tours and displays of theart department, BABES andGreen Circle substance abuse pro-grdms, computer demonstratIOnand a history 01 the school

Also speak1l1g at the reception mthe auditorIUm Will be SuzannaSippola, preSident of the PTO,DebbIe Saros. open house com-mittee chairman. and Joyce

Saros and Manna Terrell co-chaired the 16 member planlllngcommittee

There are some new faces wear-mg Grosse Pointe Park policeblues The department hired onenew officer, sent two more to thepohce academy for trammg andpromoted two others to sergeantrecently

OffIcer John Kretzschmar beganwork With the department Dec 26

Park police hire three, promote two

to pay some of the expenses for aneducational field trIp and to buyclassroom matenals for teachers.

In past months, board membershave been questIoning whether thedonatIOns by PTOs at differentschools IS resulting in an ineqUit-able distnbution of eqUipment andmatenals among the elementaryschools

Questions have also been raised,chiefly by trustees Carl Andersonand Carol Marl', whether some ofthe donations are be1l1gused to buyequipment that the school systemshould nghtfully be bUYing.

The administration IS workmgon developing a gift policy, accord-Ing to Supenntendent John Whrit-ner Officials hope to have a draftof the pollcy In a couple months

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109a hvmg every day Just the waywe do "

Between 15 and 24 people par-tiCipate In each miSSiOn Becau~eChlna-U S Exchdnge~ l~ orgdDlledunder IRS regulations. the tnp IStax-deductible tor the pI ole~~lOndlpartiCipant and partially tax-deducllble lor a ~pou~e Thespousal deductIOn came dbout becau!>e of the great Importdnceplaced upon the lamd~ unJt IIIChina, Everett !>dJd

Each delegalton centel!> drounda particular prole~~lOn When hestarted, 1<.:verell took mo,>tl\member!> 01 hi'>0\\ n prol e!>'>1011 .dentistry - but no\\, mlnel '>.farmer!>, la II yer:. tedcher!> 01Journalists dre Ju!>tdS llkel) to go

Both the delegdtlOn ledder dndthe participant'> dl e requu'ed tobrll1g somethmg to the tilP 1I1 Jprotes!>lOnal sen~e Re!>umeb dndwntten goal and dtcornpll~hment::.ldlemenl!> help d!>~U1e W,lt edctlparticIpant ha!>!>omethll1g to eon-tnbute to a roundtable dJ!>cu!>slonor as a lecturer

... - .'419605 MACK AVE.

Grosse Pointe Wds 882-1340

Smce the school ha'>begun \\ IdeI'advertisement of ItS programs,whICh include all-day kmdergartenand latchkey a!:>well a!:>Illgh abl!lty and computer cla!>:.e~. theschool's enrollment ha!> beennsmg

Trombly was prOjected to havebegun thiS school year \\ Ith 224student!> m September, but FourthFnday counts aclualh counted 247thiS year Some 01 those childrenare converts from non-publicschools, accordmg to Joyce, whoadds that after the recent maIling01 inVItatIOn!>. she hd!> ah'ead\started gellmg calls Irom parent;;askmg about the servIce!> dnd CUl'-nculum at the school

.'The advertlsmg goe!:> alongWith the board of educatIOn's goal01 tellIng the !>toQ of the schoolsy!:>lem,' !>he add" 'Thl~ I!>achance lor u!>to put our best tOOLforwdrd lor the commul1lty ..

The Board of EducatIOn accept-ed more than $8,500 m gifts fromthe Poupard and Mason PTOsMonday, Jan. 13.

Mason PTO's gift will help fundassemblies for students, educa-tIOnal field tnps and studies, an artappreciation program, a fifthgrade Toronto tnp and to purchaseeducational enrichment materials.

Poupard PTO's gIft ISto be used

Class rescheduled

Board accepts PrO donations

Robert Maniscalco's Port.altPaintmg class, scheduled to beg1l1at the War Memoflal, Tuesday.Jan. 14, from 7 to 10 pm, Will berescheduled to begm the follow1l1gweek, Jan 21, at the same tImeStudents III the class WIll be treat-ed to one sessIOn taught by the Ill-structor's father, natIOnally ac-claImed portrait artist. JosephManiscalco, on Jan 28

ThiS one-tIme-only sessIOn WIththe semor Mamscalco IS for enrol-led students only Register at theWar Memoflal, 82 LakeshoreRoad The course wIll be extendedone week to March 11and WIllcost$60plus model fee for eight weeksCall 881-7511 for additIOnal Illfor-matlon

Andlamo 0Ciao 0

Le Sportsac 0High Sierra 0

Jan Sport 0Etc. 0

Fair1aneTown Center3rd Level

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"In the Village"Admission is free and!>eating IS limited. Calltoday for reservatIOn:,;

Put Number 1to work for you..

~21EAST,INC

"In the VIllage"773.3340

Dr. Robert Everett

on where you look at foreigners asIf they're m a zoo," Everett said"<Our parllclpants) learn andunderstand more about the prob-lems that these people face, earn-

more than 87 percent, and Defer,WIth Just abcut83 percent, accord-mg to the census

Of the 859 school-age chIldrencounted m the district, 155 at-tended non-public schools Accord-mg to the recently completed res-Idents' survey of attitudes aboutpublic schools, close to 31 percentwho send their children to pnvateschools said they sent their chil-dren to non-pubhc schools for thereligIOUS Instruction avaIlable

Other responses to the questionof chOICeof non-public over publicschools showed those surveyedsaying they sent their children tonon-pUblic schools because It wasa tradition (13 percent), they feltnon-public schools had higher aca-demIC standards (9 percent>.there was stricter disciplllle m non-public schools (6 percenlJ, and of-fered a better reputation and bet-ter curriculum (6 percent>

While the 50 or so students whocould be lured to attend Tromblywouldn't brmg any more money tothe school system, which ISout-of-formula and doesn't receive directaid from the state Department 01Education, the extra childrencould eliminate the needs for "flex-grades" at the school, according toschool personnel

The school was one of fourelementary schools found to haveat least two extra rooms in a studydone late last year by the ad-mlmstratlOn. The school current-ly has 11 self-con tamed class-rooms, accordmg to the admmIs-tra hon survey.

The school began making itsopen houses more a commumtyevent to attract possible studentswhen the first rumblmg<:; 01schoolclosmgs began. Trombly's enroll-ment ISJust under 250students, thesmallest of the nme elementaryschools The school Itself IS the sec-ond-oldest elementary school inthe dlstl'lct and the third-oldestschool buildmg

CENTURY 21

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Public school advertises for local students

By Nancy ParmenterFrom small beglOnmgs huge

enterprises grow. Fifteen yearsago, Grosse Pointer Dr. RobertEverett hadn't even thought of co-ordmating mternatlOnal ex-changes between Chmese andAmencan professIOnals; in 1986,through his independent not-for-profit corporation, Chma-U S Ex-changes, he expects to send 200professional delegations

The object is to present Chinathrough its own eyes The Amer.Ican participants In the 17- to19-day triPS spend at least half 01their time mvolved m professIOnalactiVIties - lectures, roundtablediscussIOns, factory tours - withtheir Chmese counterparts

Mealtimes, which are also coor-dmated by Chma-U S Exchanges,offer an opportumty to SOCializewith the Chmese and talk aboutbusmess m an mformal way. Par-tl\_IPdllt~ t:IIJ up Ivilh ,m almo~tdawn-to-dusk immerSIOn m thmgsChmese

"There are so many tours going

You're invited to a rewardingcareer in real estate.

(C 19H6 C('nl"r~ 21 1t... 1 ~.'ld\'(' C"I")Xlr.lum l<.' tn.,We r<lr lh,- NA ~•• 1I<t~- l'lt<t ..mltrk. tlf ( enlury 21 Real F,ldle ('o!"Jl'>r.I'tln ~,qu.lOpportumly Employ"

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AFTER INVENTORYCLEARANCE SALE

By Mike AndrzejczykWhat do Umverslty LIggett Mid-

dle School. DetrOIt Waldorf School.Grosse POinte Academy andTrombly Elementary School have10 common')

All four .....Ill have open house!>thIS month. And all four have ad-vertised the event. even thoughTrombly IS part of the GrossePointe Pubhc School System

Trombly's open house Sunda)from 2 to -1 pm at the school onBeaconsfield IS a little moreelaborate than those held motherpubhc schools It's also the onl)one advertised throughout the ele-mentary school's dlstnct by directmail

More than 1,600flyers went out toannounce the event The PTO plan-ning committee lor the open housespent most of Its $250budget on theproduchon and maJilllg of thehand-addressed lI1Vltatlons

"The invitatIOns were sent toevery household in the dlstnct."Prlllcipal Shlela Joyce said "Weplan to showcase Trombly to ItSfullest to show what a cntical m-stltutlOn It is to our commumty ..

The school decided to hoid Itsopen house m January because It'Straditionally the month that par-ents begin decldmg where they WI))send their children to school InSep-tember, school officials say

"We hope to lure every school-age child in the district to attendschool at Trombly," Joyce adds

But according to school systemcensus data from 1984, Tromblyalready has the third.hlghest per-centage of school-age children at-tendmg public school Accordmg tothe dlstnct's blenmal census, theschool's dlstnct attracted betterthan 83 percent of the 859 5- to19-year-olds hving In the elemen-tary school dlstnct In 1984

The two elementary districtsWith hll'(her percentages of schoolage children attendmg publicschools were Poupard, With htUe

• '-+eM: .1 - _ ...._- L

Second Section Section 8Thursday, January 16, 1986

Parcells to give benefit concert in Detroit

III Wlesbaden, Germany He wasthe publIc relations man for theopera The couple were marriedIII a CIVil ceremony III Germany,but repeated theIr vows mchurch, here, over the weekend

"In Germany, the CIvilceremony is reqUIred," Parcellssaid She explained that mostGerman couples Simply have acivil ceremony, only those With astrong attatchment to the church

Salute to Excellence focuseson Golden Age of Detroit TV

The "Salute to Excellence" benefit for Children's HospItal WIllfocus on the Golden Age of DetrOit TeleviSIOn thiS year In ItsthIrd year, the program recogmzeh Mlchlgamans who have madeoutstanding contnbutlOns In busmess, politics, humamtles,medIcine, sports and the arts

ThiS year's honoree will be Soupy Sales, who was one of theestablishmg figures III the field of children's teleVISIOn In thiSarea and a leader III the field nationally

The honorary chaIrmen for the event are Mr and Mrs WIlliamClay Ford, and general chairmen are Mr and Mrs BaSIl MBnggs and Mr and Mrs John G Levy

The salute Will be held on Jan 24 m the Renaissance Ballroomof the Westm Hotel beglllmng With cocktails dt 6 30 pm, dinnerat 7'30 pm and the progl'am beglllmng at 8 30 pm Bla' k tie ISoptIOnal

The program WIl!be Videotaped by WDJV-TV and broadcaSt ,<;a specIal on March 23 Jrom 7 to 9 P m The master of cel emome~Will be Dick Purtan

Proceeds from ticket sales Will go to Children's HospItal ofMichigan, a subSidiary of the DetrOit MedIcal Center, theacademiC health center of Wayne State Umverslty A voluntary,nonprofIt, 2oo-bed hospital orgamzed m 1886, Children's HospItalfunctions under the general superVISIOn of a volunteer board oftrustees and IS privately funded Children's hen'es patients fromall mCOP1elevels

For tickets, contact Children's Hospital of IVIIchlgan, 3901Beaubien, DetrOIt, Mlch ,48201 Or telephone 494-5373 Ticketsare $125per person of which a portIOn is tax deductible A reserv-ed table for 10 can be purchased for $1,250

In 1984, the Salute of Excellence honored AI Kalllle and GeorgeKell of the Baseball Hall of Fame. In 1985, the honor \Vd~ givento Sparky Anderson of the DetrOit Tigers

born With the proper vOice to bedeveloped

"You have to be born With It,"she said "But that's omy a smallpart of the battle I was lucky tohave the genes I have fivebrothers and sisters and they allhave pleasant vOIces They allcould smg If they wanted to Butthere Isn't any reason for Uhto be-come the Jackson Five There's alot more of It You have to havethe drive and Will and It's not foreverybody Even If you do comeup WIth thE> gf>nf>tw m<ltf>rlAI, It'<<not a guarantee"

The hard work on the way to be-commg a singer dIscourages allbut the most determmed

"You really have to love It a lotto take It up as a professIOn," shesaid "You have to love It enoughto get you over the days Whell) auhate It There IS the drudge work

(Continued on Page tB)

and act The qualIty of your smg-mg, at best, comes second In aconcert, you can be clean and pre-cIse You can concentrate on themUSIC The VIsual a~pect IS nulland VOId," she said.

Becau~e of the mten~lty of anoperatic performance, thesmgers are takmg a higher nsk ofmjuring their vOices than concertsIngers

"It IS the same as Withathletes," she saId "Just hkeyou can rum your back (Inopera) you put a lot of stram onthe organism YOU'I to <l:>kmg<lJutand you run the nsk of breakinghomething A singer must be canSCIOUSof thiS With a good tramer,you Improve the shape of yourvocal cords You work hard butdon't damage them"

It takes years of trammg to de-velop an operatic VOIce, accord-IIlg to Parcells But before thework starts, the sillger !TIIlStbe

havml; the second, relIgIOUS,ceremony She attributes the Ger-man appathy toward religIOn tothe state supported church

"I don't think people here wouldstand for the stnct SOCIalsystemthey have In Germany," ParcellssaId "H's a wonderful place forold people and artists. You don'tsee poverty In Germany Everyfall, singers by the hundredh goover there and audll10n Once youget that Job, It kmd of grows onyou"

Parcells knew she wanted aC<1recr In mus]", dt dll €dily dgt:However, the deCISIOnto purhue acareer In opera came much later

"I was nearly through the con-servatory," she said. "I Justdidn't know I thought maybe I'dmake a career of smgmg the'Messiah' year-around"

Her earliest experiences WithmusIc came from smgmg III thechOIr at Grosse Pomte MemorialChurch.

"Even as a Child, I had a verysweet, pleasant vOIce," she saId"Usually, the best children'svOIces come from boys I was notgood at sports, not particularlypopular I wasn't full of that kindof fluff "

A turmng pomt came forParcells when the chOIr dIrectorsmgled her out one day, to showthe rest of the children how thesong should be sung

"Everybody was starmg atme," she said "I thought then, Iwant to be stellar I couldn't waltfor every Tuesday, for chOIr prac-tice Children Illterested m musIcare often that way"

Parcells attended high school atLiggett, but did her semor yearand graduated from Interlochenwhere she could prepare for aconservatory She then spent thenext SIXyears, for both a bache-lor's and master's degree at theNew England Conservatory ofMUSICIn Boston.

"That was the best thmg forme," she said "To stay in oneplace and concentrate But Ididn't have any fun at all."

DUring most of her time at theconservatory, Parcells concen-trated on concert music, a verydifferent field from opera

"In opera, the visual IS Impor-tant You have to move, dance

Photo by Elsa Fret-man

Elizabeth Parcells is visiting home this week with her Yorkshireterrier, Clair, and her new husband, Dierk-Eckhardt Becker, not piC-tured. Parcells is a member of the Solo Ensemble of the FrankfurtOpera. She is giving a benefit concert for Orchestra Hall while sheIs home,pending on what the company IScurrently producing

"A state supported theater hasa responsIbIlity to the pubhc,"she said. "We have to do fairytales, children's productions,lIght opera and operettas We getto do one or two Illteresting thingsa year I can't be center stage allthe time, but nobody starves IIIGermany"

Parcells met her new hushand

By Elsa FrohmanFor man v performers, "paymg

your dues" ISa euphemIsm for theyears of waIting tables or drlvmga taxI cab while struggl10g forevery bit part that come along It15 the difftcult period In a per-former's hte when he or shebreaks out of anonymity and be-comes a household word

For Grosse POinte Ehzabeth"Betsy" Parcells, paymg herdues has meant a steady Job m arespected European opera com-pany. As a member of the SoloEnsemble oj the Fl ankfUl tOpera, 10 Germany, smce 1983,she has been smgmg roles IS pro-ductIOns such as "The MagICFlute" and "Tales of Hoffman"

Parcells has come back toGrosse Pomte with two purposesm mind. The fll'st was achievedlast weekend as she mamed herGerman sweetheart, Dlerk-Ech-hard Becker The second will beachieved thiS weekend when shegives a benefIt concert for the Or-chestra Hall renovatIOn on Jan 18at 8 p m

Parcells' Involvement with theconcert comes through hermother, a member of Ibex, WhIChISsponsoring the benefIt Ibex is alocal organIzatIOn for the supportof the arts Ibex has been suppor-tIve of the Orchestra Hall renova-tion project for several years

For Parcells, the concert WIllbe a gala homecoming. But soonafter she takes her last bows, shemust return to Frankfurt and herregular job.

"Germany IS the only placewhere an opera sInger can have asteady job with a salary,"Parcells saId. She explained thatmost American compames, In-cluding the- prestigious New YorkCity Opera and the MetropolItanOpera, only hIre smgers by thenight If you are singing, you getpaId If you don't have a role in to-night's production, forget it.

"The only steady job with theMet is III the chorus," she saId"And if you are III the chorus, youcan kISS a solo career goodbye."

In Germany, where the govern-ment supports state operas,singers are hired as part of theopera ensemble They have aregular Job WIth the company andwork m many different parts, de-

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Thursday, January 16, 1986

Patricia Clark

Alpha Phi Sorority and IS cur-rently an urban planner forSagmaw County

The bridegroom-elect is agraduate of Sharon High School,Grove City College With a bache-lor of sCience m chemistry andthe University of Michigan Withan MBA. He IS a member of Ep-silon PI Fraternity and currentlyworks for Dow Corning in Mid-land, Mich

ClarkR KendallMr and Mrs. Thomas Clark of

Grosse Pomte Farms announcethe engagement of theirdaughter, PatrICia Mane, to WIl-ham Bradshaw Kendall, son ofthe late Mr. and Mrs. WarrenKendall of Grosse Pomte. A May17, 1986 garden wedding at theGrosse Pointe War Memorial isplanned.

The bride-elect is currently astudent at Michigan State Univer-sity working toward a bachelor oflandscape architecture.

The bridegroom-elect IS agraduate of the University ofNorth Carolina with a bachelor ofarchitecture and the University ofIllmois with a master of architec-ture

Jan 2 at Grosse Pointe MemonalChurch

The Rev Dr. Stan Wilson offI-Ciated at the 11 a m ceremony

The matron of honor was MarciaPowell, frIend of the bnde, GrossePomte Park

The groom's three sons, RussellHerndon, Albequerque, N.M,Ronald H Herndon, Charles, S.C ,and (Thomas A Herndon, Okla-homa City, Okla., acted as bestmen for their father.

The couple honeymooned with aweekend weddmg trip The Will!lve m Grosse Pointe Park

The bride is a graduate of Wel-lesley College and IS a certifiedpubhc accountant The groom IS agraduate of Wayne State Univer-sIty and ISa hIgh school counselor.

All SIXof the couple's sons par-tiCIpated in the small family cere-mony The bride's three sons, War-ren Whitney of the Umversity ofMIChigan, Christopher Whitney ofCornell University and StuartWhitney of MIChigan State, gaveher m marrIage.

Miskito IndiansIn Nicaragua, 10,000 Mlskito In-

dians have been marched to relo-catIOn camps by governmenttroops, says NatIOnal GeographIC

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Rogers-HamelMr and Mrs. Fred E Rogers of

Grosse Pomte Park announce theengagement of theIr daughter,Sharon Lee, to James RileyHamel, son of Mr and Mrs. Wil-lard Hamel of Dearborn. A July12, 1986 wedding IS planned

The bride-elect is a 1974 grad-uate of Grosse Pomte South HighSchool and a 1978 graduate ofOhvet College With a bachelor offme arts. She IS a member ofSigma Beta and Alpha ChiOmega

The bridegroom-elect ISa grad-uate of Edsel Ford High School m1972 and Henry Ford CommumtyCollege WIth a degree In com-mUnicatIons

The couple are both regIsteredflf'lct llndf','wntf'r~ for tl1f' I\f(>wYork LIfe Insurance Company

Cynthia Ehrlich andJohn Winland

EhrlichRWinlarulMr. and Mrs. William G

Ehrlich of Grosse Pointe Park an-nounce the engagement of theirdaughter, Cynthia, to John Win-land, son of Mr. and Mrs. DavidA Wmland of Sharon, Pa. A July5, 1986 wedding is planned.

The bride-elect is a graduate ofGrosse Pointe South High School,the University of Michigan with abachelor of arts in economiCS,and a master's degree in urbanplanning She is a member of

man and Steven HIcks of GrossePomte, and Sheldon Hall Jr , Ur-banna, Va James Motschall Jr., ofGrosse Pomte, and Joseph New-berry of ChIcago, Ill., were lectors

The mother of the bnde wore alavender chIffon tea-length gownWIth a corsage of cream-coloredcymbidIUm orchIds The groom'smother wore a dusty-rose chiffon,tea-length gown, also WIth acream-colored cymbidIUm orchidcorsage

After a brief honeymoon, thecouple will live In Grosse PomteWoods The bnde IS a graduate ofthe UniversIty, of MIChigan andearned a master's degree fromPennsylvania State UmversltyThe groom, a lIfe-long reSIdent ofGrosse Pointe, graduated from theUniverSity of MIchIgan DentalSchool. He has been in practice InGrosse Pointe for 12 years, and iscurrently preSIdent of the DetroitDIstrICt Dental SOCiety

Whitney-HerndonGarland Herzog Whitney of

Grosse POinte Park, daughter ofHenry and Helen Herzog of Wash-mgton, D.C ,and C Ray Herndonof Grosse Pomte Park, son ofHorace and Lula Elmore of NewHavel1, MIen, were married on

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Sharon Ann McDonald

The bride-elect is a 1984graduate of Wayne State Univer-sity Law School and is currentlyearpmg a master's degree at theUmversity of MIChigan.

The bndegroom-elect IS a 1983graduate of Detroit College ofLaw and IS associated with thelaw firm of McInally, Brucker,Newcombe, Wilke and DeBona

McDonald-McMillanMr and Mrs. Thomas J Mc-

Donald of Grosse Pomte Woodsannounce the engagement of theIrdaughter, Sharon Ann, to StevenThomas McMIllan, son of Mr andMrs George Arsenault of GrossePomte Farms An April 1986 wed-dmg is planned at the GrossePomte Woods PresbyterIanChUl ch.

The bnde-elect IS a graduate ofGrosse Pomte South High Schooland attended Sagmaw ValleyState College and IVlacomb Coun-ty CommunIty College

The bndegroom-elect ISa grad-uate of Grosse Pointe South HighSchool and attended Wayne StateUmverslty

the 6 Ii m. nuptIal mass, whIch wasfollowed by a receptIOn at theGrosse POInte Yacht Club

Usmg the fabflc from hermother's antique ivory satin andlace dress, the bflde designed hergown WIth a htted bodice trimm-ed With pearls over a full chapel-length skirt. The cathedral veil,edged by Brussels lace, was gath-ered onto a matching lace-over-satin cap tflmmed with pearls Shecarried an arm bouquet of whiteroses and baby's breath

The bnde's Sister, Carol Stevensof Montcfalr, N.J , was maId ofhonor. Bridesmaids were CarolJennIngs, sister of the groom,DetrOIt, and Cynthia Ann Steves,sister-in-law of the bride, MountainView, Calif. The attendants woreperIwinkle blue taffeta tea-lengthdresses and carried arm bouquetsof cream-eolored alstromeria Illes,roses, blue bachelor buttons andbaby's breath.

The best man was Dr MIChaelJennmgs, brother of the g#Jm,Harper Woods Groomsmen wereDr Thomas Gebeck, GrossePOInte, and Capt RichardStevens, the bnde's brother fromMountam VIew, Calif. The groom'snephew, Brandon Jennmgs, wasrmgbearer, and the ushers wereJimmie Bloink Jr., Dr Jan Ll'h-

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

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Buehrle-MuhleckDon and Manon Buehrle of

Muskegon announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Laura, toRobert A Muhleck, son of Mar-garet Muhleck and the lateGeorge Muhleck of HarperWoods An Apnl 26, 19B6 weddmgIS planned

The bnde-elect IS a graduate ofMona Shores High School m 1976and MIChIgan State Ulllver~lty in1980 She IS the office managerand purchasmg coordmator forThomas Solvent Co of DetrOIt

The bndegroom-elect IS a 1971gradUate of Gro~se Pomte NorthHIgh School and MIchigan CareerInstitute m 1977 He IS an engi-neering techl1lclan In the Hydra-matlc Dlvl~IOn at GI\1C

Renee Janush andWilber Brucker

Janush-BruckerMr and Mrs Walter D Janush

Jr of DetrOIt announce theengagement of theIr daughter,Renee, to WIlber M Brucker III,son of Mr and Mrs Wilber MBrucker Jr of Grosse PointeFarms A September 1986 wed-ding IS planned at ImmaculateConceptIOn UI-ralnlan Church

Dr. and Mrs. William Jennings

Stevens-JenningsAnne Mitchell Stevens. daughter

of Mr and Mrs Walter Stevens ofGrosse Pomte Farms, and Dr Wil-ham G Jenmngs, son of Mr andMrs George Jennmgs of GrossePOinte Woods, were marned onNov 29, 1985 at St Paul CathohcChurch

The Rev Edward Ritter, COUSinof the groom's mother, celebrated

-Weddings

lI~ngaged~~~~~~~~~~~~

i_ J

SiX selecft.d articles on 'he ntJlurulne.}j of!'f'u,e In/rodar/lon by furl fodl f41/ar m(hldof7h, (h""lwfl ~ClmceVumlor

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Academy•receIves

TimmismelTIorial

DesignerThe United States 1984 contem-

porary Christmas stamp was de-Signed by 9-year-<lld Danny LaBoc-cetta of Richmond HIll, NY, inonly 20 mmutes, says NationalGeographIC World

George A. Haggarty, presidentof the board of trustees of theGrosse Pointe Academy, has an-nounced the receipt of a gift of$500,000 to the Second CenturyFund from MIchael and NancyTlmmlS The gift IS given 10memory of their daughter, LauraElizabeth Timmis, a 1984 gradu-ate. This major gIft will prOVidethe funds for the constructIon of anew bUIldmg whIch WIll be namedm Laura's honor, as well as reno-vation of the existing Early School

The Grosse Pointe Academy,located on Lake Shore Road InGro<;s(' Pointe Farms, IScelebrat-mg Its centennial year and has pro-VIded pflmary educatIon to manyresIdents of this community TheEarly School at the Grosse PomteAcademy IS dIstingUIshed as thelargest and oldest MontessoriSchool In the State of MichIgan,dating from its found1Og m 1962.

"The Grosse Pointe Academywas an important part of Laura'sgrowmg up years, as she attendedthe school from preschool to grad-uation in 1984," Timmis said"ThIS gift reflects the appreciationof the family and is a fittingmemorial to Laura The EarlySchool manifests the philosophy ofthe academy's founders and IS thecornerstone of an academy educa-tIOn This expanded facility willcontmue to prOVIde the excellenteducation for WhICh The GrossePomte Academy IS recogmzed."

Ground wIll be broken for thenew building and the renovation ofthe existmg faCIlIty in mid-March1986and all work will be completedm tIme for the opening of the newschool year m September. The newbUIldmg Will Implement the re-commendations set forth in theschool's long range plans preparedby J Michael Kirk, noted restora-tIon architect The new buildmgWIll be 4,680 square feet and WIllcontam an actiVIty room, a gym-nasium and an additional class-room

ThiS construction IS made pos-sible by the Second Century Fundcampaign whIch was initiated inthe spring of 1984 The campaign,under Haggarty's chairmanship,has raIsed more than $2 million forsupport of scholarships, buIldingrenovation, chapel support and en-dowment of faculty salaries. Morethan 100volunteer parents, trust-ees, alumm and friends havedevoted a conSIderable amount ofeffort to makmg thIS campaign asuccess.

PhOlO bV Joe Gazdlck

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

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l.lll r, eh n at ';26-34';9

Valentine dance setA Valentmes Day dance Will be

held on Fnday, Feb 14, at 7 p.mat the Grosse Pomte War Memor-Ial Treat your Valentme to a SIt-down dinner, wme and beer, anddancing musIC wIth a disc jockeyfor only $15 per person

TIckets may be picked up at theWar Memonal or you may maIl acheck to the Grosse Pomte SoccerAssocIation, Valentme Dance, P 0Box 36156, Grosse Po1Ote, MICh.,48236, by Feb 1

The dance is sponsored by theGrosse Pomte Soccer Association.but It ISopen to anyone who wantsto have a good time

No weekendsIn Edwardian England, people

mVlted house guests to come for"Saturday to Monday" becausethe term "weekend" was con-SIdered vulgar, says NatIOnal Geo-graphIc

No-return bottlesWme bottle!> from the wreck of

TItamc, which sank III 1912 at acost of 1,522 lIves, now he on theocean floor at 13,000 feet, and canbe IdentIfied as to type of wine mdeep-sea photographs, says Na-tional GeographIc

Private Duty Nursing Careserving the Grosse Pointesand the Tri-Counties

Get acquainted with AAUWMembership Vice President Francesca Catalfio- Truba, seated center, and program develop-

ment vice.president Aralynn Vinande, seated left, discuss with Mary Leech, standing center,and Anne Stockman, seated right, plans for the Prospective Members' Coffee Meeting that theAmerican Association of University Women's Grosse Pointe branch will hold on Wednesday eve-ning, Jan. 22, at 7:30 p.m., in the upstairs lounge of Grosse Pointe Memorial Church. Studygroups and committees will have displays and a brief presentation will further explain thescope of the AAUW activities. Interested women from east side communities who hold bac-calaureate or higher degrees are invited to drop in at the meeting or to call 881.9585 or885-8247 in advance for further information.

In edltmg thIS section, I often find that I would like to contacta club or orgamzatIOn and find that I don't know who the contactperson IS or how to reach that person. Most of you publicitychaIrmen have been very good about including a contact numberon your news releases, but If you haven't turned anything in thiSweek, and I'd stIll lIke to get 10 touch wIth you - I'm often leftwonderIng who to contact

To help me stay in better touch with you - I'd Itke to put togethera dIrectory of club and orgamzation contact people. This informa-tIOn Willnot be published - so don't worry about your address andphone number becoming public information. I'd just like to havethe mformation so If I suddenly decide that this week I'd hke todo a feature on your club, I'll be able to reach someone

If you'd like to have your club lIsted In my dIrectory, please fillout the form below and return It to: Elsa Frohman, FeaturesEditor, The Grosse Pomte News, 99 Kercheval, Grosse PomteFarms, Mlch , 48236

Club information wanted

NAME OF ORGANIZATION _

BRIEF STATEMENT OF THE NATURE OF YOUR ORGANIZATION

NAME OF PRESIDENT ,PHONE: _

NAME OF PUBLICITY CHAIR PHONE:, _

Community Professional Nursing Service

NAME OF CORRESPONDING SECRETARY _

MAILING ADDRESS _

MEETING SCHEDULE _

Thursday, January Hi, 1986:

MACOMb NURSiNGU'i~j!~2Private Homes, Hospitals

or Nursing Homes• 24 Hour Service - 7 Days a Week• Full Time or Part Time Coverage• Bonded and Insured

By RN's, LPN's, Nurse Aides,and Live in Companions

263.0580

"-~------_.~-~---~--~-~--------"-~-~ - ..

---~---_-.... ...... -------. - ..... ----. - .....'_hIlSl4 _

ServIces

16 [~1keshore DriveGros~e Pomte Farm~11825.110 24 h rs

First EnglishEv. Lutheran

ChurchVermer Road at

Wedgewood Drive,Grosse Pointe Woods

884-5040

Early Worship &Sunday School - 9 10 a mLate Worship - 11 00 a m

Paul F Keppler, PaslorBruce Qualman, Paslor

Faith LutheranChurch

CHRIST CENTERED -SPIRIT LED

Jefferson at Phlhp822.2296

Sunday WorshIp. to 15 a mSunday School • 9 00 a m

Pra)er & PraiseWed 730 P m

PastorRonald W Schmidt

"Ethnics Present,Please Stand!"

JOSEPH P. PERSE with

930&1J30am

Cflb.Toddler CareChIldren ~ Church

School

Wide Selection of

20571 VermerJust east of 1-94Harper Woods

884-2035

~

RedeemerUnitedMethodistChurch

9 00 a m Church School10 30 a m WorshIp

Rev Don Llch!enfelt

CASUAL &DECORATIVEFABRICS

Grosse PointeUnitadan Church

~......-."Keep In Touch"Rev Ms Pat Carol

11 a.m Serviceand Church School

17150 MAUMEE881-0420

JohnCorradoMInister

A& C l/plrollery CO.UPHOLSTERING & DECORATING

Servicing the Pom/es for over 30 years

Grosse PointeUNITED METHODIST CHURCH

211 Moross Road 886-2363

(J

882-8770

DIAL APRAYER

"The Sign of Hope"Dr Donald G Lester, preaching

THE SUBJECT FOR THIS SUNDAY IS:

"Life"First Church of Christ, Scientist

Grosse Pointe Farms282 Chalfonle Ave.

(4 blocks West of Moross)Services

Sunday 1030 A MSunday School 1030 A M

Wednesday, 8 00 P MALL ARE WELCOME

Grosse Pointe WoodsPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

19950 Mack Avenue(ha "way t)e"Neell Morass and Vern er Roads)

886-43009 :lQ a m FamIly WorshIp

"Knot Now"Pastor Edward Taylor, preachmg

11 a m DIVme Worship"Picking Up the Fragments"

Dr Irvmg PhIllIps, preachmg

qIMJ(! ("jJ(.(///(1 <jY(i/f/(.)wl f{jhllifflPresbyterian U S.A

Dr Robert W Boley, preachmg

9.00 a m WorshIp & Church School11.00 a m WorshIp & Nursery through KmdergartenDr Robert W Boley Rev Jack Mannschreck

Free pick-up & deliveryfree estimates

VA 2.966012339 HAYES

Pa~lor (,e.,r!\"r" 'khrltl'rPa.,lor Roherl \ Hlmbo

Thursday, January 16, 1986

Joseph P Fabry, Pastor

8 00 a m Holy Euchanstto 30 a m

Choral EucharIst andSermon, Sunday School

(Nursery AvallablelWeekday Euchansl9 30 a m Tuesda}

Reclor Roberl E \ell\Karen P EI an. a~oclaleLookmg For Fnendshlp

and Bible Teachmg"

~.< l ST. MICHAEL'S

EPISCOPALCHURCH

lOH5 Sunnmgdale Park(.ro~,e POInie \\ood~

881-1820

9'30 & 11 amWorshIp

930amSunday School

& Nursery

10-30 amCoffee Hour

Sunda) School 9 00 a mBible Classes 9 00 a m

Family Worship 10 10 a mFolJolled by FelJo\\shlp

HourWed Bible Class 10 ()()a m

St. JamesLutheran Church

"on The Hill"Mc'lIl1an at Kerchl'\ al

8ll4-0511

WORSHIP SERVICES

VISITORS \\ EL< O;\JE

Christ the KingLutheran Church20338 Mack GPW

884-5090

DON'T PAINT YOUR ~RADIATORS ~~

Sleam and hOI water Ace radiator~~~:;~~sW~~hv:~~~~tco,l enclosuresproven 10be the IlneSI I PrOjeel heal out ,ntomelhod 01healing BUT roomare uyly and old 2 Keep drapes wallsfashioned Pa nl or wood cleanercovers drastccally reduce 3 Beautify your homeheatmg efl,c'ency Free catalog of Ideas and

IrscO efl c,enl healingFf~A EstJma'es ( II I )Manulacturl119 CO. Wr/le or phone to '"

3564 Blue Rock Road, Clnclnnatf, Ohio 45247 1.800- 543-7040

St. Paul Ev.,/. Lutheran._".

-db. Church: . ~ .' 881-6670

" ,- Challonte andLotllrop

9 00 a m Family lI'oflihlP10 10 a m EducatIon for all

11 15 a m \\oflihlpNursery all servIces

REV J PHILIP WAHLREV ROBERT CURRY

The Grosse PointeCongregational

andAmerican Baptist

Church240 Chalfonte at Lothrop

884-J075"Have We

Regressed?"Exodus 20 1-4

Deuteronomy 28 1-89 10 & 11 15 a m ~ervlces9 30 a m Church SchoolCnb room both sel'\ ICes

Dr Ro} R HutcheonReI Keith A Harrmgton

GROSSE POINTEBAPTIST CHURCH

21116 \'lack hl'nurGro~~1' POinte "ood~

8S1-1'l41A ~arm Wdcomr

A"".IlIr.; YOI' t'~ll")\\~

q II. m ~ toCont,"~nlal Rr~ak(a'i I(or everyonr

q 4') a m~unday ""hool / L

1100am ~ tI\formng ,",oNhll' ~ •../

6 '10 pm ....,..Evem ng ""rvl ce !l,r.. ..

WFO'F.~DAY"';4~ P m

FamIly NIght Dmner6 45 P m

Youth & Adull BIble SiudyAwana Cluh for Children

Rev DaVId WIckSenior Pa,tnr

»~\ qar I I II ~llrJ of Fd

f

Pat Carol

Nancy Schmitt

• • •

mumty education and for thehospital's health promotIOn ac-ttvlttes He has coormdated andtaught health education programsat The DetrOIt Medical Center andat Wayne State Umverslty smce1977

SchmItt ISa regIstered nurse andpatIent educatron coordinator atthe instttute She was extensive ex-penence m rehabIlttation nursmgand has developed mterdlsclplin-ary educatiOn programs for pa-tients in several of the hospItal'sspecIalty umts

Schmitt utilIzes humor WIth pa-tIents both at the bedsIde and m theclassroom. With the objective oflegltlmlzmg humor as a therapeu-tiC tool, she organized the Rehab-IlitatiOn InstItute's annual "StaffLaff," and educational programfor all hospital employees.

For reservatiOn mformation callMrs W1l1iamDeBruyne at 293-3786the evenmg of Jan 16

mother IS Mrs James WhartonPaternal grandparents are Mrand Mrs. Harry Bearse.

Amy ElizabethDickinson

Brian and Molly Dickinson ofRochester Hills are the parents ofa daughter, Arpy ,Ehz~R~~~, bor,nDec. 10 Maternal grandparentsare Mr and Mrs. Richard'Julienof Kalamazoo. Paternal grand-parents are Mr. and Mrs PhilipDlckm~on of Grosse Pomte Park

AmandaColleen Cencer

Mr and Mrs Paul D Cencer ofGrosse POinte Woods are theparents of a daughter, AmandaColleen, born Dee 13 Maternalgrandparents are Mr and MrsErwm M Sleron of JacksonvIlle,Fla Paternal grandparents areMr. and Mrs James P Cencer ofSt Clair, Mich

Jennifer Marie BellDaVid and Dianna Bell of

Grosse POll1te Woods are theparents of a daughter, JenmferMarie, born Dec 30. Maternalgrandparents are Mr and MrsEverett Beach of Hillsdale, MIChPaternal grandparents are Mr.and Mrs Rupert Bell of PortHuron

Filthy picturesArt restorers cleanmg MIchelan-

gelo's frescoes in the VatIcan's SIS-tme Chapel have found, under-neath centuries of grrme, astomsh-mgly bright colors, and have con.cluded that much of the smokygloom assOCiated With hIS pamt.mgs was nothmg more than dIrt,says NatIOnal GeographiC

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

Cottage Auxiliaryplans luncheon

RebervdtlOnb are now bemgtaken tor the dnnual meetll1g andluncheon of the Cottage HospitalAuxiliary \\ hlch \\ ill be held onWednebday, Jan 22 at the GrossePOll1tc Club b Berkbhlre Place,Gt osse POinte Farmb

:\Jemberb and guebts will be wel-comed at 11 15a m and lunch w1l1be !>erved at noon. followed by thebusmess meetmg and m!>tallallonof officers

Next on the agenda IS an hourlong lIght and lively pt e:>entatlOnof "The Therapellllc Value ofHumor' by Damel D Thomaszew-ski and Nancy L Schmitt from theRehabIlitatIOn Instttute In the De-trOit Medical Center The program\\ IIIgive a lIghthearted yet senouslook at the role of humor In our per-sonal, profebslOnal and volunteerlives

ThomdszewskI Ibdirector of edu-catton at the Il1s11tute He IS re-!>ponslble for pallent staff, com-

The Grosse POInte Ul1ItananChurch wIll welcome Pat Carol tothe pulpit on Jan 19 She hasserved churches In Westford,Mass, and IS currently Involvedm wrltmg Hebrew Bible stone!>for church schools for a film stnpsenes

David Hans KaufmannDr and Mrs Robert Kaufmann

of Grosse POInte Park are theparents of a son, DaVid Hans,born Dec ~ Maternal grand-parents are Mr and Mrs GordonM Stetz of Grosse POll1te Park.Paternal grandparents are Dr.and Mrs Werner C Kaufmann ofNew York, NY

Julia Anne StefanovichSteve and JulIe Stefanovlch of

Chnton, N C , are the parents of adaughter, JulIa Anne, born Dec17. Maternal grandmother ISLorene PurvIs of Emmence, KyPaternal grandparents are Steveand Barbara Stefanovich ofGrosse Pomte

Sarah Marie BennettBill and Wendy Bennett of

Southgate, Ky, formerly ofGrosse POinte Farms, are theparents of a daughter, SarahMane, born Oct 18 Maternalgrandparents q.rc Toby Morris ofMiddletown, OhiO, and the lateSharon Stahl Paternal grand-parent!> are Jean Bennett of Cm-cmnah and the late Clayton Ben-:leU

Andrew Brett BearseTom and Sallie Bearse of

Grosse POll1te Fat ms are theparents of a son, Andrew Brett,born Dec 16 Maternal grand-

Her sermon IS tItled "Keep InTouch" and concerns the story ofRuth from the Hebrew BIble andhuman relatIOnship,> It IS In-teresting to know that her motherISa Methodist minister III Burton,Mich. near Jo'lInt

The Grosse POinte Ul1ItarranChurch IS open to everyone It ISnon-credaL reqUlrmg only thatyou arc mterested III enrIchIngyour life clnd the lives of thosearound you

Elizabeth Parcells

-A/ew f/rrivalS

(Conlinul'd From Pagt> 1H) Hall box office at 833-3700, or goand the practIce and the set- by the box offIce In personbacks"

A recent additIOn to Parcells'credits IS a compact dl~c record-mg, Just rcl('ased, that she did twoyears ago WIth Conductor LeopoldHager On the recordmg, Parcellssmgs Bach It was released mEurope on the "Forlane" label.

For tIckets to Parcells' concertthIS weekend, where she WIll beaccompamed by .James Wmn onthe plano, contact the Orchestra

GP Unitarian welcomes Pat Carol

MON-SAT.9'30 a m ~.OO p m.

rooms and Apartments-all with private bat~s

• Around-the-clock security

and• Beauty/Barber Shop• Grocery Store• Doctors' ClInic• Gift Shop

all within the bUilding

• Excellent Meals

• RegIstered Nurses on duty

LOIS NAIR

WHITTIER TOWERS

The .Welcome- sign is out,awaiting your call or visit.

call

for information or an appointment:

JANUARY FUR SALE30% TO 60% OFF

Kay Anos Furs19261 Mack (near Moross) next to Woods Theatre 886-7715

Page Four-S

f

;-,-------

Page FJVe-B

19599 MackG.P.W.

882-9711

\,

HOURS:rn-F,9:00-5:30SOot.10:00-5:00-....

16421 HarperDetrOIt

881-1285Open Man Thur Frr 9.8

Tues & Sat 9 5 30CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Tradl tIOna I Women s Apparel22430 GREATER MACK • ST CLAIR SHORES,

Mf 48080 • 773.8110

27113 HarperSt Clair Shores

nS-8900

NAIL CLINIC AND):Lo, SKIN CARE SALONNeu' Revolutionary}

Breaktbrougb Conceptl<'or Nail lL'\:tensions

IlDage & Eyewear

SRLE20% TO 50%

OFF

Open Mon Thurs Frr 10830Tues & Sat 106

CLOSED WEDNESDAY

RLL WINTER mERCHRNDISERT

WINTERCLEARANCE

Naturallyat

80" Sofa 60" Love"e,lt With LIfetime Warranty onConstruction by rLEXS fH L In your selcclJon ofFabriCS. Allow 5 wrek" tor de!lvery

JANUARY SPECIAL SALEon all FLEXSTEEL

SOFAS and LOVES EATS

]\,u\ e 11,1It the ,lppl1c..JlIO!1 [Iml ot

II(,H r BONDI i\l(, ..,Y~TI M lOI1\ ClHIO!1,ll ,Ill \II('" lip,> .1I1L! \\ I,lp'"

No more odors 20311 l\-lack (at Lochmoor)No more lifting Gros~e Pte. Woods. 881-4211

50% OFF EXPIRES FEBRUARY 2H

Fournier'sFurniture

II1Junes, strokes, amputatIOns,those with neurologIcal dIsorders,such as multiple sclerOSIS, andburn patients

"We need these systeml>," saidCallahan, "not only for musIctherapy - for patients learmng towalk agam who are aIded by thebeat of mUSIC, for example - butalso as a way lor patients to relaxand find enjoyment as a release fortheIr pam"

"Each evemng we ha ve dIfferentmUblcal group'> come 111 to prOVidelIve entertamment for our patientsbut we desperately need a soundl>Yl>temto be dble to reach all thepatients," l>he said

Area reSIdents who mIght beable to rionate eqUipment or ,'olun-teer InformdtlOn may contact 1\1e-hnda Callahan at 494-9786 or theOperatIOn LINC office at 882-6100

OperatIOn LINC antlclpatel>many new requests for help fromnumerous metropolItan al'ea agen-Clel>we berve 111 1986 We need yourtime and contnbutlOn~ As a non-profl t, volunteer orgaJ1lzatlOnLINC depends on your support Tovolunteer or donate useable Itemsat any time of the year, pleal>e callLINC at 882-6100, between 9 a mand 2 pm

Slovak EthnicSunday set

The Sal'lsan Folk Ensemble andthe InternatIOnal InstItute Will hosta Slovak Ethmc Sunday, Jan 19at2 p m 111 the Institute Hall ot Na-tIOns, III E Kirby m DetrOIt

The Sansan dancers Willoffer aspeCial performance WIth choreo-grapher Jaroslav SeVCik, a formel'solOIst tor the Slovak National FolkDance Company, "Sluk " Also appeanng WIll be Peter J\llchlIca,vIsIting prole~l>or Irom the WayneState Umverslty MUSIC Department

"Famed Slovak artist VlhamMesco WIll exhIbIt and olfer forbale more than 50 of hll>\\ oodcarvmgs," saId Mdry Ball, execul1vedIrector of the InternatIOnal Insti-tute "He"" III also perfO! m selec,tlOns on authentic IJ1struments, thefUJara and piStala ,.

A film of Slovakia as well al>Siovak refreshments Will be mcludedfor $5, $4 for International Institutemembers ReservatIons are neces-sary and can be made by callIngthe institute dUrIng busll1e~s hoursat 871-8600,or bend check or moneyorder, made payable to the Inter-ndtlOnal Institute, to Slovak Sun-day, 111 E Kirby, DetrOit, MI48202 Seating ISlimIted so call to-day

The InternatIOnal Inl>tltute Ib aTorch Dnve supported agency thatprOVIdes SOCialservIces to new Im-mlgrant~ and foreign speakmgpeople

343-9169

GROSSE POINTE NEWS

Moving1 Engaged1 New Baby?Getting Settled Made SimpleNew Town dilemmas fade after a WELCOME WAGONcallAs WELCOME WAGON RepresenlatlVe ,'s my lob tohelp you make the mosl 01 your new ne,ghborhoodShopPing Areas Communltyopportunltres SpeCia,altractions Lots 01 tiPS 10 save you tlma and moneyPlus a basket 01g,lls for your family I II be listeningfor your callHELPFUL HINTS for Weddings and Engage.menta tool ,:) Ir. ")Ir

vyeTroine W~O~Newcomer, ctHInge-of.,esldence, baby calls,and engagementa.

881.5618 GROSSE POINTE

"We are really proud of ourschool chJldren and theIr famJl-lIes," said Noto

"Even though one elementaryschool chose only to have theirkmdergarten class partICipate andfewer students were actually 111-volved IJ1this year's drive, the chil-dren were even more generousthan before," she explained

"Foster Care chIldren are IJ1temporary homes through no faultof their own, and the State onlyprOVIdes $10 per chIld for eachfoster mother to buy ChrI~tmasgIfts," added O'Bnen

"Those additIonal surpnl>e gIfbfrom our great kids are much ap-preclated," she said

"Of course, we would alwayswelcome the support of any club,orgamzatlOn or II1dlVlduall> whomIght want to donate the gIfts nextyear," saId Noto

WhIle the tmsel, ornaments andlIghts have been put away foranother year, the success otLINC's other hohday programscontll1ue to brIng happmess tomany needy people m 1986

Among the many gen2rous con-tl'lbutlOns to LINC agencIes fromthe commumty thIS season. theMIchIgan Candy Dealers ASSOCia-tIOn prOVided 425 candy-tilledChristmas stockmgs, the RIchardSchool Daisy GIrls Scout Troopgave handmade stockmg stuffers,the Gold and Silver TrefOil Asso-ciation contrIbuted many personalcare gIftS, and 12 beautJ1 ul, hand-made dolls were brought 10 by atalented local cItIzen

And because of thoughtfulnesssuch as thiS the annual LINC ToyChest and GIfts Program was ableto present toys, candy, personalcare Items and food to Adult Ser-vIce Centers, Inc ; DetrOIt Antl-Hunger Program; the Renms-sance Health Care, Inc , La CasaCommunity Youth SerVice,Brown's Chapel MISSIOnary Bap-tist Church; Jefferson House of theCapuchm Commumty Center,Conner House of the EastwoodCommunity Climc, and the Asser-tIVe Commumty Treatment Pro-gram at ACT-Hegira Programs,Inc.

WIth the advent of the Ne""Year, an important request for aIdcomes to LINe from the Rehablh-tatlOn Institute of DetrOIt's Thera-peutIc RecreatIon Department

According to MelInda Callahan,director of therapeutic recreatIOn,the IJ1stItute needs a VCR (VHS) toshow movIes to patients, a stereoWith tape player and turntable, amicrophone, and the expertIse of aknowledgeable volunteer to helpInstItute workers choose and im-plement and appropriate soundsystem for patIents

The institute serves a Wideval'Jety of disabled patientsAmong these are people sufferIngspmal cord mjul'les, closed head

1835 ffetlwudCwct!t ~ HtoekG,P.w.

nursery and church schools wereable to donate toys, or hats andmIttens to deservlllg, but oftenneglected fostel' care kIds

Program co-chaIrmen JeannieNoto and Maggi O'BrIen reportedthat 2Ll more gIlts were receivedby the program 111 1985 than mpre" JOUl>years

Vincent Lionti

Female Ranch Mink "';oatreg. $5595 now $2995

Ranch Mink CoatSilver Fox sleeves and Tuxedo

reg. $4595 now $2950

Lunaralne Mink Coatreg. $3395 now $1995

Blush Mink CoatBlush Fox sleeves and Tuxedo

reg. $3895 now $2495

Autumn Haze Mink Coatsreg. 53395 now $2550

Coyote Coatsreg. $5595 now 53595

Coyote Jacketreg $2395 now $1595

Beaver Coatreg. $2695 now $1750

Blonde Beaver Coatreg. $3695 now $2385

Beaver Jacketreg. $1595 now 5995

Raccoon Jacketsreg 52695 now 51595

Blue, Red, Crystal FoxFlank Blouson Jacketsreg. $1595 now 5995

Full Skin Crystal FoxStroller

reg. $5295 now $3395

Red Fox Jackelreg $2995 now $1995

Opossum P,ece ReverSibleJackets

reg. 5419 now $199

LINC helped make Christmas brighterThursday, January 16, 1986

Stacks of ChrIstmas presents,1,843 to be exact, were the specialgifts of Grosse Pomte school chIl-dren to the foster care children ofWayne County thl~ holIday season

Through OperatIOn LINC's 12thannual Foster Care Children'sChrIstmas GIlt PI ogram, l>tudentl>In 14 Grosse Pomte elementary,

,,

GP Symphony Women's Assoc.to hold membership meeting

his father, C Victor LlOnti He ISalso a vlOhst and the VIOla Con-certo by DalmazIO Santmi waswritten for and dedicated to him in1980 He was the 1977 reCIpient ofthe Dorothy Gluckman Awardffofu tne'Greerl\vich Syinpnony

He IS a member of the VenturnQuartet and ISa coach for the D30CIVIC Orchestra He IS a facultymember at Macomb County Com-mumty College, and has been amember of the DetrOIt SymphonyOrchestra SInce June 1983

TIckets for the meeting and pro-gram are $12 per person and canbe obtamed by contactmg Mrs An-thony Rutkowski, 23318 NorcrestDr , St Clair Shores, 48080

The Grosse Pomte SymphonyWomen's AssocIation will hold itsannual general membership meet-mg to kIck off the 1986 year of ac-tivIties on Jan 23, at 10 :30 a.m ,atthe Grosse Pomte Hunt Club

The busmess meeting wIll'beginthe program and a SOCIalhour andlunch will foHow at 11 30 A pro-gram of musIc featurmg VmcentLlOnh, vlOhmst WIll follow themeal

The SOCIal chaIrman for theaSSocIatIOn IS SylVia RutkowskI.The program chaIrman IS JaneBuhl The preSident of the GPSWAIS Mary Baynert

LlOnti has been playmg the violmsince age 6, under the tutleage of

< '-~~....... ~<o..,b<j;!4$\

:4 SPECTACULAR JANUARYFUR CLEARANCEALL OUR FURS ON SALE*i~"---'--'----_-"'- _

4:~'. > Here's a few examples~*< WHILE THEY LAST<"'"--;.;-

)'<7-\

""""' ....::;..-,

! '

Page Six-B GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

C "t"lIp Moms In<: 1980

Kings & 100s IAlso 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 SmokingNow Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

Mfr's suggested pricing based on full-prrce brands

I

\

\\ Count ern.\\\\

,

Thursday, January 16, 1986 GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Seven-B

(!/uband(!hurchA/ews----------------

8045H,.,T JHHR.,O'I)J fRO! f, 'fiCH.

NURSINGHOME

Women's ConnectionThe Women's Connection of

Gro::.se Pomte presents SelmaFI::.her, who will speak at theThursday, Jan 23, dinner programheld at the Golden LIOn restaurantFisher has her own tax practiceand ISan "enrolled" agent, whichenables her to practice before theIRS

Her tOpIC wll1 be the proposedtax law and Its effects The even-mg is open to the publIc There ISa charge of $13to members and $15to non-members for the dlllner andprogram There IS a charge of $4for the program only,

The deadlme for reservatIOns ISSaturday, Jan. 18 SOCializing anddmner is from 6 to 8 pm, with theorogram following For reserva-tIons, contact Anne Marie LaIrd at331 1998

821-3525QUr1llT>

\URSING Cr1RE

AARPThe Grosse Pomte Chapter :2151

of the Amencan ASSOCiationof Re-tired Persons will meet at 1 pm011 Jan 27, at Gro::.se Pomte Mem-ondl Church

Dr John A Whntner, superIn-tendent of the Grosse PomteSchools, Will speak on the subject."Our Grosse POll1te Schoob - To~da} and TomolTo\\- "

No capDamel Boone never wore a coon-

skm cap, says NatIOnal Geograph-IC

FLOOR COVERING INC.

On Our Already Low PriceMohawk • Galaxy • Salem

Lees - Wunda Weve • Pepperell

JANUARY CARPETSALEEXTRA 10%DISCOUNT

14410 HarperCt~t};3;AI v/S4" "I 822.2645 [E-8]

Man .Frr 8 00-6 00 Sal 9 00-3 00

Women's Association ofGrosse Pointe Memorial

The annual meetll1g of theWomen's As&oclation of Gro&sePOlOte MemOrial Church wIll beheld Jan 21, at 10 a m Followinga bnef bU~lI1ess meetmg and pre-sentatIOn of annual reports, thegroup WIll adjourn to BdrbourChapel where the Rev Anne EFuhrmel::.ter, mtenm d&~Oclatlonpa~tor, Will conduct the m::.tallatlOnof thc officers CommuOlon wdl be!>crved

A luncheon honorlllg the assocla-tlOn'~ pa&t preSidents will follow atnoon 111 the follow~hlp hall Reser-V'<:ltlOnsfor lunch can be made bycall1llg the church offICe at 882-5.330

(;rosse PointeCamera Club

The Grosse Pomte Cqmera ClubWill meet on Tuesday, Jan 21, forboth prmts and slIdes for competi-tIOn, at 7.30 pm, at Brownell Mid-dle School. 260 Chalfonte, Gro&&ePomte Farms For more Il1formatlOn, call 881-8034

Pointe Garden ClubPomte Garden Club will meet at

noon Monday Jan 20, at theWhither, 450 Burns DrIve Ed-ward Eaton of Eaton Nursery Willgive a talk on "Landscape Reno-vatIOn of Older Homes"

Mrs Richard A Forsyth IShostess for the luncheon meeting,aSSisted by Mrs Dainforth B.French, and Mrs Gerald E War-ren

Ribbon Farms QuestersThe RIbbon Farms Chapter of

the Questers Will meet at noon fora luncheon at the home of MrsJoseph Scanlan on Monday, Jan20 The members Will each parti-cIpate In the program by brmgmgone collectible and presentmg dl&-tmgU1&hll1gfeatures and hIstoricaldata to the group

Tho oldDamel Boone, the great AmerI-

can frontiersman, volunteered tofight 111 the War ot 1812, but wa~turned down because he wa& 78,says NatIOnal GeographiC

Louisa St. Clair DARLOUIsa St Clair chapter of thc

National SOCIety of the Ddughtcr&of the American RevolutIOn willcelebrate Its 93rd birthday With agala luncheon meetlllg at the De~trOlt Golf Club on Saturday, Jan111The SOCial hour will beglO at11 30 a m and lunch WIll be scrv.ed at 12 30 P m

Mr~ George T Ed::.on, chapterI egent, Will preSide at the meetingThe featured ~peaker Will be Mr&John P Weaver Sr , regent of theDaughters of the AmerIcan RevolutlOn of Michigan Hcr tOPiC \\ illbe "Our Country's Coloma I Inni>and Taverns" SpeCIal guests wIllbe members of the state executiveboard and regents of nelghbormgchapters

Mrs Frank S Clark IS thehostess and reservations are bemgtaken by Mrs Charles E Marches-sault and Mrs Kenneth MWheeler

Breather's Club'What Ii>Emphysema'l" 1&the

tOPIC at the month's BreatheI'~Club, the support group of chromclung disease patients sponsored bythe American Lung ASSOClatlOnofSouthea&tern MIChigan The meet-mg beglOs at 2 30 pm Monday,Jan 20 at the Calvary SemorCenter, 4950 Gateshead, DetrOit

Bob Padalmo, MAR R T , wIllbe the speaker

Breather's Club meets the thirdMonday of each month and IS afree community service of theLung ASSOCiation For more mfor-matIon, call 961-1697

Junior Groupof Goodwill

The "Potpourri" cookbook pub-hshed by the Jumor Group ofGoodWIll \\-III be on sale at thePomte Pedlar on Saturday, Jan18, when Grosse Pomters HelenHuber and Joanne Zuchowski areon hand to demonstrate some ofthe recipes m the book There wlllbe a tastmg table of samplesReCipes for hors d'oeuvres, soups,an entree and desserts WIll bedemonstrated The program Willgo on from 11 a m to 2 p m

19565 MACK AVE.GROSSE POINTE WOODS

(formerly of the Image Makers)

HAS JOINED THE STAFFAT

ANNOUNCING

Pam Arnold

Pear TreeQuesters

Mrs Steven StefanovlCh andMrs John McLellan wIll host thePear Tree Chapter of Questersmeeting on Thursday, Jan 16, at10 am, at the Central LIbrary,Kercheval and Fischer roads

The program WIll feature DrCharles Hansen as guest speakerHIS talk WIll be followed by a bnefbus mess meetmg. Coffee and rollsw111be served

Guests are mvited to JOIl1 themembers for thiS specIal occa&lOn

EastsideHandweavers Guild

The EastsIde HandweaversGuild, an association of personslI1volved in various fiber arts, m-cludll1g weaving, spinmhg andbasketry, Will hold their monthlymeetll1g on Monday, Jan 20, atthe Gro&se Pomte Central LI-brary

The program entItled "Warpmgthe Loom," will present Ideas forplanmng warps which combmeyarns of many dIfferent texturesand colors, and varIOus problemsolVIng Ideas and techmques ItWill be of mterest to both ex-perIenced and nOVIce weaversAll persons who are mterested 10the fIber arts are welcome to at-tend

Refreshments and social hourbegm at 7 pm With a bUSInessmeeting at 7-30 p m al,d thE:pro-gram scheduled for 7,45 P m Forfurther mformatlOn you may callSue Elhson at 881-2906 or MaryLeIgh Herdegen at 882-2261

Sweet AdelinesThe Greater DetroIt Chapter of

Sweet AdelInes, Inc. IS holdIng aspeCIal guest mght 011 TUc::,JdY,Jan 21 at 7'30 pm. 111 the GabrielRichard BUilding, U of M-Dear-born campus, 5001 Evergreen,Dearborn Women who like to SlOgare lOvlted to attend

Guests wlll be mVlted to particI-pate m a typical Sweet Adehnes re-hearsal and learn a song 111 four-

Grosse DOI"nteSl"ngles part barbershop harmony It ISnotCI necessary to know how to read

Richard Walker of Reuters musIc The chorus will also enter-News Service wIll be the featured tam them WIth songs from its re-speaker on Friday, Jan 17 at 7'30 cent show whICh featured musIC ofpm, when the Grosse Pomte the 40sSingles convene In the Lakeshore Sweet AdelInes. Inc IS an mter-~oom of the Grosse POInte national smging orgamzatlOn WithAcademy, 171 Lake Shore Rd, over 30,000 members throughoutGrosse Pomte Farms HIS tOPIC' the Umted States, Canada, Eng-"Reporting DetrOIt - For the land, Sweden, the Netherlands,Rest of the World" Japan and Australia The Greater

An Afterglow Dance, Im- DetrOIt chapter has 45 membersmediately following the general representIng 26commumtles in themeetIng wiII be held at the Jeffer- DetrOit metropolitan area. Theson Yacht Club, 24505 E. Jeffer- group performs for semor clhzenson, St Clair Shores, at 9-30 pm groups, church groups and otherThe music of Doug DI Maria will CIVIC and commumty orgamza-be featured tions

Sunday afternoon, Jan 19, at 5 For further mformatlOn callp.m. Grosse Pomte Smgles Will Juhe PPIrce at 8l:l2-1877have a WlI1e & Cheese Party at dthe Grosse Pomte Farms home of Win milla member. Pointe Questers

Friday, Jan 31, the featured h d '11Ispeaker will be Dr Miguel Loren- T e Wm ml ointe Questers

will meet in the h me of Mrs J Lzim, M D, tOpIC, "Natural En- Obenauer on Monday, Jan 20.~:~~~~ent through Plastic Sur- She WIll also be presentmg the

Grosse Pointe Singles IS a dl- program on the hIstory of collect-verSIfied smgles group offering a Ible bells, glVmg the foundatIOn

and the how and when of the bell'svarIety of actiVItIes m educa- h bhonal travel and social functlons. beginning. T e oldest ell was

found some 3,000,000 years ago 10A,ny smgle person, 35 and up, ISm- Asiavlted to att~nd any ~f these func- The coffee hour and meetmg Wll!hon~ For mformatl?n, call t~ be c~.by Presldellt Mr::.HoMme 445:r288, anyti'rfte .... Carl~asia before the program

Alpha Xi DeltaThe first meetmg of the new year

for the Grosse Pomte and MacombCounty Alumnae of Alpha Xi DeltaWill be a VoLUNGteer Workshopat the American Lung Associationoffices on West Adams m DetrOIton Monday, Jan 20 PartIcipantsare asked to brmg a brown baglunch

Starting at 9.30 a m. the alum-nae Will address and stuff enve-lopes WIth material whIch answersrequests for Christmas Seal con-tributions for heatlh mformation

Mrs. Stephen Lyle, preSIdent ofthe alumnae group, Will be coor-dinating a car pool to dnve to theworkshop, Her number is 977-3263

Alpha XI Deltas have been work-mg with the AmerIcan Lung Asso-ciation for many years as one oftheir natIOnal phIlanthropic proJ-ects

CREW

GPUMCFellowship Groups

The Fellowship Groups ofGrosse POlllte United MethodistChurch Will meet on Tuesday, Jan21 The program will be an over-view of the Book of Damel, whichwIll be the BIble study for LentThe program Will be gIVen byCarol Ann MaleItzke and PatDeck

The AM Fellowship, BarbaraBrasseur, chairman, Will meet inthe mornmg at the home of CarolDavey

At noon, the Evelyn GrIffIth Fel-lowship, Margarette 01l1a, chair-man, wIll meet with Betty Dun-woodle in her home. Betty Bu "faand Irene Dickson will serve as ~o-hostesses

Sue Lenz, Margaret Layson andRoberta Owens wLlI be co-host-esses for the WesteY~~IlWshlpWith supper at ute churcnRober-ta Owens IS chairman of the Fol-lowship.

DOrISWhite FellowshIp, DorothyGreer, chairman, WII!meet m theevemng at the home of EmilyBoley

Everyone IS welcome Select atime convement for you and callthe church office for more mfor-matlon

A group of Detroit-area womenha ve orgamzed a Michigan affilIa-tion with CREW-Commercial RealEstate Women, home-based InWashIngton, D C, The group com-prises real estate professIOnals in-terested in furtherIng their careerdevelopment and establlshmg con-tacts With people mvolved invanous aspects of commercIalreal estate

CREW IS Intended to brmgtogether women In all avenues ofreal estate - architecture, con-structIon, fmance, acquisitIon - maddition to the traditional roles ofselhng and property managementThere IS a need in the DetrOItmetro area for these mdiVIduals toget together and share ideas andestablish a stl Ullg netwul kmg sy~-tern, accordmg to CeCe Sharp,president of Schostak EquitiesCorp and a CREW founder.

Meetmgs are scheduled for thesecond Wednesday of each monthWith the next meetmg scheduledfor Wednesday, Feb 21,7 p.m. atthe AmerIcan Center BUIldmg,27777Franklin Road m Southfield.Guest speaker is Leslie Cohen ofForbes/Cohen PropertIes in South-field Potential candidates, whohave been employed for at leasttwo years on a primary basis incommercIal real estate, are en-couraged to call Sharp or KathleenValenstein at 559-2000 for furtherdetaIls

Pointe Book ClubThe January meeting of the

POInte Book Club WIllbe held Mon-day, Jan 20 at the home of MrsEllsworth W Allison. The co-hostesses Will be Mrs WilliamHosbem and Mrs Kennard Jones.Followmg the luncheon, GerdaBwhtz of the Grosse Pomte Li-brary Service wIll review severalcurrent books mcludmg "Accident-al TOUrIst" by Anne Taylor, and"Davlta's Harp" by Chalm Potok

Comesee Arpin's fabulous 1986 collection of fashion furs, expertly craftedInlo loday's exciting new designs .•. and of course, you are assured 01line qualify and value when you shop Arpin's.

60th JANUARY FUR SALEARPIN FURS Of WiNdSORFine/Canadian Furs at Very Special Prices

If we cen helpyou with yourmedical orpersonal car.needs, call us.• Home nursing• Private Nursing• Home making

services

Prof•• slonal Medica. S.rvlc ••2040 H...,., Aw."H_,...r Wood., MI 4822.• SHlt .......... - MII C."whwwlttee fer 0..... ,. T....

THINKING OF A NEW

KITCHEN?If It's By Customcraft,It's in a Clm,s by Itself

CALL THE PROFESSIONALS

~~~~~~~~FI~81.1024V,s,t our Showroom

Mhl"'"dU,. ..lth ~"r'\1(f"

IF YOUCAN'T BETHERETO CARE,CALL US. 343-4357711/CJ In,l1'lfJin

Fur Speria,tst for over 58 year"ItH4 Pell~~ler Sereee

Windsor • 1-')I <). 253 5612Daily <) (0 ') ~O, Fn (0 <)

Park In the DownlownParklnR GaraRf -

Park at PelISSIer

Duty an d SalesTax Refunded

Fuil Premium onAmerican Funds

Heart of GoldTwo Grosse Pointe Farms residents recently attended the

Heart of Gold Award Council meeting to screen nominationsfor the 1986 volunteer awards program. Pictured are, left, San-dy Fisher, Heart of Gold screening and judging chairman; andKarla Scherer Fink, Heart of Gold vice chairman. The Heartof Gold program, which honors outstanding volunteers, issponsored by the Heart of Gold Award Council and the UnitedFoundation. Trl-county area residents will be honored for mak.ing outstanding volunteer contributions at a luncheon Feb.18 at Cobo Hall. For ticket Information, contact the UnitedFoundation at 965-7100 before Jan. 31.

- -_ ..._ ...~,.,- ~ ... --_ ......

Grosse Pointe Real Estate ExchangeTHE PROPERTIES LISTED ON THESE PAGES ARE OFFERED EXCLUSIVELYG) BY MEMBERS OF THE GROSSE POINTE REAL EST~,TE EXCHANGE ~

Page Eight-B

r!im ~tU'O.$ ~~ene£,in~17108 MACK

886.9030

GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

GROSSE POINTE FARMS OFFICE90 Kercheval

884.6200

ST. CLAIR SHORES OFFICE23915 E. Jefferson

775-6200

FIRST OFFERING

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5OPEN SUNDAY 2-5

JU:::. T THE RANCH jou've been !ookmg for and THIS WONDERFUL FAMILY HOME has fournow that ItS been redone III neutldl tones, It'!> bedrooms and two and one half baths Itperfect Llvmg loom and den have natural flre- features a large family room WIthfIreplace, up-place" the kItchen ha!> been updated With dated kItchen WIth eatmg area and IIlcludes anewer dl!>h\\asher, dIsposal and floor The newer refngerator, stove and mICrowave ovenFlOrida room has ,>lJdmgdoorwall to pllvate Beautiful yard WIthnew patio and shrubs ThISpatIO and gas gnll for those summer bar-be- home has been well mallltained and decoratedque's 1\vo bedrooms, two full baths All thIS illSIde and out and IS m move-m condltlon.835and more 655 ROSLYN WESTCHESTER

DEVONSHIRE AN EXECUTIVE IMAGE WIll be fulfilled WIth thIS SIXbedroom, three full bathsand two lavatory home Amellltles for elegant entertamlllg SpacIOus famIly room, sound proofIlbrarv 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 planoffel!>IIvlng loom dllJlng loom, fdmlly room, three bedrooms and two full hie baths Extra largecurner lot mcludes a !>prlllkier sjstem and an attached two tar garage WIthcarport Call for extradetmls of <Illextl d mnelJltlCo

HAHVARD I\OT A DRIVE BYI" ThiS three bedroom, one and one half bath Dutch ColomallSTASTEFULLY decorated m neutral colors The hVlng room WIth natural fIreplace, formal dmmgroom den and bedroom have refllllshed harawood floors Low heat bills are the result of the newenergy effiCIent furnace, new storms and screens and extra, extra msulatlOn There are many moreamemtlCs and assets m thiS lovely home Call for detaIls

HARRISON THIS HOUSE HAS A HOST OF NEW THINGS like a new roof, new carpetmg,new furnace, and ne\\ 100AMP service to name a few Llvmg room has cathedral ceIling WIthcharm-mg brick fireplace, fIrst 1I00r laundry, and ItS close to schools and transportatIOn

STUNNING AND BRIGHT de!>cflbe thIS threebedl oom, t\\O and one half bath St Cldll on theLake condominIUm The !>unken hvmg room\\llh ndlllral rlre-plart' ha<; 1\\0 doorwal1, thatledd'> to the enclosed patio Although there I~..I dJlllllg room, the kItchen has eatmg !>paeeandmatching appliances plus a trash compactOlFull bd!>ement WIth dark loom and a one carattdched garage are defmlte as!>ets MUSTSEE"

HOME MARKETING SYSTEM

FIRST OFFERING

, '

7'fl ;l,IIDDLESEX - Fabulous house located onone of Glos!>e POInte Pal ks fme'>t and mostsecluded streets FIlJlshed ba!>ement withnatur<ll fll eplace, central air, gal age dooropener, la\\ n !>prlllkier sy!>tem

.:B08BERKSHIHE - Five bedrooms, four fullbdth!>,lavator)- Ell" I", L-'0 'h, sel vIce !>tallb,!>prmkler sy!>telsO 1n burglar. fireand "cold" alar ~ ,~lems RecreatIOn roomlfl the ba~ement with fireplace

BY APPOINTMENT

;;~1$

868 WESTCHESTER - Three bedl oom bnckColomal. central air, fanlll) room formal dUImg room, large screened In porch oft of kitchen. new cement drive and yard

. .~;~946RIVARD - Brick Illcome III Grosse PomtePerfect for extra 1ll""~LOduclllg umt or fO!large famdy nsO etc T\\ 0 car attached garage, .. dlllreplace III basementand recreatIOn room Call bl ol..er fOi mOle de-taIls'

\105BEHK~HIHE - Open f:>unda) 1 ~ UnbelIe\ dble English Tudor Unbehe\ able pllte I

Fedturmg three !>tOl)-~tal/led glass sl.y light,kitchen \\ Itll butler!> pdntn and gorgcoushIedHa!>t room Gorgeous leaded gldss dndh'lld\\ood throughout OPE,\, ~U;.,DAY 1')'

FIRST OFFERING1138 ANITA - Beautiful bilei-. ranch III nunt condltlOnt I 1\\0 bedroom!>, Flond,l room $71,000

OPEN SUNDAY

HOME BUYING SYSTEM

Grosse Pomte Woods886-4200

Administrative Office268-1000

OPEN SUNDAY 2-515'l6 Brys - Grossi' POintc Wood"254 Lothrop - Gro<;'>cPOlllte F,lrm ..~7 Wllh,>on - GrossI' Pomte Shorf''>t9616 Keno<;ha - Harper Woexl,>1\12NotrE' Dame - Gro,,-e I'olllll' ( IIY468 McKmley - Gro,,'>c POlntc 1"lInn..801 Lincoln - Gro,>~e POinte ('Ity

• 7

~",,- ... ~ H

IMMACULATE AND VERSATILE home onexqUIsitely landscaped grounds and With-inwalkmg distance to all schools ThIS three tofour bedroom brick bungalow has a naturalbrick fIreplace m the basement, recreatIonroom and bar, furnace room and offIce MUCHMORE' $105,000 (G-68HAWl 886-4200

FIRST OFf'ERING I ThIS wonderfully locatedfour bedroom, two and one half bath cen-ter entra nce Colomal features three fireplaces One fIreplace ISIII the kItchen Hastwo-car attached garage and more Call fordetails $172,000. m-OOOXf<')8852000

LIGGETT SCHOOL AREA ThiS four bedroom,two and one half bath Coloma I has a greatne\', kItchen completed m 1985 Oak cabl-neb. !>peclal tile, kitchen-aId dIshwasherCentral aIr, patIO to a lovely back yardtH-05CANl 885-2000

SPACIOUS RANCH ThIS custom hUllt ranchhas many features, custom kltchrn With hUlltms and eatmg area, over'i1Zedfamily room wllhwet bar and flCldstone flreplacp $217,(J()(J47WILLISON, GROSSI': POINT!': !o>HOIU:SOPf:N SUNDA Y 2 'i 886-2000

fo f{r:~HLY DECORATED and super sharp'Thl., four to five bedroom bungalow ha!>twodnd (JO~ half bath!> flr~t floO! laundn flr!>tfloor md.,tpr !>Ulteand fanta!>tlc kitchen" GreatIdmlJy homf' 2')4LOTHROP OPE~ SUNDA Y2-i 1',1',6 WI(j

NEW OFFERING I ThIS beautIful three bed-room condo offers central aIr and all apphances Clo'>eto the VlIlage shoppmg areadnd transportation Immediate occupan-cy' Call today for details' $80,000IF IISTP) 886 5800

PRIME ARF:A Lo\\c~t pncpd comparablehom(' III Ea'>t J)plrOlt Thl'>thr('c hedroombrick ranch ha<;hard\l.oon floor; \l.et pIa!>ter anrl alummu m trlll1 fllJ1!>hrnba<;('mentWith lavatory, new('r roof dnn more QUIckO<'cupant) $;2,lJOO IG 14EGO) 886 4200

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 hardwoodfloors 5074-91l0 1;16 BRYS OPE\, SUN-DA Y 2-i 886 :iBOO

GHOSC;EP( JIVff: CITY Thl'>umque Coloma Ihd" hN'n exten<;lvelv restored m the la'>ttv.II }"dr., Th(' home boa,,!!>of a 10\ely mI('nor dccentpd h\ j('aded glas'> \\ 1IIdo\\'>dnd di'l<lIled \l.et pla~ter $114000If-' 01 LI ~) llll6 illOO

1\1I1\'TCONJlITION I Thl'> t\l.Ohedroom bnckr<lnch f(,<ltllre!>ndturaJ fireplace In the hvmg room, largc Flonda room Thl~ homeI'> mcp]y decordt('d and m the GrossePomte School dIstrict Call today $';0 lj()()(G60NOR) R!lh4200

UNIVER5ITY Wonderful English stylebungalo\l. \\ Ith loads of charm BeautifulIv decOlati'd \l.llh natural \l.ood\\ork,largebedroom<; and prett, fIreplace ConH'mentlocatIOn Don t ml'>" thl'> one Call today'(Ii 82UNIl 8812000

YOUNG COUPLE HAVE BEEN SEAHCIlJNGfor a three or four bedroom ('olol1lal orranch m north cnd of Gros'>e Pomte Park,any area of Gros"e Pomte Farm!> or Gros.,ePOlflte Woods cast of Mack Will do ~omeredecoraltng If needed Up to $100,000WOO IFAR I 1186')800

BUYER DREAMING of !>pendmg the re!>tofthe wmter by the fireplace In the familyroom of a four bedroom Colomallocated In

Gro!>sePomte Farm'> Willing to spend betwren $200,000 and $225000 Call today'(fI-001rOE) 118;-2000

SEEKING A SEMI HANCU In Gro<,<,ePomteShore'>, Farm,>, or Gro'>sc POinte CityWould prefer four bedroom'> two baths anda famIly room 3000square feet for up to$Z:->o,OOO Ca II today' (!I001KEA' M5 2000

BUYI-:HS WILLING TO no '>ome of the workto achlCve thp dream of havmg a beauti-ful 4000 '>quare foot Colomal m GrossePOInte bhores or Farm'> WJlJ go up to$'l2'>,000for a four or five bedroom home(JI OOIMIL) 885200()

Ichweitzere~Bettgfnes.Real EJtote.lnc. I I iIfIIII Hand Gardens

If you're thinking of selling your home - WEHAVE THE BUYERS! If you're looking for ahome - WE HAVE THE SYSTEM that can makeyour dreams come true!

MUST BUY A HOME I A three or four bedroomranch In Gros~e Pomte Park or Gro<;sePOinte Shores Minimum of two bath" \l.Ithfamily room (If aVdllablel Bet\l.een$175,000 and $210,000 Need!> IMMf:DIATELY' (GOOIRICl ll864200

''''''''',-..M}.;st'''1,,~~i? ",Everyday, we service families just like yours ...helping them find the perfect home. Below isjust an example of some of the things that ourbuyers are looking for!

SEEKING TO SETTLE m a three bedroomColomal or ranch In Grosse POinte City orFarms Prefer a two car attached garage,and natural fireplace Lookmg between$80,000 and $90,000 (GOOIFRAl 886 4200

fLOOKING FOR A LISTING of a three hcdroom

brick ranch With one and one half hath ormore, famIly room, basement, two car attached garage, and between $12; 000 and$165,000 Any where m the Gros'>e POlfltes(GOOISEL) 886 4200

WE IIAVE TWO BUYERS lookmg for a ldrgeranch or one and one half story home III theShores, Farms or Woods f<'amlly room andSpaCIOUSdesign are a mu'>t' Betwern$100,000and $150,000 (FOOlAND I 8lI65800

Grosse Pointe Farms886-5800

Grosse Pointe "HIli"885-2000

t

f,

I~

Thursday, January 16, 1986 GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Nine-B

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5281 Beaupre - G P F

When you list your home withCENTUR Y 2 J LOCH MOOR weplace a picture of your residenceIn the Macom b M L S book as wellas In the Grosse POinte Exchangebook You can double your home'~exposure by IIstzng It With us'

460 LABELLE - APPEALING - Large (2,100 sq fl )Colomal m a great locatIOn of the Farms Twoand 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 FIrstfloor laundry, den, updated kitchen, second floor terracE'. 5>creened m porch I ,

"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,Largeroom sues, newer carpetmg extra InsulatlOn I I Nicely land5>caped, good (DndltlOn'

9'250BOLEYN - BEAUTIFUL three bedroom, two bdth bungalo\\ m a super location of DetrOIt Rect'nlIy updated and decordted, new central aIr, kitchen, electriCIty Cdll for detalb

Ontu~'r=~tT21'1LTJ J UULOCH MOOR

884-528020439 MACK AVENUEGrosse POinte Wood!:>

•I1J '~:

~ ,,,f,, '.;..~t,:,; ~

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5

S~&,1<, g'~ ;eea~

'"rJJII,rl) Sai"s alld f'r;"IH/,~ tn' Had,,' 886.8710OPEN SUNDAY 2-5

~~

B 1~#i 9~,JI '7:,;I~

CANAL PROPERTY - BUild your dreamhome on thIS 80xlJO foot vacant lot com-plett' With <,tl'l'1<;l'!lWi\lI

IMMACULATE INCOJ\IE - Verv dedn andwell mall1tamed two family m GrossePomte Park Each umt has three bed-rooms, natural fIreplace and separateutilIties

FABULOUS CANAL HOME - With three bed-rooms, one and one half baths, library,modern kitchen and spacIOus family room\\ lth cathedral cellmg, fireplace, wet barand door\\all to large yard and pallo areaAlso an 80 fool5>eawall WIth covered hOIstCall for detaIls

YoungbloodRealty Inc.

BHING A LITTLE PAINT & ELBOWGREASE - GET A GREAT !,'AMILYHOME With four bedroom" two ilnd onehalf baths, paneled famIly room Withfireplace, bUilt m the 60's WIth good Sizedrooms and a ternflC floor plan

SPACIOUS ENGLISH - featurmg largerooms, and solId old fashIOn quality Withfour bedrooms, three and one half baths,a paneled library, a screened terrace, alarge recreatIOn room With fireplace andan attached garage

HUNTINGTON - You'll be surpnsed at thespacIOus room, custom kitchen, secondfloor laundry, and most of all that you canown thIS four bedroom, two full bath homeWith den wlln wet bar, FlOrIda room andrecreation room for Just $113,000

CONSIDER a family room, a lIbrary, and ahobby room all on the mam floor ThiS ISalso a well landscaped 250 foot deep lotcomplete Witha banked runnmg track Callfor more details

GREAT FAMILY HOME' THREE MILEDRIVE - Four bedrooms, three and onehalf bath Colomal has plenty of room foryour family acllvltles

23011 COLONY CondommlUm located nealGrosse Pomte E Mack - S 9 Mile "All onone !,'loor .. Two bedroom!>, central air, apphances Included Terr ..Ice\\lth door I', .Ill 0'. crlookmg beaullful court yard Pnce redu(ed

IHO VEl{I\'If<~){HOAD Located dllOS!> fromLOl hmoOi GoB Cour!>c ThIel' bedrooms,I1JtUIdl !Il epldcc 111 hVll1groom Den, roof five\1'.11" old Hoo! on g,lId!!<>l1e\\' l{e<'lf',lllOnloom Immedl.lte OCCUpJIlC\,

ESTATE ~ALE - Large Flench Country oftellng SI'I( bedroom!>, four baths plus powderloom Thl ee fIreplaces, den, screened mudporch HecrcatlOn room With la\'atory,bm gular alai m, ne\\ er bOIler dnd roof Two cargJI.lge immediate occupancy

BRAND NEW HOUSE - Custom bUIlt by BayPomte DeSign Co Cape Cod sllll under constructlOn Features Include great room, threebedrooms plus 20x14studIO, library WIth closetor fourth bedroom FIrst floor laundry Jacuz-ZI Inmaster bedroom Generous allowance forunflllished Items

VACANT LOTS - GROSSE POINTE FARMS - Two chOIce lots for sale or WIll bUild to SUIt LocatedIn Hose Ten ace Bay Pomte DeSign Co PrIced at $75,000 and $85,000

Kercheval Ave.886.3400

EDGEMERE - ExceptIOnal Colomal on 235foot privately landscaped yard With pool,greenhouse and garden house Library andgarden room SIX bedrooms and four andone half baths RecreatIOn room, central

• aIr, lawn spnnkler and two car attachedgarage

BALf'OUR - Four bedroom, two and one halfbath center entrance Colomal on 123xl72lot Updated kitchen and baths Secondfloor FlOrIda room RecreatlOn room Twocar attached garage

BELLE MEADE - Four bedroom ColomalWIth both a lIbrary and famIly room FIrstfloor laundry First floor la vatory With stallshower Paneled basement has lavatoryWIth stall shower and a sound proofed roomfor band practIce Central air Cm;:le dnve

- T\\lo'cat garage~ \\)()X'fll'91ot . --

SOMERSET - Two family brIck flat Two bed-room5>III each umt Natural fIreplace Rec-reatIOn room Separate utIhlles Two cargarage $79,000

Th1l1k1l1gof relocating to an unfamiliar area?Call or slop 111 our office and we will be gladto have informatIOn on your new area sentto you WIthout obligatIon We are membersof one of the largest relocatIOn servIces Inthe United States and Canada

Other flUe Grosse POinte propertIes availableIl1 all Pi Ice Ianges

DIDS3mGBIEMAXON

AUDUBON - Delightful fIve bedroom threeand one half bath English Updated kit-chen Large famIly room With fireplaceJacuzzI off famIly room Flmshed base-ment Three car garage Adjacent bUIld-able lot mcluded

WASHINGTON ROAD - ImmedIate posses-sion Over 7,000square feet Coloma I 16x19library 18x21 drawmg room Heatedgarden room Newer kitchen Nine bedrooms and five baths AdJommg bUildablelot avaIlable WIth house

NEFF ROAD - One and one half story re5>l-dence With den or bedroom and full bathon first Three bedrooms and bath on sec-ond Paneled recreatIOn room 1'\\0 cargarage 50x156 lot $70,900

WINDEMERE - ettstorn blill~detached con-dommlums Umque and exclUSIVe LocatedIn Grosse Pomte Farms off Lake Shore

RIVARD - Enghsh styled condomll1lUm town-house First floor library Four bedroomsand two baths on second plus two bed-rooms, bath and storage on thIrd One andone half car garage

ON BEAUTIFUL PROVENCAL ROAD -Stately reSIdence on profeSSIOnally mam-cured 2 27 acre lot With pool Large galleryhall WIth open staIrcase and two powderrooms Beaultful paneled IIbrarv with fire-place Updated kItchen Screened terraceWith awmng Five spaclOUS family bed-rooms, each WIth bath and two WIth fIre-places MaIds rooms Games room Withfireplace m basement A truly outstandmgreSidence

KERBY ROAD On a GOx161lot thiS one and onehalf story residence offers three bedroomsand two baths Kitchen has table spaceThel e ISalso a bedroom, third bath and anoffIce In the basement Two car garageOnly $89,500

VENDOME - Outstandmg Enghsh Tudor Internflc Farms locatIOn Oak \Ii oodwork andoak banmster on open staircase LibraryWith fIreplace FIve bedrooms and four andone half baths RecreatIOn room Three cargarage Many amemtles for the particularbuyer

BUILDER'S OWN HOME built m1980 only 500feet from the lake on a prIvate dead endstreet Oak paneled library plus a 26x26foot family room WIth fIreplace and hottub Four bedrooms (master bedroom hasfIreplace) and three baths Two powderrooms Heated garage Cedar shake roof

HARVARD - Charmmg three bedroom, oneand one half bath Colonial WIth 20x15 fam-Ily room Paneled recreatIOn room Centralall' and two car garage Near ChandlerPark.Drlve 111 DetrOIt Priced rIght

SOMERSET ~ Two family brick flat Threebedrooms In each umt Updated kItchensAlummum tnm and gutters Separate util-Ities Two car garage Owner occupIed$79,500

MERRIWEATHER ROAD - Great locatIOnFive bedrooms, three and one half bathsLIbrary Glass enclosed and heated terraceRecrealton room With fireplace SecurIty system

FIRST OFFERING

~ ~ ~PROVENCAL, GROSSE POINTE FARMS

The seltmg for thIS magmflcent residence ISWIthout peer' Located acrossfrom the country club. thIS charmIng Colomal IS graced by some of thefmest appomtments EnJOy wmter by one of the fIve fIreplaces sum.mers admirIng the garden With surroundmg bnck wall Butlers panlry andapartment over four car detached garage Seven bedrooms $625,000(H 80POH) 8852000

JJo~n,$. ~OI)~man'NCComputeflzed - Mult/llsted

93 KERCHEVAL 886-3060 GROSSE POINTEEstablished 1951

987 LAKESHORE RD . GROSSE POINTE SHORES, two bedrooms, oneand one lIalf baths and family room All on one floor

INCOME PIWPERTY &12614 ALTER ROAD, two famIly brIck and twobedrooms e(jch Ulllt

VACA\IT [01 121'\167Jeffer5>on Ave, corner of UNIVERSITY PLACE

WATERFRONT HOME

FINANCINGWith Interest rates dropping to 10 25% on Fixed

Rate finanCing and 85% on Vanable Rate we areseeing buyers saving hundreds of dollars per monthover what they were paying Just one year ago

You may be surpnsed to see that your ability toborrow has Increased dramatically In recent monthsThiS IS probably the best tIme In 5 years to obtainmortgage finanCing Most buyers can borrow muchmore on tlXed rate finanCing today, than they couldhave one year ago

We have up to date Information on all locallenders and are more than happy to share that In.formation With you

ONE OF GHOSSE POINTE'S TRULY OUT-STANDING HOMES ClaSSIC(korgian ar-chitecture, desIgned by R 0 Derrick, fea.tures SpaCIOUSrooms, Circular staircasehandcrafted fireplaces, finely carvedmoldmgs and decoratIve plaster, ~ensa-tiona I new kItchen French doors leadgraCIOusly to expanse of gardens, stalelytrees and brick patios adjOInIng the tenniscourt

WATERFRONT - EnJOy the sunnse from yourown attractlve wood deck on lakeside of houseFour bedroom, two and one half bath Coloma ICentral air, updated kitchen, electncal, andplumbmg Steel sea\\all plus boat well Great lo-catIon for sports mmded famIly

LARGE FAMILY ROOM Four bedroom on pop-ular Lakeland, near the "VIllage" shopsNearly 3,000square feet of hvmg area Withspecial features such as a 2lx17family roomWith fIreplace and wet bar Three car gar-age, sItuated on a SpaCIOUS60,,183 lot

McBREARTY~

ilEAL'0-5

SOLD

882.5200

FARMS COWNIAL - Three bedrooms, two andone half bath Many specm I features mclude at.tractIve decor, newer carpet, double closets 10two of the bedrooms, attractlve landscape andmore Rare opportumty for two full baths at amost compelltIve pnce, $17,000down and $740per month Will buy thiS home

16845 KERCHEVAL "IN THE VILLAGE"

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - Four bedroom,two and one half bath newer Woods Col-omal, famIly room With fIreplace, attachedgarage, central aIr, convement floor plan,transferred owner

OPEN SUNDAY2') - Designed for great famIlyliVing and Ideal for entertammg, you mustsee thIS home A paneled famIly room, alibrary and two recreatIOn rooms allowseach famIly member theIr lMn space f'ourlarge bedrooms three full baths, threenatural fireplaces. newer kitchen, and cen-tral aIr condltlOmng 16.'>5,')E Jefferson

WASHINGTON ROAD - Enghsh Tudor Inpnme area of Grosse Pomte CIty MeticulouscondItIon, natural woodwork hardwood floors,newer Mutschler kItchen breakfast room andlIbrary Four bedrooms, two and one half !led-rooms baths Early occupanc} All apphancesmcluded

TRADITIONAL NEW ENGLAND COWNIALIde.<JllocatlOnfor the growmg family, for ex.ecullve enlertammg, for warm and cogemalIIvlllg Paneled library WIth fireplace plusfour to five bedrooms Secluded yard andpatIO plus so much more Call for details

FIRST OFFERING - Attractive mcome prop-erty, located Just one half block from Ker-cheval shoppmg and pnced at only $62,000!,'eatures mclude fresh decoratmg and car-petmg

Charmmg Falin ('01011\.11 10<'<ilcdclo<;(' to the Lake' and pnvate park, onone of Ihe <..,hOJ1''' 1110'" populilr '>lrel't" f<'ourbcdrooms, two and one halfbath" phI'," n "It r<1('tl\l' faml h room \\ Ith natura I fireplace, plus a cozyden phi" a Iloran or offlc<' !'erft'cl for the profcs<;lOnal or executive whodocs hI" hOll1el\ork <it hom<>

RESOLVE TO LIVE WELLTHIS YEAR

OPEN SUNDAY 2-51845 KENMORE - Grosse POinte Woods

Gredl .,tarler hOlN' propert .. abuts (rhe<;qllire Park Sharp Colomal,thn'e o<>drOOlr1"one and onl' hillf bath" covered porch, two cargarage Only $ll7,'ion

4820 GRAYTON, DETROIT - $22,000{'07Y cla"IC bncl.. bung:lIO\\ ~outh of Warrl'll '1\..0 h<>droom<;,one bath. den

Intl'llDr rederordler!

IlaIIllS-"--G-eo-r-ge-P-al-m-,,-- ( ) lICet1~W-a"lIa-c-e-G-u.er.lI.er--"

Wilham Queen '''-I PEAL TOf<S Gerald LeoneGloria Barker Herb LorenzLeo L'rolshagen Jr Traci Tapert

17646 Mi\CK 886-4444

-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 @'

GROSSE POINTE WOODS2209 HAMPTON - Three bedroom, Colomal,newer kitchen, no-wax floor, new roof, naturalfireplace, nicely decorated, full basement Withlavatory, low $5O's

~''''",',,""''{M_t:'-TORREY ROAD

Beaullful three bedroom, two and one half bathr.lnch Huge liVing room With natural fireplace,marble and slate hearth Central all',aluminum tnm Attached garage New reduc-ed pnce OPEN SUNDAY

KENOSHATnm three bedroom ranch With large kitchen

Paneled recreatIOn room With extra bed-loom or olUte Lavatory In bd£>ement

CLOVERIVLovely three berlr"~ ~Dnmove-in con-

dItion - eakfast room,spaclOLSO c~ .. cJed family roomHardwo ••"urs

FORDHAMCozy three bedroom bnck bungalow With two

full baths near Seven Mile - Kelly areaConvement to Easlland shopping

ALTERSpacIOus and clean two family fla t near WlOd-

mill POinte Separate new furnaces Newroof

BEVEHL \' ROADDistinctive vmtage manOl home m convenient

Farm!> location Refreshing customlk~UI dtlJlg tu i>dlll~1I lllc II lIIlCI oluc:.Beautiful floor plan, high lellll1g~, spacIOusrooms, numerous fireplace£>, gleammghardwood floors throughout

SOMERSETExcellent two-family bflCk mcome ofters thl ee

bedrooms each umt, hvmg rooms v.Ithnatural fireplaces, formal dUllng 1'00msSeparate basement!> dnd utilities

WAVHURl\ChOice two-family Income Tv. 0 bed Iooms

lower, three bedrooms upper Good rentalarea Separate basements and fUln.lces

IIt\RVARUStunmng center entrance Colomal \\ ltl1 taste-ful upbedt decor Five roomy bedl oom~, threeand one half baths Step-down famll~ loom withumque paneled ceding

884-7000

HARPER WOODS20476DAMMAN - Beaullful, bflCk ranch Withnatural fireplace, kitchen With eating areathree bedrooms or two bedrooms and den 1m:maculate, move-In condItIOn '19660COUNTRY CLUB - Pflce reduced, threebedroom, bnck bungalow, Grosse POinteSchool District, large kitchen With appl1ances,family room, finished basement, two and onehalf car garage, newer roof and furnace, qUickoccupancy

SINE REALTY. .. IT'S WORTH YOUR TIME

TO CALL SINE ...

GROSSE POINTE FARMS336STEPHENS - Attractive, three bedroom,two bath ranch with attached two car garageon cui de sac, natural fireplace, masterbedroom With bath, gIVes owner a taste of coun-try hvmg m the city

SINE REALTYMULTILIST SERVICE

FARMS OFFICE

_ AI'lOH~~510w

OUR1l:L.f;-TAX

WOf?t:=S

Thle- Tax •..

a recorded tax mformatlon servicewhich may be able to answer your taxand some refund questIOns Thetelephone number and a list of topiCSISm your tax package

.. public ~rll£U m~NtJfI(! from lite IRS

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 2-51540 TORREY ROAD

i .•f!f' ~ " 51£S * Mfi'

THIS HANDSOME COLONIAL ISan attractivebuy Newer kitchen and furnace, natural wood.work, hardwood noors and secuflty system,Lovely 32 x 16 pool With ca bana hidden m backyard of thIS attractive four bedroom home

LONG AGO BUT NOT SO FAR AWAY! ThiSflOe older home IS located on a convement pn-vate road 10 the Farms and has been extensive-ly remodeled and decorated Characterized bylarge room SIZes, Its a great home for gracIOusentertalnmg It has a large well eqUipped kit-chen and a first floor laundry Many newstorms and screens and reflmshed floors It hasnmc bedrooms (S1Xfamily) and SIXbaths

~SOUTHERN COLONIAL Y'all come and seeIt thiS Sunday The kitchen and bathrooms havebeen remodeled and recent decoratll1g I~ 111neutral colors Modern furnace WIth five bedrooms, three baths and a family room, ItS agreat famIly house See It Sunday at 717 Bed-ford

PROVENCAL ROAD - ThiS beaullful Colon-lallS graced by fine archltectura I detail and awell deSigned floor plan The house has largeroom SIZes. a paneled libraI') With pegged oakfloors and a heated garded room There arefive fireplaces, mcludIOg two lo bedrooms SItuated on a large walled lot, It IS one of the fe\\smaller houses on Provencal Four familybedrooms, three baths plus third floor and garage apartments

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5

SCHULTES REAL ESTATE710 NOTRE DAME

881.8900

NEW ON THE MARKET

590 Barrmgton - Lovmgly carcd for four bedroom, two bath home Extra half lot404 RIvard - SpeCIal farm house \\ Ith contemporary mtenor Three bedrooms, one and onc half baths

plus a studIO apartmcnt1498 Anita - Thrf;'e bedroom bungalo~ WIth central all' condltlomng PTiced under $70's234 Lothrop - Yamasaki deSigned contemporary 011 wooded cui de sac SIx-seven bedrooms1424Torrey - NIcely loc;Jted one and one half <;tory ",Ith family room WIth fireplace Three bedrooms

and one bath2286 AlJilrd - Clean attrach\'e starler home WIth two bedrooms and one bath Big famIly room737 Bedford - Beautiful Colomal With remodeled kltchf;'n and baths See above1429 Three MIle - Attractive Colomal \~Ith four bedrooms Lovely 32 x 16 pool See above Tight

.~INO HANDYMAN NEEDED' ThiS ISa true "turn key" home Every lOch has been exquISitely decoratedm 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 foroffices or children ThiS beautiful home has many amemtles mcludlng security and sprmkler systems

~ \' • 1 H ,.' /' lA' r": I' \.

l~~f( ( J.

GROSSE POINTE PARK - We have JUSTLISTED thiS SPARKLING bnck Colomal offer-109 four large bedrooms, two and one halfbaths, paneled den, family size living roomWith fireplace, spacIOus dining room, lots ofnice closet space, carpeted recreatIOn room,central all' condltlomng on deeper lot with brickpatio and two-car garage Very attractivelypriced' Details at 884-0600

FIRST OFFERING of thiS outstandmg Interiordesigner's own home on a lovely landscapedsite near the lake' SpacIOus accommodationsinclude five bedrooms, three baths plus twohalf baths, umque two-story family room Withfireplace, upper gallery and reading room,super kitchen With breakfast room and adJOin-ing garden room and countless custom extrasfor gracIOus family IIvmg 884-0600

10 SYCAMORE PLACE - SPECIAL FINANC-ING available for thiS traditional Colonial built lo1983 Custom features lOclude huge two-story IIv-109 room, convemence deSigned Island kitchen,outstandIOg first floor master suite With luxurybath plus three bedrooms, two baths and openlibrary overlookIOg hvmg room on second floorA very speCial value! 88H)600

ISHOWN BY APPOINTMENTIUPDATED PARK COLONIAL has four bedrooms, den, two-car garage and Irresistable pnce of $53,900'

Transferred owner anxIOus to G-O I 881-6300

IOPEN SUNDAY 2-5138 S DEEPLANDS - A touch of elegance In five bedroom, three and one half bath French Colomal

With library and family room 884-0600581 F(SHER - Larger three bedroom, two and one half bath multi-level Huge family room - nearly

3,000 square feet' 884-0600796-8 TROMBLEY - Exceptional larger two-family on prestige rental street Three bedrooms, two

baths, libraries, fireplaces In each umt Substantial pflce adJustment' 881-6300630 WESTCHESTER - Four bedroom, two and one half bath Colonial Family room with fireplace,

ltbrary, newer kitchen, fmlshed basement, attached garage 884-060021406 BRIERSTONE - Three bedroom Harper Woods ranch With assumable Land Contract '881-6300

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 libraryall on lovely large site Formal assumption available 881-4200

UNIVERSITY - Popular centrally 1"5" OLD n-Cen bus and the Village offers wellmamtamed three bedroom bflCk llassed terrace, new decor throughoutand affordable 80's pnce tag' 88

LAKEPOINTE - Well malntamed bnck and aluminum two-family With great updating Perfect forowner 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 familyroom, new kitchen and lovely patio on large lot $129,900 884-0600

IN THE PARK handy to Kercheval - walk to everything' Excellent three bedroom bflCk two-storywith SpaCIOUS rooms, fireplace, updated kitchen With breakfast room and more Exceptional valueat $59,500 Il84-OOOO

LAKELAND - Nothmg to do but move 10' ThiS three bedroom, two and one half bath Colomal Withlibrary and brand new kitchen IShard to resist I New decor and large prIVacy site add to the charmof thiS offenng 884-000<1

HARCOURT - Professionally decorated 2-FAMILY has three bedrooms, two baths, fIreplaces andfamily rooms in each umt New furnace In fmlshed basement plus many additIOnal amemtles881-6300

CHARM! SPACE' LOCATION' This three bedroom, two and one half bath Colomal has It all' Hugefamily room With fireplace and beam ceJlmg and fimshed basement all on 6OxI75' centrally locatedSite handy to the VIllage 881-4200

NEW OFFERING of chanmng old farmhouse In 12 Mile-Jefferson area' Updated throughout, It in-cludes three bedrooms, one and one half baths, family room, new furnace, new electrIcal, newdecor' All terms mcluding Land Contract Extra acre available for your own "country setting'"Details at 881-4200

106 VENDOME - PRESTIGE FARMS AREAand a spacious four bedroom, two and one halfbath classic Colomal Large beamed ceiling famJlyroom With fireplace, den, fli1ished basement Withtap and billiard rooms- nearly 3700 square feetof gracious accommodations 884-0600

POPULAR BALFOUR SQUARE complex near Eastland offers one bedroom umt With all new decorincluding new carpeting Perfect for the career person who likes to GIO' $54,900 881-6300 BORLAND-JOHNSTON

AlWiOelates orMany, Many More by Appointment"cliing or Buymg Our Full Time ProfeSSionals:ue ready to help Call Today

395 Fisher Road 20647 Mack Avenue (i)O!I!Joqte (,I' \rmlh II'RIl ~OIJIJOql('I'(/nelf~ 'ichoo/886-3800 884~6400_ Tile Help..... People I

=c:-::::.,-~:::(:,_>/~_:,-';,~IB;;a0", 1ii

GROSSE POINTE PARK GROSSE POINTE WOODS16610 Mack 881-4200 19790 Mack 881-6300

GROSSE POINTE FARMS82 Kercheval 884.0600

Thursday, January 16, 1986 GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Eleven-B

~.Edgaf &CWiOdaIes114I<ERCHEVAl 886-6010 REPORT TO ADVERTISERS

This minI-English m<lnSlOnlook:. so good fromthe street you're gOing to be pleased as punchwhen you step Inside Drmk 10 the nch panel-109, the hbrdry, the step down hvmg roomgarden room dnd new kitchen three car garageand plethora of bathrooms Fea:.t your eyes onthe appollltment:. and re:.erve the sWlmmmgpool for that dip . The toa!>t of the neighbor-hood" we might e;av m pdl tylllg

(in-'teg-rat-e) n. rigid adherenceto a code of behavior, honesty_

THINK AHEAD - capture the regal lifestylebefitting an Enghsh Tudor In thIs grand sevenbedroom manor situated In Grosse PomteShores close to Lake St Clair ThIs beauty of-fers privacy III the vast IIvmg and dmmg room,and large bedrooms atop a dramatic staircaseThe spacIous lot Will eaSIly accommodate asWlmmmg pool or tenllls court

Priced a great deal below most of the otherhomes on thIS prestIgIOus street III the FarmsBetter stIll IS Its locatIon Just a short block tothe Lake Shore All the charm expected In theolrlpl' hOI'''!:''', yet t'IYtaf('{! Inevery respect "..:thsplendId famIly room kitchen combmatlOn,garden room, bathrooms and major redecora-tIon Just enough yard for complete privacyWith a reflectmg pool and smart boxwoodhedges Early occupancy IS available

THIS LOVEL Y ENGLISH TUDOR, With lIttlemore than cosmetIc Improvements, wIll proveto be a remarkable Investment as well as anexcellent home m whIch to hve. SItuated nearthe lake, It offers fIve or SIX bedrooms, four andone half baths and that much needed three cargarage, plus large den and a second floor of-fIce that could be used for separate lIVingquarters

Integrity is critical to anewspaper. It beginswith ethical newsgathering and reportIngand extends to theadvertising salesdepartment as well.Advertisers mustbelieve in the Integrityof circulationinformation.-.-the basisfor intelligent advertisingbuying decisions.

That's why we subjectour cirCUlation recordsto independentverification by the AuditBureau of Circulations.ABC is the oldest-andlargest-not -for-profitcirculation auditingorganization in the

world. Nearly 5,000advertisers, advertiSingagencies andpublishers have ~olnedtogether to make ABCthe standard forcirculation integnty.

Before you buy anyadvertising, ask to seea copy of the latestABC Audit Report.We'll be pleased toshow you ours.

Grosse Pointe News99 Kercheval

882-3500 - DISPLAY882-6900 - CLASSIFIED882-0294 - NEWS

eMemberC Audit Bureauof Circulations

I

Place a matchbetween the arrowsand read to yourself.

ADDRESS _

--- Classification Desired

Schedule my GROSSE POINTE NEWS Want Ad for

Date

Enclosed is my check or money order for $ _

NAME _

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 DesiredMinimum Cost is $3.25 for 10 words - Additional Words 25c

1 2 3 4

5 6,

7 8

9 10 3.25 11 3.50 12 3.75.13 4.00 14 4.25 15 4.50 16 4.75

17 5.00 18 5.25 19 5.50 20 5.75

21 6.00 22 6.25 23 6.50 24 6.75

25 7.00 26 7.25 27 7.50 28 7.75

29 8.00 30 8.25 31 8,50132 8.75 etc.

,.---------WANT AD ORDER FORM---------,IIIII---- - --- IIIII

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4

BY APPOINTMENTA RARE OPPORTUNITY I Two famIly flat

perfect for the famIly movmg from a largehouse seek 109 tranSItIOn to an easIer life-style SpacIOus IIvmg room With a naturalfIreplace, formal dmmg room, paneledlibrary, three bedrooms and three bathsand a new kItchen, WIth many optIOns ofclosmg off bedrooms If desIred The down-StaIrs flat has a hvmg room, dmmg room,kItchen, two bedrooms and a bath and pro-VIdes an INCOME plus SECURITY Phonefor detaIls

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on thIS clean andcomfortable three bedroom brick ranchHardwood floors, updated kitchen "Hthlarge eating space, double lot With frUIttrees In backyard and Circular dflve m thefront Near shopplllg, schools and transpor-tatIOn $41,000

GREAT NEWS' You can stIll purchase a housefor a bargam pflce in Grosse Pomte WoodsThIS restored two story offers super poten-tIal for the fIrst time buyers who want topersonalize theIr new abode Features Ill-clude hving room With fireplace, famll).room, sun room, three bedrooms, twobaths, modern kItchen and more $65,900'

WATERFRONT PROPERTY - ST CLAIRSHORES Newer bflck ranch With threebedrooms, two baths. family room WIthfireplace, attached garage, fIrst floor laun-dry and modern kItchen Call for a prevIewtoday'

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4341TOURAIi'ffi - A great family home featur-

109 three famIly bedrooms and two fullbaths up plus a den or an office Large hv-mg room with fIreplace, dmmg room andgarden room Secluded pnvate locatIOnPRICE REDUCED & IMMEDlATE OCCUPANCY'

CHAMPION~BAERREALTORS

102 Kt.n. ht'Val Ave I GI"O'iSefbmte Farm", MI.48236(5) 884.5700 lB.

OPEN SUNDAY 2-4226 MORA~8981e-"brick:-centel' hall Col-

omal offers paneled library with fIreplace,comfortable hvmg room, sun room, largemaster bedroom, three more bedrooms, ad-ditional space on third floor, two cargarage

BY APPOINTMENTLarge traditional four bedroom English Tudor,

den, Flonda room, attached greenhouse,remodeled kItchen, security system, many,many extras Immediate PossessIOn$145,000

Immaculate three bedroom, one and one halfbath Colomal, den, large beautiful back-yard, excellent location close to the Village- A "must see" at $117,000

GREAT INVESTMENT I Full term LANDCONTRACT offered on thiS well mamtam-ed two famIly flat 'l\vo bedrooms, hVlngroom, dmmg room, kitchen, ceramic hIedbath IIIeach urnt Separate basements, cen-tral air condition Phone for detaIls

St ClaIr Shores - MAINTENANCE FREE -Custom bUIlt brick ranch Three bedrooms,,one and one half baths, kItchen With eatingspace, new recreatIOn room WIth bar, patioWIth gas gnll Call for further detaIls$64,000

f£l~~<l

r. ~'" .....- ~ '.....I 'tr_'"W_

( ~ ,-~--:::!".-

-~"'>---- ----~-.... -==:>-- _ <C2::.~ ~~

YORKSHIRE - Four bedrooms. two and onehalf baths, unIque family room

~br~~~K: ~ •.~~ 'P'(. -

RIVARD - Condo four bedrooms, three andone half bathe;

...- ------------------------------------------~t-- -~-----------~-

Feature Page Twelve-BThursday, January 16, 1986

,

I

created a lot of change," he said.'It used to be mostly the claSSIC011on canvas Now we have col.leages, sculptures, watercolorsand tempra We have all themedia "

In someways, change has comeslowly to the Scarab Club

"The Scarab Club has been con-servatlve, compared to some ac-tlVltles m the art field," Scanessaid

Scanes explamed that Amen-can artists m general used to beqUite a bit behmd their counter-parts In Europe

"Modern art is about 115 yearsold," Scanes said. "But It was the1913 mternational exhibition inNew York when AmerICan artistswere first exposed to modernart" .

For Scanes, It [S impossible totalk about the history of theScarab Club WIthout mentIOningthe famous Scarab Club Ball, thatwas once one of the premierSOCial events in Detroit Datingback mto the "teens" thecostume ball was first held at anamusement park near the shoreSide of the Belle Isle BridgeLater it was held at Ihe GreystoneBallroom and still later at theScarab Club's historic building onFarnsworth

"It was your typical artists'ball," Scanes said WIth a touch ofmischief, "lnvolvmg a small de-gree of nudity The Scarab ClubBall was where the movers andthe shakers used to go."

Today, Scanes enjoys his retire-ment With travel and a continumginterest m drawing, pamting andsculpture He accepts an occa-SIOnal commiSSIOn to do a pamt-mg, but generally paints for hiSown pleasure He IS currentlyworking on a painting of a 1964Corvette that he owned until Itwas stolen in the 1970s He isworking from a photograph of thecar, taken during a vacatlOn inthe upper peninsula

"It's a photo With the Mrs. in it,taken during a rare Octobersnowstorm," Scanes said.

He often works from photo-graphs, though he also work fromlife, sometimes startmg to paint ascene he sees from hiS motelroom door while on vacatIon.

"The only thing that separatesartists from other people ISartistsare using their eyes all the time"Scanes said "It's a matter ofobservatIon Learning the techm-cal skill IS very faCile It's havmgthe mterest to use It "

Scanes thmks of hiS art as a per-manent record of the things hehas seen /

"When you talk about art with acapital "A", often art is the onlyremnants we have of pastclvlhzatlOns," he said

chicken bouillon1 ba) leaf1/!. tsp. fines herbs1/.. tsp. coarse ground

black pepperCombme peas With remalnmg

mgredlents mgredlents excep.tbacon and bring to a rapid bOllReduce heat to low, simmer 30mmutes Turn peas mto a211-quart casserole dish; placeCanadian bacon m peas Cover andbake in preheated 350degree oven,for one hour Remove cover, con-tinue baking 30 mmutes, If neces-sary, add a httle more wine ortomato JUice to peas To serve, re-move Canadian bacon from cas-serole and slice Arrange slIces mcente~ of casserole, surrounded bypeas Makes SIXservings

Calones about 379 per servingCholesterol about 93 mgs

Sunshine BeanCasserole

2 cups cooked red beans, drained!. cup" large limas cooked or

canned, drained2 cup ...garban70s cook('d or

cann('d, drained1 pound ver) lean ground beefI large onion (J cup) choppedI clove garlic, minced1 or 2 Tblsp. prepared mustard1/4 cup bro\\n sugar1/2 cup cat"upI tsp. cumin (optional)1/4 cup r('d \\in(' (or 1/2 cup \\-ater

\\ith 3 Tbl"p. vinegar)Salt to la"l('P('pp('r to ta"le

Put dramed beans mto a2\ rquart casserole, mix hghtlyand set aSide In large sklllet cookground beef. onIOns and garhc un-til meal IS lightly browned Addskillet mixture to beans m cas-serole. mix together Cover andbake for about an hour IIIpreheated 32.'i-degree oven Or sim.mer the mixture In an electnc slowcooker on low for three to fourhours Makes eight servings.

Calor!e~ abo"t 208 per servingCholec;terol about 40 mgs.

combmatlon of cold sweet frUItWith a heavy mixture ISmost plea-sant. Makes about 12 cups - atleast 16 Clverage servings

Turkey-HamCasserole Supreme

1/2 cup chopped onIOn2 Tblsp. margarine, melt{'rl3 Tblsp. flour1/4 tsp. salt1/4 tsp. pepper1'4 cups skim milkI can (4 ounc('s) .,Hced

mu'shl'Ooms, undrained '2 Tblsp. dry shel'l'y2 cups cooked turkey or chicken1 can (5 ounces) "ateI' chestnuts,

drained and sliced1 cup lean chopped ham1/2 cup cholesterol-fr('e cheese.

coarsely shredded1 cup soft breadcrumJ>"2 Tblsp. grat('d Parmesan ch('ese

Saute omon m two tablespoonsmelted margarine until tender butnot brown Blend m flour, salt andpepper Gradually stIr m milkCook over low heat, stlrnng con-stantly untll smooth and thicken-ed Add mushrooms, sherry.turkey. water chestnuts and ham,stlrrmg well

Spoon mixture Into a hghtly OIL-ed shallow 2-quart casseroleSprmkle mixture With shreddedcheese, the breadcrumbs and lastWith grated Parmesan cheeseBake in preheated 400degree overfor 35 mmutes or until lightlybrowned Makes about SIX serv-Ings

Calones per serving about 233Cholesterol about 45 mgs

Creole Cassoulet2 pounds Canadian bacon,

trimmed of all fat2 pkgs. (10 ounce,,) frozen

blackeye peasI cup onion", coar,,('I) choppedI chicken bouillon cubeI clove garlic, minc('d2 cup" waterI cup tomato juiceI cup white wine or

One of Scanes faVOrite media ISwatercolor He was a foundmgmember of the Michigan Water-color Society. But he also paintsm Oils, and recently, since hiS re-tirement. he has gone back toschool al the Center for CreativeStudies 10 If'.lrn sculpture HIShome IS a gallery of artworks ofhis own and of other artists he ad-mires.

In a half-century as a Michiganartist, Scanes has made the ac-quaintence and friendship ofmany well-known local artists Hecounts Marshall Fredencksamong hIS friends and has aplastet cast of a Fredencks bas-relief in his living room.

For Scanes, the Scarab Clubhas been a connectIOn With theMichigan artistic community

"(The Importance of the club)for me, has been the associatesI've met," he said "And also theInterest of the younger artlstscoming up. It has prOVidedstability and directIOn and hasgiven arllsts the opportumty toshow the exercise their wares"

Scanes has seen many changesIn the direction of art over hiS 52years m the club

"The women artists have

Photo by Elsa Forhman

Ernest Scanes holds a sculpted penguin he made. The hole inthe belly is the result of a knot in the wood, but Scanes said hefinds it makes a good handle for the piece.tendency to spill over IOta hiSwork as a fine artist - in unex-prcted and sometimes humorousways HIS first gold medal at theScarab Club was for an "abstractapproach" to a technical drawingof a BUICk Dvna-flow transmis-"IOn Ill' tltled'the work. "TorqueConverter Schematlsm "

Scanes and hiS family movedmto Grosse POinte Farms 10 1~and have made their home hereever smce Scanes said that theScarab Club has always had ahigh percentage at Grosse PointeMembers

Though It started out as an ex-clUSive club for men, in more re-cent years, the club has opened itsdoors to women.

"It was onginally all male,"Scanes said "But post-World War11, we started to thmk maybe weshould open up the membership towomen" Actually, It was the1960s before women becamemembers, but smce then, severalhave held the ofhce of presidentand there are generally women onthe board of directors

"I thmk It has been beneficial,"he said "The place was gettmgseedy The ladles have kept It upbetter"

ElegantEating

(Takes about 30 to 40 minutes)When pork ISbrown, add It, whole,to the pot of beans

In the meantIme, blend groundpork With sage and allspice In asmkll skillet brown the pork,omans and garlIc unhl the onionsare lightly browned Add thesauteed pork mixture to the kettleWith the beans Cover beans and

bOIlgently for 2 hours Add carrotsand continue cookmg unlll beansand meat are tender Removefrom heat Lift out pork onto plat-ter to cool Drain beans, saving h-qUId

When pork IScool enough to han-dle, remove bones and all poSSiblefat Cut meat Into small pieces andadn to beans. along With the rest ofthe mgredlent') except the grapesMIX gently Transfer mixture to1 quart casserole About 112 hoursbefore servmg, cover and bake at.l;O degrees Allow more time Ifm1'l:ture has been refrIgeratedWhen ready to bring cassoulet tobuffet table, l'calter grapes thICk-I) over the top, and serve The

Ernest Scanes: A half century in art

Ed Ualislewsld "'A."JI1.. .. offers. complete~ --r-cr custom Cabm Craftsrugs. They're hand crafted In the USA of 100% wool.You can order custom colors and sizes See the almostunlimited range and beautiful deSIgns at 21436Mack.Free Parkmg In front, 776-5510

By Elsa FrohmanErnest Scanes and the Scarab

Club are practically synonymou~A member for almost 52 years.the Grosse POinter has ~een theclub through the Great Depres-sion, a World War, booms andbusts and a half a century 01 artIstIc change

This month, the Scarab Club I~celebratmg Its 75th year of exIstence With a retrospective ex-hlbltlOn Founded in 1910 as theRobert Hopkin Club, named afterthe well-known Michigan mannepamter of th(' penod. the club,and Scanes have come a longway

Scanes jomed the Scarab Club

)'Jointerof

.!Jnterest

A casserole can be a nIeal In Itself with fresh hot bread. a saladand afrtHt, or It may be the memoorable dish of a more elaboratemeal, beginning With hot 110rsd'oeuvres and a clear soup andending With a masterpiece dessert

PreparatIOn of casselOles cantake tIme, or they can be asc;embled quickly uSing canned orfrozen prepared foods

The follOWing IS a :>electlOn ojcasserole recIpes from the lowcalone. low cllOle ..terol budgetwise kitchens oj Thyra GreyHoward and Helena DeWItt Roth

California Cassouletwith Grapes

A substantial and Interec;tlngmeal In one casserole IS thiS Slm-plijied CalljornlQ versIOn ojFrench.type cassoulets It may beprepared ahead oj time. rejrlgerated. or jrozen ready jor Jlr1albakingI pound sm all \\ hite b('ans6 cups water3 to 3'l-pound pork loin roast2 onions. sliced2 cloves garlic, minced2 peeled carrots, cut into circle ..1 cup bean liquid1/2 pound very lean ~round porkPinch of sagePinch of allspice1/2 green pepper, cut in "trip"I can (8 ounces) "t('\\ ('d tomators1 cup red wineI can (8 ounce,,) Dutch onion"Garnish: 2 cup .. or mor(' ch illed

seedless grapesSoak beans In advance for 4 to 'i

hours before servmg hme Dramthe soaked beans, put mto largepot, add water and start cookmgthem At the same time brown thepork roast In 375 degree oven

at the urging of Sid Walton m 1934After a high school career as anart student at Cass Tech HighSchool, Scanes attended John BWIcker Fine Arts School in De-trail and net Walton, who had acontract to produce reproductIOnsof Mayan vases for the AlbertKahn-designed Fischer Theater.WhIChwas just bemg bUIlt Scanesgot a Job painllng the vase:, Thatwas in 1928 or '29. as Scanes re-members H was fIve vear~ InterbeforE' Scanes Jomed ihl:' Scar,:bClub

The Scarab Club is practIcallyumque In Its support and en-couragement of local arllsts Ac-cording to Scanes, it IS the onlyartists' club in the midwest thathas its own building and studIOS

Members of the club Improvetheir skills With drawmg andpainting classes and have accessto the bullding's studios. The clubholds regular exhibitions and an-nually awards a Gold Medal to Itsbest artist. Scanes has held thathonor three limes m 52 years

But far from being a dlletante,Scanes has devoted hiS hfe todraWing and pamtmg - though Ina more techmcal vem than thework he has displayed at the clubHe worked for General Motors for40 years, ending with hiS retlre-ment In 1972, as a technical illus-trator

Scanes' work as a technical ar-tist over the years has had a

Casseroles go oven to table for siInplicity

••

SAVE •.. 25~ to 50% off aU falland winter merchandise. Check tilesale again at Miner's ofGrosse Pointe,375Fisher Road.

• • •

wrmrL\ 'I : "",,, I \ 11,,\

O '" '" '"Lacquer ... the look of the Eighties is avail-able in Allmilmo cabinetry, the most durable

hand rubbed matjinish available today Colors .. sub-tle beiges and grays or flashes of peach and anthraciteSee Baker Concepts your Studio A dealer for the latestdesign innovations BAKER19591 Mack Avenue, CONCEPTS,884-7088.

Unique Optique .:.One of the most ob-VIOUS and best ways to

update your look is new eyeglass frames. Unique Op-tique has an excellent selection for men and women ofimported and designer frames including, Tura, ~phiaLoren, Menrad, Logo, Vuarnet, Anne Klein, Bolle andmore at 20339Mack Avenue between Country Club andLochmoor. Most insurance accepted. Tuesday-Saturday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., 885-0541.

* '* '"

Introducing Nail Bonding ... a unique processof lengthening and strengthening the nail. Now fora limited time onlytake 50~ offnail bondingwith thisad. Can 881-4211 for appointment. Lla Nail Clinic.20311 Mack Avenue.

JANUAR Y LAMP SALE ... at Wright's Gift andLamp Shop offers 20% off and more on most lamps.Still bargains on Christmas items too' ... 18650MackA Venue. FREE PARKING next to the building.

• • •

Stimulating exercise and challenging men.tal actiVity keep us alert and healthy. Thebenefits are the same for the young as well

SINCE 1976 all the "FORTY PLUS." Join me at ourbrosse Pointe studio M-W-F at 1:38a.m .... Joan Thornton, co-owner, Vital Options Exercise, 16828Kercheval, on the second floorof U1eWalton.Plerce bUilding.- Wehave a wonderful selection ofclasses. Call 884.1525.

nettle CREek ...only to the end of Januarycan you save 30% off custom

orders and in.stock window treatments, bedspreads, ~furniture ... Youcan also save 20%offin-slocklamps,bath accessories, pillows and more. Come see all the .savings at 17110Kercheval. 882-0935.

I• • •

Mutschler customers ... are selecting Wood-Modefor rooms other than kitchens and baths. They'rechoosing this cabinetry and furniture for dining rooms,living rooms and even home offices. Wood.ModeCabinetry is custom built so you're not limited to stan-dard furniture dimensions. You also can have panel-ing and wainscotting, beams or flooring to followthrough with your scheme. Discuss your space needsand decorating dreams with the experts at MutschlerKitchens, 20227Mack Avenue, 884-3700.

* * '"

ThInk Ha"'{ai[ . Budget of Lux-ury we've got what you want. Pricesfor one week from $638, includes yourair fare and hotel. Call the Travelagency your friends recommend. Wal-lace/Willmore Travel, 886-8805.

I ......

The Pomte Fashions ... is offering30%to 50%01£ falland winter fashions. There's also a selected group of

~. ~N dresses with 70~ 01£ sa:ings a~15112Kercheval,1I22-l818.'~RJ~~

Starting Planning Now ... for the tailgateof your hfe! U-M football and Hawaii in '86. ~Yes Michigan ~lays Hawaii in '86. Come androot for the Maize and Blue and relax in para-dise. December 2 thru 15, 1986.Space limitedto 100persons All inclusive tour. Call TravelGalerie, 886-0111.Ask for Karen. GO BLUE!

* * *

~ .• ISHNL¥L-=-~)'" It's time to""'--.J[!SlIDWICI ~ order your SuperBowl Party subs or party trays. Great sandwiches, ourfamous Maurice salad, and homemade soups are avail-able also ... 19341 Mack Ave., 885-5122.. '" ..

By Pat Roussea¥Getting Engaged? ... You both should see the hun-

dreds of styles at edmund t. AHEE jewelry co.From the traditional solitare to a contemporary lookof a diamond in a setting of baguettes. There are goldwedding bands, engagement and wedding ring sets anddiamond wedding rings. You'll be pleased with the highquality and the wide price range at 20239Mack Avenueat Oxford. Open Fridays until 8 p.m .... 886-4600.

* * *

No Need ... to look at the world through brokenwindow glass. Call J and T Stained Glass. experts inrepair and restoration of stained and leaded glass. 1007Maryland corner of Jefferson, 823.2255.

• • •

f!J-Dt1z!eCounter Points

Vitabath Special ... at the Notre Dame Pharmacy, 21 OlS. ofBath and Shower Gelee with a free sample of Vitabath Moisturiz.ing Aflerbalh Splash.ChllOliegreen, lemon or pink the $25size for $20.

~

' .Winter Sale Time at the School Bell, 17904

Mack Avenue. Great values in toys and supplies !.. * * * ...c.i ,.

Planning A TV Super Bowl Get Together? ~ 0'2... Vintage Pointe has your party supplies in- >!~eluding cold beer, pop and a variety of • I •

delicious snacks and will deliver in the area,885.0800 ... Kercheval at Notre Dame. Openseven days a week evenings too.

• • •

1II

The Third Section Section CThursday, January 16, 1986

Saturday is 'Hockey Night in Grosse Pointe'

'Any Norfh-South game)the kidscome toplay ...the crowdplays a bigfactor .. ,"

- Northcoach

MikeManzella

IiJ I i r~~"""'~d<

goab and v.e \\on - but they werea little of! dgall1~t ('I anbrook and\Ie got beat

Bight nO\I, rn~ mdJOl problemIS del en!>c Il ~ come a long \\ dj~I1Ke the begllln1l1g of the !>ea~on-- WdVIW Houle dnd BrIan 1\;ettleare plaYlllg vel ~ \\ ell - but I \ egot evel ~ detell~el11dn oul \\ Ilh theliu Thal mdke" Il Lough ' ;\I,mlelld ddd!>

Norlh'" ~tldteg) I:' 10peppel ihe~outh net \\ Ith a~ mdllV !>hot!>d~p(\~"'b)(, 'We hno,,\ thit ',\C h ...\c10 do t\\O thll1g.... Iwat Teco:::,,md~hut do\\ n Hob Wood We do thdtand e\'et'~ thing ebe \\ III fall Il1loplace '

, I'll tell ~ou one thing \\ e can-nol gel llllo a ~col'lng matc.h WIth\ollh The) \ e got mOl (' deplhthdn 11(' do thCll de!en'>e I~ "ol1ddud ld...t tlmp Denm" IJUl1lorgOdlie\Idl! I :,1011('(1u", Zunrnermancounter~

To bea l them \\ e ve got lo ~Ia)\1 Ilh them J m ,>1t'e",...ll1gJU~I\\ hdlI have dll ) Cdl pOI:::.ednd dl~Cl-phne ~o t,1I II ...\101 "ed .-\",younga!>the~e kid ...dl e the~ hd\ en 't gotten f1u!>tered dnd I don t expectthem to on SdlUldd \ he add~

'\Iollh I'"4 21/1 ledgue pld~ \\ hlleSoul h l~ ') I \\ e \1111 dlld \\ e relIed dl 3-2 In the league dnd Il ..,a\1 hole 11('\\ bdll~dme ;\Idn/elld~ay~

"One tllIng\ tOl "'Ule nl'\ l'lundel e ...1Ill1dte "oulh Ihgh heddd~

01 lot' lhell mattel "Ollh \nd\llth the hl~ton the",e tllO teelm",ha ve 111 the~e g<lIne~ the "mal lmOlle\ ~d) ~ don I bet clgd lI1",t('ltl1('1 01](' oj Ihem

. -4 \ t ~';" ~ Vt. • )4 ~:-"(!"~'t 'l,------------------------------I "A Super Bowl of Shrimp" II S 6150 II ave a bag on our Fresh II Cooked & Peeled Shrimp IL-----~~J~~~~~~_~~~~l!~~ ~Fresh Florida Stone Crab Claws,--------------- ~--------------1 lliz lb. bag Medium ~ I L~rge Fancy Alaskan I

I Raw, Peeled & Deveined f I King 6895 I

: Shrim 512951 : Crab lb. :I P t I Legs Wllh Coupon II WIth Coupon Exp 1-25-86 I I fxp 1-25-86 I~-~-------- J L ,

Fresh Tuna • Fresh Tile FishMar~land Solt Shell Crab

Dove Bars Incredible Hand Dipped Ice CreamLive & Cooked lobster • lobster Tails

Enjoy a good bottle of wine or champagnewith the game - dl()", from our fine ~eje<tiun

mdn thought he'd strangle the nextperson who a~ked hIm about theupcom1l1g North-South game He!>houldn't have been to surprIsedby the que~tlOn after wondenng mthe pre !>ea!>onIf hIS sophomore-laden squad would wll1lIve game~111 the whole year, Zlmmermdn'!>Devils got of! to an atlf'l1tlOn grab-bll1g 7-3 start Just lIke thellcrosstown rival!>

Slill, Saturday'~ game l~ ju:::.tdnother one on the !>chedule for7.101 rnf'rm<l n

"I'm probably the only one Illlhennk who approaches It that wa),but It'S just lIke any olher game tome Whether we WI11 or lo~e [JJbe d01l1g the :::.ame thlllg~ on Sun-day mormng I always do

"Sure. thIS commullItv lIves forthe l\Iorlh-South game But IeallyIIhdt doe~ It prove') NothIngbecau~e there's alwa\ s dnotherone, Zimmermdn Sa\S \llth alaugh "

Zimmerman doe!> admit thatSdturday's game ISa bIg one - InIhe standmgs North ISjust behindSouth m the I\hchlgan l\IetroLeague and ZImmerman ~ays he'~glad that hiS team IShot right no\\

We've gol the great attItudewe've hdd all ~ea~on long WIlheight sophomores, I thll1k that'~out:::.landll1g And 13111) (Tecm"Soulh'~ ~enlOl goalIe) I~ gomg beltel' no\\ lha never ..

Tecos will have to contend Withthe Nor!>emen \ hot Ime of Ca~e\QUIck, Peler GUlzardo and TomUgval "QUick ~ Ime ha~ slarted tocarry the team,' North'~ Manzellasavs "That hne wa!> tahulou ....agam~t Fra~er - the~ got t\\ a

EAST WARREN LANES17225 E WARREN

(3 Blocks fromGrosse Pomre)

885.0060

SATURDAY NIGHTMIX DOUBLES

Every Saturday at 10 p.rn

NO TAP - WIth Pickle Barrel$12 per couple entry fee

OPEN BOWLING SA TURDA YS NOON - 6 PM

"Freele the DeVIls" pall1ters' cap~dnd toweb

It nllght Just be the fdct thdt theNorth-South game has been deCId-ed by one goal In three out ollourll1~tances, thal the team I!>favoredto \\ Il1 never has, and tha t threetlllW.., eIther '\Jorth or Soulh ha!>come back trom 1\\0 gOdl detlclb- t\\ Ice I1l the la~t fOUl m1l1ute~01the game - to \\111 and !>endthellfdn~ home happ)

"An) NOllh-South gdme and thekid ...come lo pld\ .. "',1\'" North ....MaIlLella 'The CI'O\\{jpla~ ~ d bigldclor A lot ot kld~ dren't used topla~ 1I1g III lront at I 000 peopleWe're not gOlllg lo change an)-thmg We've lned hype and wc'vetl led to apploach the game 10\\ke\ Thl~ lime \\ e re gOlllg to letthe kld~ lake chdrge

'Each boy ha~ to come lo pia)and he kno\1 s It "

There \\ as a time III the past le\\\\ eek:::.\1 hen ~outh c.oach Zimmel'-

ddy Cros!> Country Ski-10K IS settor Sunda) Jan 26 The skI rdce1~ at 11 a In • preceded by dn IceLI~hll1g tournament at lJ a m alStony C'leek J\Ietl'OPark The racedl~tance IS62 miles. rdce fee IS$lJor $9 on rdce dav and Illclude!> along-sleeved shli t and a medalThe top two f1ll1sher~ III each dgegroup (13 and up, 14-17.11l-2425-2!J30-34,35-39.40-44,45-49 and 50 andover) recel ve trophle~

Skiers should call Metro Beachat 463-4581 or Stony Creek at 781-4242 (da vs) or 792-4563 (evemngs Ifor sno\\ condlllon!>

r......~~...~~~l, GIANT January Ski Sale ,, Select clothing 20 SO fII OFF, and Equipment - 10 I, .,Behind every I, -~_~ successful,,~74' ~, ~, skier'

~~?)~ is a ski', l)' shop that cares.', ~r It takes JJlClrb ,, ~ than greet skis to make ', agreatsldshap. ,

, r:!~!'!?ou!~e~ni~G!~p~~!,,H Mon.-Fri. 10-8 884.5660 Sat. 10-6 i YISA~'~ ............ ~ ~ ~ ~ ...-. ~ ~

Man Sal 9 30 a m 7 p m

21006 Mack Ave. (4'/2 N. 01 8 MJleGrosse POinte Woods' 881-5000

noon

Call

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getresults

before

By Peggy O'('onnOl'To South High hockey coach TIm

Zimmerman, It'S just anothertough game HIS North ~hgh coun-terpart MIke Manzella call~ It "111tense" As far as everybody else InGrosse Pomte IS concerned, thl~Saturday mght's North-Southgame IS THE game of the hocke~!>eason

Compared to the 17-)edr oldNorth-South football clash, thetWIce per year hockey tussle I!>dflvalry-come-lately But m Just ItsthIrd sea~on, the game appedr!> tohave more than matched otherBlue DeVIl-Norsemen duel!> 111terms of sheer crowd-plea~lllgeXCItement

Why? It could be the electrICItygenerated by 1,000 rabid hockeyfans packed mto a tmy Ice nnk 01the let's-see-who-can-outdo-the-other-slde's-pregame-hype byshowermg fans and foes alIke WIthItems lIke Confederate flag!>,

Cross country ski schedu IeMetro Macomb Runners' race

dIrector Joe Smetanka hasscheduled several cross countryskI races for area enthUSiasts IIIthe next two months. The racestake place at 1 p,m Sundays, J an1!Jand Feb 2,9,16 and 2,111\ edther<lml ~nO\\ perrmltlllgi .It ;\lelloBedch III Mount Clemen..,

The regular cross country eventsare 4 mIles; race fee IS $7 and Ill-eludes a long-sleeved shIrt andmedal or trophy The age groups(see below) are for begmners orveterans

The third annual Superbowl Sun-

Hockey fans are in for a treat this Saturday night, when the squads at North and Southface off in the first game of the annual hockey match-up. Senior goalie Bill Tecos (below,left) will lead South against North's hot-scoring line led by senior Casey Quick (below,right). Game time is 7:20 p.m., but officials suggest fans arrive early as nearly 1,000 peo-ple are expected to attend the contest. The teams had identical 7-3 records at press time.

Tuesday

Classified

882-6900

8y "'wV o'ConnOrNBA game in Pointe?In 1960,it was no big deal

When the glamorou!> Los Angeles Lakersand the DetroIt Pistons get together for agdme dt the PontIac Sllverdome, the placeIS usually pretty well ~old out weeks, If notmonl~, In advance And mosl years the El-lay squad makes only one stop In ~10town(or, If you \\111, Po-Town)

That wasn't alwavs the case Back In 1960lhe Pistons and the"Lakers (who then calleddecldedly-unglamorous I\1mneapolls home)were sel to engage III dIVIsIOnal playoff ac-tIon Except that the Pistons couldn't fmd aplace to play when an Ice show moved m andtook over their "home" - OlympIa StadIumTheIr usual alternative, the Umverslty of De-trOIt's old Memonal BUIldmg, was also book-ed,

So they wound up In Grosse Pomte, 111 theunfamlhar confmes of the old Grosse PointeHIgh gymna!>lUm, capacity' 2,800

The game was moderately bIg news inGro!>se Pomte - the Grosse Pomte Newseven ran a front page story two days beforethe game It was a lO-ll1ch story, which tooka back seat to headlInes lIke "Park Blamedfor PollutIon" and "Elm Tree Spraymg Pro-gram Okayed by Park Council," but It wasstlll front page news

I say "moderately big news" because thISpaper dIdn't cover the game or even do a fol-10\\-up ~tory about the attendance, the effecta pro game had on Grosse Pointe, or evenpnnt the fInal score It was almost as If probd~ketbdll (yawn) came to the POinte evervda~" "

But hey, that was 1960 Thmgs were dIf-ferent back then

For example, accordmg to the GrossePOll1te News' pre-game story, tickets to thegame were unreserved, sold on a first-come,fIrst-serve baSIS Imagll1e that at the Sllver-dome loday And they could be purchased atthe laughably-low pnce of $3 for adults, $1for students, whIch IS about whal you'd payfor parkll1g these days

Those who wanted to see the game mere-ly had to stroll on over to Gray's Sports Shopat 106 Kercheval - where the ChnstIanSCIence Readll1g Room IS today

And back then, the Pistons and Lakersplayed 12 games agamst one another eachseason, SIX111 each cIty Thmk of beIllg ableto \..atch Kareem Abdul-Jabbar andMagic J ohn~on take on the PIstons SIXtImes each year But that's now

Then, the Pistons and the rest of the NBAwere sort of a dog-and-pony-show type ofoperatIOn WhIch IS probably why not toomany people even remember the day theNBA playoffs came to Grosse Pomte

South HIgh athletIc dIrector Chuck Hol-losy was teaching at AustIn HIgh back then,but he remembers hearmg about the PIstongame, even thought tl)e versIon he heard hadOscar Robertson and the CmcmnatIRoyals as Detroit's opponent "In thosedays, It wasn't that bIg a deal," Hollosy says"The NBA was pldymg 111 varIOUS highschool gyms when the arenas were bookedThey pI obably picked Grosse Pomte becauseIt was the largest gym available at the timesmce East DetrOit's - which IS bigger thanSouth's gym - probably had hIgh school dIS-trIcts gomg on "

Imagme that - the NBA runnmg a dIstantsecond to high school tournament play.

Even Nick Kerbawy, the general mana-ger of the Pistons that season and the man\\ ho had to do some frantIc phomng to flOda game sIte. can't qUite recall the outcomeof the \~hole affaIr

"I have the feellOg we lost and were elI-mmated But that s been a whIle and I'mreally not sure," Kerbawy says "I do re-member that the Mmneapohs Lakers hadElgin Ba) lor, one of the NBA greats ThePlston~? We had Gene Shue, who ISnow thegenera] manager of the Washmgton Bullets

"Oh. \~ewere a road show back then WedId ever) thmg to sell tIckets And qUIte of-ten, \\ e pla~ ed m front of 15,000empty seatsTV IS \~hat changed all of tha!," he adds

Even the PI",tons aren't sure what the out-come of the game IS Piston employee TedPit) I1ski IS workmg on an "orIgm of thePistons" feature film to run at halftIme dur-mg an upcommg natIOnally-televIsed gameIt \\as Pltvnskl who called me, lookmg forsome background 1l1fOrmatIOn- anyth1l1g-on the day the PIstons came to GrosseP01l1te Seems even the PI"ton record booksaren't too clear on the outcome of that game

Pltvnskl'<; request got me 1l1terested 111 thewhole thmg Bulm 1960I wa~ a mere 2-year-old toddling around DetrOit and no one I'vetalked to who was around back then canseem to come up WIthany more detaIls aboutth£' game on March 12,1960 Even though It\\ a", tde" Ised nationally over NBC's 200-sta.lIon network (but blacked out m DetrOItwhIch Just goes to show that some thmgsnever change) there Just doesn't seem to beanybody around who remembers

('o/ltlllll('11 on Pag{' 2(')

;""'J SPOrts;f

.1f ; Week-,, ,

Page Two-Cj, GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

L'Anse Creuse managed to beatSouth's freshman team 10-15,3-15,but Coach Jan Kuhagen said thatthere was "good team effort fromall II

nelli, Tony Smihal and MarkThomas

South, 2.7, Will try to pm downPort Huron Northern today, Jan.16, and travel to the Royal OakKImball InVitatIonal on Saturday,Jan 18Icers are 7.3

By Jennifer McSorleySouth High

Boostmg their record to 7-3, theBlue DeVils hockey team con-quered Ann Arbor Huron 3-0 m Itsonly game last week

Semor goaltender Blli Tecoshad hiS second shutout of theyear, even though Ann Arbor out-shot the Devils, 25-21

South's fIrst goal was scored byJumor John Nicholson fromsophomore Tim Jerome, whilethe DeVils were. shorthanded Thesecond wa" a power play goal hyJumor Andy Roy, from seniorEnc Warezak and Jumor EvanFrakes Selllor Rob Wood notchedSouth's fmal goal on assists fromJerome and Frakes

ThiS Saturday mght, Jan 18,the Devils Will take on North at7'20 pm at Grosse Pomte Com-

Frame touched first for South inthe 400 free rela y

At the Birmingham Seaholmmeet, mdlvldual wmners wereDick Clarke, 200 free, MattSmith, 200 individual medley and100 fly; RICk Leonard, 50 free,and Jeff Clark won the 100 back-stroke South also took first m the200 medley relay, consistmg ofJeff Clark, Leonard, SmIth, andFrame. Wmmng the 400Iree relaywere Thompson, DICk Clarke,Frame, and Leonard

Coach Fred Mlchahk com-mented, "We have depth We canafford to lose first place m certamevents, because we place secondand third 1Il many events"

The sWimmers Will meet Rose-Ville today, Jan 16, and Dearbornon Saturday, Jan 18 Both meet!>WIll be at home

Matmen lose pairThe Blue Devll wrestlers drop-

ped two matches last week, toNorth HIgh, 41-24, and at AnchorBay, 55-15

Wmnmg matches for Southwere Gordon Muir, Paul Andre-ponte, Barry Brookes, Dave Mori-

The JV, 0-1EML, 2-5 overall go-mg mto Tuesday's MountClemens game, WIll play at An-chor Bay Jan 17

'" '"South's freshman squad suf-

fered Its first loss of the seasonlast week, to Notre Dame, 39.28,dropping its record to 4-1. The BlueDeVils scored Just one pomt m thefmal quarter, agamst the FightlllgInsh

South plays, Jan 17 at AnchorBay

Tankers unbeatenSouth's boys' sWim team re-

mamed unbeaten m dual meetf:>,defeatmg Ann Arbor Huron, 93 5-78 5, and Blrmmgham Seaholm,98-74 The deCimal score agalllstAnn Arbor Huron was caused bya rare tie

IndIVIdual wmners faclllg AnnArbor Huron were DICk Clarke,200 free and 500 free, RickLeonard, Illdlvldual medley and100 breast, Matt Smith, whosetime m the 100 fly qualIfled forstate play DICk Clarke, MattSmith. Billy Thompson, and Scott

The Blue DeVils, 1-0 m the East-ern MIchigan League, 4-3 overall,travel to Anchor Bay tomorrow,Friday, Jan 17

JV drops twoSouth's JV basketball team

opened 1986 WIth road losses atFraser, 52-42, and Port Huron,55-44, where It opened Its EMLseason

Coach Al Devme explamed,"The turnovers are kllhng us "South turned the ball over 15times at Fraser and 16 hmes atPort Huron "Most of the turn-overs are Just bad passes, II

Devme added Combmlllg last\\eek'~ t\\O games, South averag-ed between nme and 10 player!>seonng a game

Bnght spots agamst Fraserwere l\Ial'ty Saad's 14 pomts andMike Fmch's 10 pomts, whichIleipeu hun earn Player at theGame honors. Jim Johnson had 11rebounds

Agamst Port Huron, co-captamBryan Jones led South sconngWith 11 POints, while Johnsonadded 14POllltSand 10 rebounds tonet Player of the Game honors

South sports

Basketball Blue Devils open 1986with two victoriesmumty Rink

Splkers sweepThe volleyball season began

last week for all three levels ofplay Both the. var~ity and the JVteams were VictorIOUS.

The varsity beat Port HuronFnday mght, 15-6, 15-3 Four girlshad two kills each - MeganKeller, Mary Ann Montagne,Theresa Schulte, and HeatherImel Montagne, the team's onlysetter, was good on 20 of 26

South's JV also conquered PortHuron - 15-8, 16-14 SophomoresPatty Pentecost and Lisa VanTassel did well settmg, as dIdsophomore StephanIe Dmka ondefense Sophomore Meg Peter-son and freshman Chns Shultehad some nIce spIkes and sopho-lllUl e Bal h Denier had d goodblock Sophomore Carohna Gas-kms made five unreturned servesm a row .

By Stephen EbnerSouth High

Wms over Fraser, 51-42, andPort Huron, 61-55, Signaled a ne .....year for the Blue Devil varsitybasketball team

At Fraser, South fought hard 10the second half, to overcome a 22percent first half shoot 109 per-c<>ntage Fraser's 50 percentshool mg percentage won It a mne-pomt lead at halfhme The victorsfrom South were led by centerGordie Langs, 19 pomts, 11 rebounds, and forward Tim Hud:>on.14 pomts Guards Ed Graml-mg and Sean Bruce each netted!line pomts, and assisted on SIX,md seven baskets, respechvely

Last Friday, Jan 10, Southopened Its El\1L season at PortHuron An 18-pomt Blue Devillead at halftime didn't weakenhome-faVOrite Port Huron "Inthe ::>tl.vllJ half we lhull't executewell," said coach George Pelrou-leas. "Port Huron scored oneveryone of their possessIOns"

Top efforts for South wereBruce With 22 pomts, Hudson hitfor 15, and Langs had 11 pomtsalong \\llh 10 rebounds

North sports

Norsemen cagers win pair, raise marks to 5-2spikers dropped theIr first game,15-7, 15-11 and 13-15. KellyGlanunzio set well and RobmWheatley had SIXkills in the loss.

The freshman squad split ItSfirst two games, losing to L'AnseCreuse, 15-8, 15-4, on Jan 6, be-fore bouncing back to top Chip-pewa Valley m a best three-of-flvematch, 15-7, 11-15, 15-8, 16-14, onJan 9.

Against L'Anse Creuse, BethBlosnick was higher scorer forNorth with four Dawn Redmonhad two blocks and two spikesMary Spiewak added one spike'SpIewak led North against Chip-pewa Valley WIth 14 points, threeace serves and ')even spikes Red.man scored 10 and had h'ro aceserves and Katy KaUer had eightpomts <By Josh Abbott)

The JV also topped St Anne's,15-2, 15-0, but needed to go an ex-tra game agamst Our Lady of theLakes, 13-15, 15-8, 15-11. In bothgames, the JV was led by the serv-mg of Damelle Spehar and PathHamlm

ThiS week, the girls played atCardmal Mooney (after presstIme) and will host St AgathaThursday, Jan 16 The JV game ISat 6 pm, followed by the varsitycontest

good people of Grosse Pomte "

BUlli'S begmmng to dl'lve me crazy, won-derlllg about the fmal Score of that playoffgame. So If there's anybody who actuallystopped III at Gray's Sports Shop, bought a$3 ticket and wandered over to South Highfor an afternoon of NBA actIon back m 1960,please call me up and give me the fmalscore

If you won't do It for me, thmk of all thosepoor Grosse Pomte News readers who havebeen hanging on every word pnnted for thelast 26 years

Sports Week

wm over South High, Phil Sheffer-ly, Chns Hayes, Paul Lozelle,Dean Demotropoulos and DaveVan Dale pmned their opponents

The JV team also topped MuthHigh, 24-6 Paul Attar, AndyMemmg and Joel Rojas pinnedopponents, Frank Markey andDoug Schmitt picked up wms forthe young Norsemen. <By JamieWheatley)

Spikers win openerThe girls' varsity volleyball

team opened the 1986 on a strongnote, defeating Bi-County rivalL'Anse Creuse, 15.10. 12-15, 15-9.Cmdy Bowman had four kills andVlrgmia Sanders served up threeaces to lead the way for the LadyNorsemen

Despite a good effort, the JV

both days. $35 for Fnday only. $20for Saturday only. and $15 for theBraden/Shnver sessIOns on Jan24

Further IIlformatlOn may be ob-

tamed by callmg eo-director GaryBodenmilier at the Grosse PointeIndoor Tenms Club. 886-2944, orBob Wood, athlehc director at Um-\'er~lty Liggett School. 884-4444

Star spikers undefeatedPerfectThere's no other way to descnbe

the varsity and JV volleyballsquads at Our Lady Star of the SeaHigh School Each team was unde-feated at press hme, WIth ValeneJohnson's varsity splkers at 8-0and the JV team at 4-0

The varsity opened the seasonWith a 15-9. 2-15, 15-13wm over StAnne's at home Jan 6 The girlscame nght back Jan 9 WIth a VIC.tory over Our Lady of the Lakes,15-2, 15-7

(Continued from Page IC)

Maybe It's because the NBA was the Rod-ney Dangerfield of pro sports back thenOr because Jaded Grosse Pomters had al-ready sampled the NBA's wares when theLakers beat the Pistons, 120-101,In a 1959ex-hlbltlOn game played to benefit the G PHigh Dad's Club At any rate, all I've beenable to determme ISthat back then, the NBA,the Pistons and their stop m Grosse Pomteturned out to be no big deal

As Kerbawy recalls, "we came 10 and weleft and didn't disturb too many of the

Schorer scored 30 pomts and had7 rebounds and Brady added 16pomts and 13 rebounds.

The frosh play East DetrOIt Kf'l-Iy on Jan 17

Wrestling string at 10North's varSIty wrestlers

started out the new year WIth aneighth place fimsh in the AnchorBay tournament The Norsementhen defeated crosstown rivalSouth High, 41.24, to keep alive atradItion of 10 straight years ofnever losmg to the "boys on theboulevard. "

At Anchor Bay, the Shefferlybrothers led the way for themedal wmners Phil, a Junior,took second, while freshman JohnShefferly took home third In the

sports psychologist from FortMyers, Fla, and many otherUSPTA profeSSIOnals from aroundthe country

Reglstratlon IS $60at the door for

Sofe boatingclass is set

The U S CoastGuard Auxiliary Flo-tIlla 10 Will offer aSafe Boating Class be-gmnmg Tuesday, Feb4, at Warren WoodsMiddle School, 1340012 Mile Rd . Warren

Registration IS at 7p m that evemng. thefirst class follows at7 30p.m Call773-7142or 776-5906 for moremformatlOn

259.1510,259.1511

*

-AliMu""&do.u GII<i p~ 8'MJt.u

CLASSES INSAIL BOATING & POWER BOATING

record to 3-4. North beat WarrenWoods Tower, 52-26, on Jan 6, be-hmd the lO-pomt performance ofSteve Langs Nme other playersgot mto the scormg column.

On Jan 9. the JV destroyedLake Shore, 60-18 Mark Demam-gold had 14 pomts to lead theualanced scormg attack •'We hada hard tIme startmg out, but nowwe're playmg a lIttle better andI'm happy about that," said coachMartin Letzmann

The JV plays at Brablec onJan 17 <By Josh Abbott)

In freshman basketball,North's Scott ShoreI' and MaltBrady combmed for 46 pomts asthe Norsemen eaSily defeatedEast DetrOit Oakwood. 57-38

3177 J liE. Jefferson ~ LJ

~~

~ .-:ifConlonese • Amencan • Mandarin. Szechuan

Dine In • Carry Out. CocklailloungeBanquet Fac,hlles

Downlown Detroll minutes away from Ren CenOpen Men Tn",s 11 "m 1 om fr & 50111 om 2 am Sun noon 10rr

PEKINPAVILION

Pam Shriver headlines 10th annual workshop

G/~en by Grosse Pointe Power Squadron

CLASS STARTS MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1986

TIME: 7:30 P.M. CAFETERIA

GROSSE POINTE HIGH SCHOOL - NORTHMORNINGSIDE - OFF VERNIER

Ladles In~lted

Pam Shriver, currently the No4-ranked women's tenniS player IIIthe world, and veteran VICBradenWill be the featured speaker~ at the10th annual DetrOit Tenms Work-shop, Jan 24 and 25 at the HyattRegency In Dearborn

Shriver Will conduct an openforum, whIle Braden Will dlSCUSSall aspects of the game The \\.ork-shop also features Jim Koehl'.

also had commendatIOns forJUlllor Tom Shehab, saymgShehab "really gave us a 11ft IIIthe fourth quarter With some bIgrebounds"

Dudeck led the Norsemen WIth16 pomts, Bill Miller had 13pomts

In summanzmg the season thusfar, Olman said "We have a goodWin-loss record, 6ut' we'';'" nfltplaymg as well as we Cc:tlJ ~,~np~on the nght track"

North's next game IS Fnday,Jan 17, at RosevJ!le BrablecGame tIme IS 7'30 P m

JV wins twoThe North JV basketball squad

had Its best week of the season,wmmng two and runmng Its

ULS SPOrts

Big week for Liggett Knight~' hockey squadThe University Liggett School from ChrIstmas break at full goals II And in the third penod, wmning, 6-2 The 42-40 loss to Troy ZlOn Jan

varsity Ice hockey team returned throttle, defeatmg Southfield Jumor wmger Andrew Galsterfjr Sophomore goahe Stev.e Stoyka 7 was a terrIfiC effort which fellLathrup, Howell High School and tallied the crucial goal to put the played "absolutely superb J~st short The entire game wasthe "Big Red" from Port Huron in Kmghts ahead to stay hockey," stoppmg 26 shots m- close and WIth 16 seconds left ina week's tIme At home on Thursday, Jan 9, c1uding many crUCial ones \~hen the game ULS had the ball With a

On Jan. 7 m SouthfIeld, the the Kmghts defeated highly rated the game was close. "Steve IS an chance f~r a he The Kmghts re-Kmghts o~ercame an early thr~e- ~Iass A Howell High School, 4-3, outsta.ndmg goaltender He has versed the ball agamst the Ziongoal defICIt by sconng five third m an excellent game of hockey the Skill, mstmct and desire to ex- zone and tried to get It to the mld-period goals to defeat SouthfIeld "We had everythmg to gain and eel," Fowler noted Blrgbauer dIe to Kevin Darby but the ballLathrup, 7-5 Semor goaltender nothmg to lose," saId assistant scored two goals, and chipped m was deflected awayEd Brady played a "very sohd captain Bob Jewett "Just as m another three assist to lead ULS Darby led the Kmghts with 16game 10 the nets," said coach the South game, we were ready to Captain John PetrIllI (one goal points while John TraVIS whoJohn Fo;vler play We skated With great mten- one assist), Bob Jewett (one goal: played hiS best all around game,

Brady s 27 saves were com- slty a,~d deslre from start to one assist), Galsterer (one goaD, chipped m With 10.plemented by an explOSive scor- flmsh, said Jewett Maltland (one goaD, French (two The 60-42 defeat at Plymouth onmg attack led by semors Mike Agam, Brady was the stopper aSSISts), RlstIc (one assist> and Jan 10 was another heart-F~ench (two goals) and John for the Kmghts, reglstenng 27 sophomore wing Ted Evans' (one breaker. Plymouth Jumped out toBlrgbauer (two aSSists), Jumor saves assist) rounded out the scormg a 21-7 lead Behind an aggressivedefenseman Blasko Ristic (two Maitland had a hand m each of for the Kmghts and penetratmg KIrk Haggartygoals and two aSSists), and Jumor the Knights' four goals, scoring The Kmghts play an Important the Knights scored 14 straightwmgers Bob Jewett (one assist) two himself, a:nd assistmg Bob game at Andover High School to- pomts. The game was mp andand Brandon Pelok (one assist) Jewett and Blrgbauer on two day, Jan 16and then return home tuck untIl two mmutes mto the

ThiS rematch wI.th Southfield others on Saturday, Jan 25 at 6 pm fourth quarter With ULS leadmg,Lathrup - the Kmghts won on In Port Huron on Jan 11, the agamst Dexter High School J7-35, Plymouth went on a 12-2Dec 7. at McCann, 8-3 - saw 14 Kmghts extended their wmnmg tear and put the game awaypen~lhes called, but only four stre.ak t? four 1Il a row and fIve out Cagers strugg Ie Haggarty scored 15 points andagamst the vIsIting ULS skaters of SIXWith a victory oyer the Big Darby contributed 14Fowler sal.d that sONhomore Red of Port Huron High Scho~l. The ULS boys' varsity basket- "Our team IS very disappointedcenter Gordie Maitland was the After falhng behmd 1-0 to the Big ball team contmued to struggle as and frustrated, but nobody, Icatalyst out on the Ice for us to- Red 10 the first perIOd, the Its record dropped to 1-7 With repeat nobody, has qUit trying.mght When we needed to get go- Kmghts stormed back by sconng losses to Troy ZIOn Chnstian and We Will contmue to battle everymg, he scored two Important SIXunanswered goals, eventually Plymouth Chnsllan last week game 1" coach Wright declared

Sat. JAN 18 • 2 pmf'II1 vs. Calgary Flames

FREESTOCKING CAP

To the first 2,000 youths (14 & under)courtesy of Seven-up

By Bill Hoover~orth High

:"1orth's varsity basketballsquad raised Its overall record to5-2 (1-0 In the BI-County League)With vlctones over Warren WoodsTower, 57-54, and Lake Shore.49-35, last week

The Norsemen. paced by RobSkuras' 16pomts, Dave Bryer's 15pomts and Chris Dudeck's 10pomts, defeated Tower on Jan 7North led by one pomt at the haltand the two teams were tied.37-37. at the end of the thirdquarter The Norsemen were ableto perform well enough in thefmal quarter to record the 57-54victory

"We won and Chns Dudeck dida good job," said coach GeorgeOlman after the victory

Agamst Lake Shore last Fndaymght, North blew many fastbreak opportunities and commit-ted several turnovers allowmg 1-6Lake Shore to keep the gameclose "We didn't play well, butwe got the wm and that's the signof a good learn, II Olman said He

Tickets at JOE LOUIS ARENA BOX OFFICEand all TlcketWorld Outlets

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,

Entertainment Page Three-CThursday, January 16 1986

100100100

5050

10075

Michaels dnd Wilham Grd\. \\ lthHarley Cokhs.'> directing .

The only thlllg that keep~ theaudIence III the movie are .'>omehorror movie tricks odd Cdmeraangles, light and shado\\ tl'lck.'>andcharacters popping IlltO thecamera's view It s lea]]v notenough to make up lor the ~Io\\story, though

Nothmg could make up lor theless-than-enthuslastlc actmg b;.Jones, Vaughn and Hamllton Bub-ba Smith's performance as an FBIman, stereotypIcal dl1rl ~hort ab ItIS, IS at lea!>t believable But Icould never be sure \\ atchmgJ ones, whether he \1a.'>smu klllgand archmg hiS eyebro\l::' as partof hiS charactenzatlon or becdusehe knew the movie 1\dsn t vengood The movie \\'ork~ best \\ henthe characters do a mllllll1Um 01talklllg and a maxImum 01 domg

So, If you go to see "Black l\IoonRlsmg,' stem that 11l1pube toleave hallway through You II nw,..,a great endlllg And ledve the kid ...at home They pI ul1dbly \\ on tlearn any new words or see dll\thmg they ha ven t ~een before oncable, but you won t hd\ e to put upWIth theIr \1'lgglIng around \\ henthe movie bog~ dOI\n

RehearsalsThe St Cldll ~hOJt'''' l'1\lt

Choru~ wlll beglll rehccll"'dl.., lor Ih~prIng .:.ea~on J\loncld\ ,Jdll 10 elt7 .W pm Rehear ...al.., \1 ill Ill' heldat Lake Short' Pl'e..,ll\ tcrunChUlch located on .Jelle,~onAvenue, one block north of II :\llIeRoad

The choru~. under lhe dll ccllon01 ]{uth Rrcnndl1 ,.., ..,PPhlJ1g ne\\memher~ Irom St ('1..111 ShO!e~dnd surroundlllg commumtll':::'

For further IIll0rm<l1101I CdlJBeth Hoffman dl 77h-l0 I")or [{lithBrennan dt 777 t!)!J}\

Your Host John Kefalhnos Banquet & Party FaCIlitIes Available

Enter Nma, played by LmdaHamIlton Nma ISa big-time thief,but her target happens to be cars,the expensive kmd

Nina IS also reasonably good atwhat she does, so when she ends uptaklllg the Black Moon, and adozen or so other cars from arestaurant parkmg lot, she can'toutrun Qumt in hISDodge Charger,even though she's armed WIth tur-bo boost and other goodies m theBlack Moon

Nma works for a busmessman,played by Robert Vaughn, who,like any good movie busmessman,ISa lIttle tWIsted He lusts for NmaVaughn's character also has a pen-chant for puttmg VIdeo cameras manythmg and everythmg

Needless to say, Qumt IS underpressure from the FBI to turn overthe tape he's stolen; Hamiltonwants to get away from her cur-rent hfestyle and Vaughn'scharacter, and the developers ofthe automobile want the BlackMoon back

If you can get through all thework that goes mto developmg theplot, you're m for a good timewhen the team deCIde.:.to steal thecar back The actIOn bUIlds stead-Ily to a powerful, prolonged clImaxthat had me fldgetmg III my seat

The trouble IS, the best part ofthiS movIe comes after you'realmost numb from slttmg throughthe fIrst two-thIrds or so It's asteady stream of tedIUm punc-tuated by medlOcre Jokes by Jonesthat the audIence laughs at not be-cause they're partIcularly amus-ed, but because they want to keepm the movIe

Carpenter, baSically a horrormOVIe-maker, wrote the story for"Black Moon RISlllg" and, aIdedby Desmond Nakano and WIlhamGray. dId the screenplay as wellProdul'tion was handled by Joel

wit

The Standard Five. , . a swing dance band comprised of local senior citIzens, will perform at Eastland Mall In the

Penney's Court from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the following Thursdays: Feb. 6, March 6 and Apnl 3Members are, from left, Dick Phillips, Laurine Mayes, Helen Adams, Betty Bakay and Nick Bales-ter. They will also be appearing at the Westland and Universal malls. For more information, callAdams at 881-6988.

20930 MACK NOW SERVING LIQUOR885-7979 SERVING LUNCH & DINNER

trymg to bustHe's only reasonably good, how-

ever. and sets off an alarm on hiSway In to steal the cassette Heendb up raclllg out of the com.pany's offices followed bv a haIl ofautomatic weapon fire

The fIlm then cuts to a deserttest track, where three men areperfecting the Black Moon, an ex-penmental car that, from what lIt-tle comes up III the mOVie, runs onhydrogen stnpped of water mole-cules The lightweIght black beau-ty does, If we can beheve thef1ashmg read-outs, somewhere be-tween 300 and 1,000 mph

acters as Beavertall Bigelow. atrue desert rat who drInks a quartof gm a day, a dwarf who hangsaround the local bar trymg to en-tIce the ladieS, an elegant hou<;e-boy who entertams lavishly m hI!>employer's mansIOn when he ISnotthere, and a burly ex-cop whoheads up a klllgdom of bIkers hIghup m the hills Wambaugh IS amaster at bnnglllg such charact-ers to lIfe

The desert With ItS wmds and~ands. creepy bugs, treacherou~spme plants and breathtakmgbeauty spread out under the nsmgsun, IS more than background tothe story It becomes a character,one that ISmore frequently hostileand eene than welcommg andbemgn

LIke all good mystenes, solu-tlons evade and small clues addup

WIth power, style, WIt and on-gmallty, Wambaugh has surpassed hImself In thIS latest offenngIt's hiS best smce "The New CenlUI IOn.., \1 hl(h \1.1'> tht. Ilr~t 01seven novels

OPEN EVERY DAY 11 A.M -2 A.M. (;)'1~ OUI ')l'r\KC A\.lJl.lbtl'

Black Moon Rising: Thdious, but with a shining ending

of the scenery does not eclipse thegrandeur of Streep's performance

There are so many scenes thatwe recall WIth plea5ure Weremember her III the candle lIghtholdIng Dems and hIS fflendBerkeley Cole (Michael KItchen)bpellbound as she reclteb a tdlltale

We feel for her ab she SitSarounda campfIre With Dems pldIntlvelytryll1g to talk hun Illto marrYingher and we experience her JOYasshe soars WIth him m her tll'st air-plane rIde

There are other memorablE'vIgnettes, all of them drawmgpower from her qUiet, lllteillgentcontrol

Redford plays hiS role well a'>FInch Hatten Clearly llllove WIthKaren, he has a terror of emotlon-al commItment The role demand-ed a blgger-than-IIfe star and 111Redford, It has one of the blgge~t

"Out of AfrIca" ISa tnumph butnot an easy one The film took 101days to produce on locatIOn nearNairobI Ten thousand peopleworked m It, IncludIng RichardLeakey as an adVIser

It was worth It

By Mike Andl"ZejclykIt's not that I didn't like John

Carpenter's new fl1m, "BlackMoon Rising, " which opened Fn-day throughout metro DetrOIt Igot III free, after all

If I had paid to see the mOVIe, Ithlllk I would have walked out half-way through But then I wouldhave mIssed the best part

The plot spirals around SamQumt, portrayed lethargically byTommy Lee Jones QUint ISa thiefand reasonably good at It, so he'shired by the FBI to steal a cassettetape of accountIng records from aLas Vegas company the feds are

anyone ot the exclUSIve golf clubsOtto takes well to the good lIfe

He lIkes to eat well and dnnk, meIther order He makes no secretof trymg to find a nch ....Ife as abonus to thiS wmdfall assignment

The reader IS mclmed at fIrst tomiSjudge Otto as somewhat of aclown. but he IS far from that HeISshrewd, alert. observant and anIllvaluable ally, as we laterdiscover

While the detectives enJoy theIrlife of opulence, they know thatthere ISwork to be done It ISworkthat throws them m With a groupof polIce officers gathered togetherby Paco Pedroza, chief of the Mm-eral Sprmgs PolIce Department

They are a motley crew Bemga cop m a town where bIkers,burgIers, nudists, robbers, dopersand drunks live who do not want apolIce force of any kmd, IS noteasy

Their escapades and their tough,expliCIt talk adds conSIderablehumor to the book And theirgOIngs-on are not the only sourcesof humor There are such char-

Piano Player and Saxophonist Thurs., Fri., Sat. evenings Jerry Neely and Jim LaminteAppetizers e~~~~,,~~r~<;I~;'1"un 365 Sandwiches ?~~~~F~:I'CL DE'OLP,." Lc.m Greek Dishes From the BroilerSACANAKI OPA I" 2.95 ~~):AE~I:~: ;Jlt:~""D"rl'( ALL SASDWlC1U:S 5EIII/£0 ""mt $Ot-"f' ;:l ;1:/:~~[)\{f:~~:'[,1I00(f Of" fQT4TQ£S SPINACH CHEESE PIE 525 16 OZ NY DINNERGJl.UJ: IASSIE'lU CH£E,S[ (U,>c1: wrTK lPU''DT I -----------1 no .. L",Y"IIlS or SUlOAL 1"111..£0 WrTH ('",U.[)£'O

GYROS SANDWICH 3 45.- ~~~K'::~~::N"'F~~6:rr'i:E'"..,'" 5<A""'VC 10 02 NY DINNERSHRIMP COCKTAIL 425 SoUps THI' ..IFY SLrrro t"~11 ..n\fO "HTH

"TA .... " ""'AT"" "00"'''' STUFFED GRAPE LEAVES 5 25 HOUSE SPECIAL;~,?,~~l,ocm CN""'" ,",cmn,I,,50 CREAM OF BROCCOLI 1.25 SOUVLAKI SANDWICH 345 Seafood ~;c".1~~O;,F~~,~~':.::;~; ,~';.'.~~~::~ PRIME RIBGAJ!;L1CS~[.T ouvt: OIl... t..[~O" SDVl:O cow ~FlH LD nllll '( 1'>(' ..... 1 'fA"l"ATl'l') pnl'l[ TF"nnUJ)I .. 'SIEWFPl ll.A.vn LONDON BROIL

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DOLMATHAKIA 275 '"'' "" "'" '''''D 'IV , .... "" •• "" "" r '''''" VEGETARIAN MOUSAKA 525 TASTY BBQ RIBS(I I"~ "~HI'~I~~ ,'r""F uHORIATrKI~1 325 .....1 ..., BROHEDSTUFFED '1'(n., ........srF(I ..lnr.,"n~I""cl"',.,'IIl'or 11~1'"

ARDICHOKE HEARTS 225 ;,,~,: ~:,:;;,:: ~j(~~r, :~,.'[u~ f\l~~r~~l ,,~\ MONl E JUliO'S 39S SHRIMP 945 :: ~ I~I~~' n~~:( ::;,~~~ (~~:) "~~~:J~l~;'lUO 1/2 BBI: CHICKENWAllr",.H[J,.IIT1(WJU HUIl"n I F II r~I tl~, .....r. f"''-'' ~ 1"'1 ::~; Il/,~~/::,.~;~I;lr:l ~r~~~;fr~lf~('~:)I"~~:~\: '","I;,/",;'~...~rl\;, ':tl ';'1';;'; )~II;llloW~:~'''l~BAKED LAMB . 595.

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E.'! ........ , ....'''4''1'''') "401\",.lI ''''Jlllllll .. ",nSTUFfED MUSHROOMS 2,9,5, 90S ,.".""" MILK..... H,f,.\( '."\' nr 'f1'II" • J:>es8e'rts DE.FP foRIED FRFCilf BBQ RIBS &: CHICKEN 95' ,•• """. "" ,,,,,. '" EGG ,>AGANAKr 29~ SHRIMP 895 7 _POTATOHSK'I-NS'"'''' 295:. r:~,~~i//:":'~ /" : :.1 ~ '" NY CffEESE CAKE 125 ",llfl I' i' i ~ ~Ij VrANN'S' GREEK TRIO 595 C.rbon.tt'd BflYflr8,eoi 7S,(nq'~".,,,, .....Hu~,.,Hr'II,.,.I,' ~~ , •• ~,~ BAKLAVA 100 RAY 'llArJOPC) ,695~C~~r-;I;~~~llfo,uu\W ""', /II, r.... HI 'WI ....~fn. ""/J v ''I / fl,\"\ GREf.K OMElJ f.TTE 295 ICE CREAM I 00 I'" ., • I , II j \1 ... I t"l lilt IIIUH 'UII 4"'1' I 11"111 'r 'Ii 995 ORANGE JUICEALL APPETIZERS " ''''''~'''''''' 'I'" , MUD PIE 2 Z5 ~ Rf'>H GREAT I.AKf. SF.AfOOD COMBO. 995 GRAPf.fRUIT JUICESERVED WITH STEAK AND EGGS 595 PfRCII 645 ',:'.', ;;;:",', """" "" '"r' ,." "" "" TOMATO JUICELOTS OF GREEK BREAD • 'fl "y,. "" ,. "".", RICE PUDDING 1 00 ""

has a hUe and no money She hasmoney and wants to get away fromhome

The pact ISmade and she followshIm to NaIrobI where they are tobe marrIed

From the very begmnmg the au-dIence recognizes her as a womanof pOise, somewhat complex,haughty and levelheaded

All of these qualitIes are dIsplay-ed as she arrives at her new homeShe ISmet by what looks lIke an ar-my of workers, who by their verynumbers mIght have fnghtened alesser woman but she alights lIkea queen and walks through theIrmidst as she dispenses mstruchonson the careful handling of the fmechllla and furnIture she hasbrought With her

Karen was made aware soonafter her marnage to Bror that hewas a womamzer and a ne'er-dowell, albeit a charmlllg one Theirdifficulties are aired With civilizedcymclsm Yet she keeps looklllgfor him to change. For all of herself-sufficIency, she desperatelylongs for someone who belongs toher.

ThiS need for someone of herown IS a plalllhve note that runsthroughout the fIlm

Even when Karen meets andfalls III lovl:' With Dems Fmch Hat-ten (Robert Redford), a man whochenshes his freedom above allelse, she stIll hopes.

She gIVes her heart and mInd torunmng the farm, masterlllg thedetails of coffee growing and enter-ing into the life of the natives, buteven that she cannot possess

As a viewer, it would be easy tobe overwhelmed by the lush beau-ty of AfrIca - the endless greenplams, rOVIng herds, a flock of fla-mmgos, a lion stalkmg m drygrasses under a burmng sun It IStruly another world, a beautIfulworld But even the magmficence

otherWIse. All efforts to fmd theperson who fired the shot fall. ButVIctor Watson, the boy's father,refuses to gIVe up

"I want revenge," he tellsBlackpool whom he has personallysought out to work on the case Hethmks BlackpooI WIll understandhiS terrible grief because he alsohas lost his only son

But Blackpool IS reluctant totake the case He argues that It ISout of hiS Jurisdiction and that hehas not come to terms with thedeath of hiS own son

Watson, who IS not a man to beput off, appeals to their commonbond of grief and adds another m-centIve. He promises Blackpool aSIXfigure retIrement Job

Blackpool accepts the offer andenlIsts the help of hiS partner, Ot-to Sprmger

Otto ISso Impressed WIth the as-signment that he thmks he has diedand gone to heaven. VIctor IS agenerous employer. The two detec-tives are set up in the fmest PalmSprmgs hotels, given a hefty ex-pen..,e allo\\ dnce and entr} mto

EligIble applicantsWIll be notifIed byphone or by mall forauditions.

Play by WSU profto debut Jan. 24

"Home from Harlem," byWayne State UniverSIty professorof EnglIsh Alvm Aubert, premieresat the Bonstelle Theatre FrIday,Jan 24 Performances run throughFeb 2 With curtam tImes at 8 pmon FrIdays and Saturdays, and 2p m on Sundays

"Home from Harlem" ISa stageadaptat,on of Paul Laurence Dun-bar s "The Sport of the Gods. ' ItIS the story of the Hamlltons, ablack famllv strugglmg WIth the,;oclal upheaval m the UmtedStates at the turn of the century

The focal pomt of the HamIltons'per!>onal upheaval ISthe convIctionof Berry, the head of the famIly,for a CrIme he dId not commItLea\ IlIg Berry behmd. hlb WIfeandtheir two children move to Harlem10 escape thE' stigma aSSOCIated\\ Ith her husband's "crime" TheIrhopes to bUIld a better lIfe IIIHarlem are threatened by mght-clubs dancmg gIrls and smooth-talkmg men

For IIck('l~ and schedulIng mfor-mallon. contact the Wayne State'Cmverslty Theatre box offIce,Ca<;s and Hancock, DetrOIt 48202,or call 'l77-2960 Tlcket<; are alsodvallable at any metro AAA officeor .Ie Penney store The BonstelleTheatre IS located at 3424 Wood-....ard Avrnue, DetrOIt

"Out of Africa" is a triumphBy Marian Trainor

If you are not a VIsItor fromouter .:.pace, you have heard orread by now what an unforget-table, bedutIful mOVie, "Out ofAfflca" IS Believe It It IS a mag-IllfIcent accompll~hment The act-mg ISsuperb The story Ib both ro-mantIc and powerful and the cme-matogrdphy I.'>a plctonal epiCpoem

The film tells the .'>toryof KarenDmesen BlIxen (Meryl Streep)who wrote under the name IsakDInesen It I~based on her lyrIcal-ly evocatIve book recountmg herlIfe III AfrIca

It was a book that was acclaim-ed by readers, crlhcs and other\\'flters Ernest Hemmgway, whenhe accepted hIs Nobel Pnze III lI-terature m 1954 deferred to seve-ral authors who should have wonthe honor before hIm, among them"that beautIful \\Inter" IsakDmesen

FIlmmaker.'> before Sydney Pol-lack had longed to make thememOIr Into a mOVIe, but theelegant claSSIC was too anecdotalThere were too many gaps andmysteries

It was Kurt Luedtke, SCrIptwriter', who researched and wovemto Karen's account her personaland somewhat movmg story Muchof the matenal came from a bookby Judith Thurman, "Isak Dllle-sen "The LIfe of a Storyteller"(St Martms Paper, $9 95)

In her book DInesen wrote. "Ihad a farm 111 AfrIca, at the foot ofthe Ngong hIlI " The fIlm begmsWith those same words as we seeher as an old woman sittIng at adesk m her mother's house, recal-lIng her hfe In Africa

WIth that brief mtroduchonl the.'>torybegms We see her as a love-ly young woman proposmg a mar-rIage of convemence to Bro. Blix-en <Klaus Marla Brandauer) He

Wambaugh's latest police mystery has power,By Marian Trainor

Tile Secrets of Harry BrIglltBy Joseph Wambaugll341 pages. Wdltam Morrow $1795

Cruelty, compassion, comedy-all of these are woven Into thisrIveting police drama mvolvmg acase that should have been left un-solved. It IS also a moving storyabout a polIce detectIve's searchfor the meanmg of hl~ son's deathand hiS own life

It WIll not come as a surprIse toreaders of Wambaugh's previOUSbooks that SIdney Blackpool, thecentral character m hiS latestnovel, IS a Los Angeles Police De-partment homICide detectIve ButthIS tIme he moves out of glItter-mg Palm Sprmgs WIth Its countryclubs and suntanned celebrItIes toMmeral Sprmgs, a sand-blown,down-scale outpost

Seventeen months before thestory begms, Jack Watson, a hand-some, wealthy young man, was m-clllerated m hIS father's RollsRoyce on a dark canyon road Atfirst It appeared to be an aCCidentBut a bullet in hiS head proved

AuditionsVanguard Produc- ProductIOns, 31182

tlOns I~ ~eekJllg ex- Tecla, Warren, MiCh.,penenced actors and 48093actresses for theIrtour1l1g youth theaterprogram Audltlonersshould bend their re-~umes to Vanguard

r,

Page Four-C GROSSE POINTE NEWS Th ursday, Jan uary 16, 1986

'The Color Purple' shines with brilliance, compassionportJOg cast Danny Glover(Places 10 the Heart! ISsuperb asthe brutal I\llslel'

Desreta Jackson ISgreat as theyoung Cehe Rae Dawn Chong ISpretty and pert as Harpo's glrl-tnend, Squeak, and WIllard Pughturns 10 a fme performance as thebumbling Harpo who falls throughthe roof so many times trymg torepair It, that SofIa does the jobher!>elt Adolph Caesar lends a bitat comedy as he trres to takecharge of Albert's household A!>mall wiry wl.lened man, he lookslike a bantam rooster standlllg upto Albert who IS tall, broad andthreatenrng

Behmd all the brJlhance of "TheColor Purple" IS Producer StevenSpwlberg and Dutch screenwrrterMenno MeYles They have madeAlice Walker's PulItzer prrze-\\ mmng novel mto a memorableJIlm experience that should wm aleI" pI'lle, of Its own

What's on Cable

08pm -

o-l10pm -o<j 30pm -05pm -0') p m -o,)IOpm-

.6pm -

.6 10 P m

05 pm0530 P m -0530pm-o6pm -o6pm -0630pm-0630pm-07pm-

08pm -

07lOpm

olprn-o')pm -0') 10 pm -o 'i \0]1 rn-6pm -• (j p m -- 6 JO P m

06 10 P m07pm -08pm -oR10pm

A iJst of progrdlll~ on (>I os.,e Pointe Cable thiS \\ eekThur.,dd), Janua!.} 16

"Locdl HuntIng and FishIng" (J I)The Job Shm\ - From the I\IESC IIII'The Sa\ mg Word 00"Sports View ToddY" - With Bob Page (II)

"Voices" - 5t Joan of Arc church magazine (Ill'Health Tdlks' - DepreSSIOn 111)

"Stead) Gams" - From Bishop Gallagher (J!l)"POInters \\ Ith Prost' - John Prost talks WIthWilliamLucds, County Execullve Ill)

• 7 P m - 'Somethmg OrIglndl - From ANPEC (I 'J)• 7 30P m - .\ oung Vle\\pomtes - Young adults share their

Vle\\~ (11)

'MUSICl\1akel~ - The Big Band ~ound WIth Ihe~Iuslc Makers (t I)

08 10pm - .Johanna GIlbert Inter\le\\!>" - Interesting people mthe commulllt\ III)

Hd) t;ml" programmIng\Iondd\ thl"OughFrIday

o 9 30a m - 'Fitness Express - ExerCise (II)010 a m - ' Health Talks - Traumd (II)o 10 30d m -' Tablesldc CookIng III}011 a m - 'Johanna GIlbert Inlervle\\s " (11)

o II 10a m - 'PractKal A::.trology' - Horo..,copes(II)o 12p m - "Wayne County <\ Nell Perspective' (II)o 12 30 pm - "The Job Sholl' .. - (11)

• 1 pm - "Sports Vle\1 Today III)o 1 30P m - "!\lUSICMakers - Big Band sounds (II)o 2 p m - "Chaphn The.1ter" - Old claSSICS(l J)

o 2 30P m - 'DetrOIt Curtam Call" - Entertamment (1I)o LIOpm - YoungVle\lpollltc;, -Localtoplc~ (II)o <jp m - SPOIts Rap - LOC.11sports (I I )

'lond,n, ,J alllldl' !()'Wavne Countv A :'-Je\\Pcrlopectlve " (II), Amenran Cdthohc - \\ Ith the Rev John Powell 00"Fltnes~ Express - Improve your health (II)'F<lIth20 - '\11thDI ,Joel Nederhood <IllTablp~lde Cooklllg' - Gregor) Polts will prepare a

four cour..,emecll (I I), Practlcdl A:ilrolog) , - Hlch Milostan Will tell \\ hatthe star::. hold for vou (II)"Sport<;Rap - l:ocal high school sports and Inter\ Ir\1s dnchof\\om,1II Fa\ Ho\\enstem (II)

o 6 10 P m - ' QUll BO\\I - Our Lddv ~tar of The Sea vs Blrmmgham ,scdholm 11(1)

, Young Vle\\polnle, - ~ee 1;16h~tmg (II)

Harper Wood..,Ihghhghh - From the Harper Woods<;chool.,)~tem 11(1)~ome Sembldnce of ,salllty - Gar) Thlson bnng!>

you the Iighlel .,Idc of hfc (II)'DctrOit Curtam Cill!' - l\hchael Chapp and Richard

Schull? re\'ICI\ Ilead Office Fool For Love, Je\\el OfThp :'I:lle The Color Purple and Out Of Africa Gobchllld thr ..,crnes on .Ie\1el of the Nile and Fool forLove ~ep the,e mU<;IC\ Ideo." DIgItal Display, 1 MISSYOII \\ hen the' GOlllggeh Tough , One VISIOnandSurpn,c !->urpfl.,e(II)

TUl' ..c1.I\ .Janllan 21( !lurch of Todd\ Vl'1thJa(" Boland (11)Loc.11lIuntll1gamI Flshlllg (II)The ,Job%0\1 -- From Ihe MESC (I I)The 'idvlIIg \\ ord <10~porl., \ lel\ Today - With Bob Page III)VOIce,' - Sep t/6 hstll1g (Xl\I,c .Ire illl \H'lnilm Veteran.,' - [n depth look lnto

the VI('ln,Jln\\ar - Ii )ear., I.lter and ItSeffect thendnd nOlI 1I0..,I('dh\ a panel oj V!Clnam\eterans (Ill~tpd(h (,dill, See 1 Hi1i,lll1g (1'1)'>ompthlng()ngll1.11 - "'rom ANPl'X' (J!l)\Iu.,,( \Idker, - ~C(' 1116 I",tlllg (I I)

'.Johanna (;Jlbrrl Inl('f\ IP\\.., - 1\I1ch,lI'IDuFour,gen('rcllmdlldgPI (rro-,.,r POl1lle('ab)r (I I)

\\ ('clru,..da\ faulI.ln 2!04 :lOpm \\.lVnr(ounl\ A :\e\\ Per..,ppcll\p (Illo 4 III P m \mNKa n Cll hohe IxI

o ') P III FIInp,>,>Exprr"" - ~re 1/20hc;tlng (I I)• 'i pm '''".lIth 20 IXIo :i 10P m Tdhlr..,ld('( ookl1lg ~er 1120h.,llIIg (I I)o6 pm Pracllcd] A.,trology - ~c(' 1/20 h<;tlllg (II)o6 10P m - 'Sports Hap - See 1/20h.,llIIg (I I)• () 10P m '(~U1?HOld '>ee 1/20 II.,tlllg (1'1)• 7 pm - 'Young VI('\\pomte" (Ill• 7 pm - Harpel WOOli'> Highlight., - See 1/20 hstmg (19)o 7 ,10P m - Somr Semblance of Sillllty , - ~('e 1/20 IIs11ng (II)o 8 p m - 'Delroll ('urlam Call - See 1/20 lI.,tlllg (II)'.!~1.11ugrams are suhject to change without notice.

first movie Her expel wnce hasbeen as a comedienne m fringetheaters and 10her own Broadwayshow, but illS not unlikely that Inthl&her fIrst film appearance, shewill be on the lIst lor an Academya\\drd

i\Iargaret Avery I!>outstandmgas the bluel:>slllger, Shug, who be-friends CelIe A hIgh pomt m thefIlm IS her bellmg out her blues&ongs 111a Juke jomt She IS sen-suous and excltlllg Co-producerQumcy Jones hal:> earned fOUlOl:>car nomJOatlOns for movie!>ound tracks and he l:>houldgetanother for thiS one "MIl:>:>CelieBlues," !>ung by Tata Vega, whodoes Shug's vocab I!>oUbtandlllgAnother root-ralsmg IS the go~pelsong led by Shug a!>she lead~ thegroup from the bar to d chul chwhere they Jom the chOIr 111 anp-roarmg reVival number

Avery and Goldberg ,11 e dbl}a<'<'l"tpo hy an ollt<,fandm!1 "\Ip-

and a

Featuring

TOP 40's

961.5005

Modern jazz stepping, .. combined with the grace of classical ballet, will enliven the stage at the Macomb Center

for the Performing Arts when Les Ballets Jazz de Montreal appears at 8 p,m, Saturday, Jan. 25,The high-energy troupe of Canadian and American dancers was founded in 1972 and has sincegained international acclaim on its world tours. Tickets at $10 for adults and $8 for students andsenior citizens may be obtained at the Center's box office or reserved on credit card by calling286-2222, Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m,

read and &pell the wordSeemg the two sisters together IS

d JOYto behold They play and runand laugh like chIldren, which theyreally are

Vwwers m the midst ot all thebad tlme& ~utfered by Celie wIll re-membel most the openmg scene 111the 111m\~here the sIsters rompthrough a field 01 pmk VIOletcosmos and chant rhythmiC hand-clapPJl1g games It establishes atheme that the mnate JOyof bemgalive ISa flame that IS hard to ex-tlllgUlsh

Whlle Cehe's !>tory dommate~the JIlm, there are other charac-ter~ and their stones that not onlyddd mterest but help to relieve theemotIOnal dram 01 what IS essen-tleilly a story that gams powertr am ~cenes that are IOtenselymovlOg

Whoopl Goldberg's portrayal01 CelIe ISpowerful and movmg It1<,dllflcuIt to believe thalthl" I' her

Preview seriesThe 1985-86Symphony Preview

Senes, sponsored by thp DetrOItFree Press and the DetrOIt Sym-phony League, wIll' present ItSfourth program on WednesdayJan 22, featurlOg lecturer andguest conductor Kenneth Jean,who WIll dISCUSSworks by Haydn,Mozart, RIchard Strauss and Pro-kofrev

Jean WIll also conduct the sym-phony 10 these pieces \"hlch WIllbeheard at the DSO's Jan, 23 and 25concerts

ThiS senes offers an opportum-ty to know more about the musIcperformed by the symphonyGuest speakers dISCUS!>the per-formances and the personalitiesbemg featured thiS year

Four programs remam 10 th1Ssenes DetrOIt Free Press musIccritic John GUIOnWIllhost the pre-Vle\vson Feb 12, March 3 and May7 Former WQRS mormng sho\\'personality Carl Grapentme Willl:>peakat the Apnl 2 preview

All programs are scheduled at 8p m and are free Village Recordsand Tapes IS located at 17116Ker-cheval, two blocks from Cadieux mthe Village shoppmg area Formore mformatlOn, call 886-6089................................

• New Orleans Dixieland •: CHET BOGAN and the Wolverine Jazz Band :• FealUring DIX'ebelle •• Every Tuesday 930 pm.: THE LIDO Dining, Cocktails :• 24026 E, Jefferson (Just North 01 9 Mile) •• 773.7770 •................................

to held the bdby She I:>pleased I:>learn that the child IS called OliVIad lldme tlMt ('elll' had embrOlder-ed on diaper!> \\ hen ~he \\ d~ pregnanl

Lite tor Celie ,>eltle~ mto one 01drudgery and lI1suIt~ 'You !>hoISugly" are almo!>t the only word:>she hedrs from ;\1I!>tel exceptorders to get Ill., dmner, \\a~h andIron hiS clothe~ and tdke <. dre at hi!>SIXchildren

The only comfort !>heha~ 1~herabIlity to'redd One at the lighthearted ~cene~ ..,ho\\~ her :>1:>ter:'I:eltle, \\ho goe., to !>chool tedchlllg Celie to Iedel She ldheb ever)Item In the kitchen ,Ind hd!>Cehe

HERBHAS BEENEATING AT

UNCLE HARRY'S& IT HASN'T BEEN

HAMBURGER

~,?~.~~775.3120

but as the du\ \\ CUll:>on 11('he~1late!> and fllidlly appear!:> to bedbout to turn bdck The rrght handseem~ to l:>a\ '\'\',l1t hel e I thmkI lorgot ""Ullldhllll;;

IllS thl!>kll1dofllnagllldllOll dndnudglOg humor thelt Jl1dke., thebook so appedhng

The author ellldrge., on hi!>characters and pre<;enb them WIthall their eccentncltJe~, but theredder geb the tecllOg that he 1<.,!>ho\~Jl1g1Il dill!'> hom •.,t) dnd adherence 10 prInCIple the kmd ofplace and the ~ort at people whoenJoy the Simple IIle

They lIved by unwrlllen rule!>and adhered to them Thevevolv-ed a pattern oj lIfe dnd found peace10 the ~tabllltv It afforded them

No one \\ o'rrIed about CrImeNobody locked door!>or even kne\\where the keys were Nel~-fdngledcontrdptlOI1!>like dlslm a!>hel!>the}believed lead to degenel acy All'condltJOnmg was looked upon a&au!:>elessmventlOn If you worked upenough sweat the shdde ought tofeel good enough All' condltlOOIng,they believed, wa!> tor the weaKand IOdolent 'It wa~ lOventlon&like -AC that brought dO\\n theRoman Empire With AC theirwlOdows were !>hut, and theycouldn't hear the barbarIans com-mg "

Every day <It {j P m the tll ealarm goe'> oil and everybodyhead~ home Jor the tund ca~seroJemade With mushroom soup \Vmtelstarts Jl1 fall dnd endl:>when MI'Berges maroon 1949 Ford I!>tow-ed annually mto the lake onGroundhog Da) The Lutherans alldrive Fords, the Roman Cdthollc~,Chevys In Lake Wobegon, carowner!:>hlp IS a matter of faIth

In Wobegon people took enor-mous pnde 111 their accomplish-ments, such as rdl~lOg the biggesttomato You Cdn ImaglOe the pndeof one gardener when her tomatoreached 22 pounds, her dismay\\ hen It fell oft the vme dnd cracked and her tnumph \\hen patchedWith maskmg tape and fIlled WIthIIqUld~ WIth a synnge, It \\ eighed111at 25pounds clnd won hrst pnze

The book IS fIlled With l:>uchstones, all told \\ Ith the ~amecharm that mdkc!> GdlTI~on Kedlor's 11 year-old rddlO show "APrall'll' Companron," so popular ItIS an old-fashIOned vanety showthat each week feature!> differentguest mUSICian!> Keillor dehver~monologues about Lake Wobegon"where all the woman are strongall the men good-look 109 and allthe children abovc a\ erage ,.

The show may be heard 111DetrOIt on WDET F:\1. fr om (j p mto 8 pm on Saturday and agam atnoon on Sunday

It IS a delightful ~ho\\ clnd thebook ISa delightful book - one thatcould be read nght thrvugh 01' reada hUll' at a lime to ::,avor the humorand brIghten a dull da)

Cookie saleThe Amencan Can

cer Society IS havlOgan after-Christmassale on cookies andChnstmas card~Both are now seIlingfor half-pnce

The one and lhree-quarter pound tin atcookies has a CUl'nerand Ives cover thatcan also be used as atray Cooklel:>are nowselling for $4 per tmWith a selectIon ofmore than 12deSigns,boxes contammg 25Chnstmas cards eachare avaIlable from$450 to $9 50

Call or stop by yournearest AmericanCancer Society offICeAn office IS located mthe Butzel FamllyCenter, 7737 Kerche-val, DetrOIt Phonenumber IS 923-5144

abused by her common-law hus-band !Danny Glover) whom shenever refers to by any other namp

than MIsterWhile still a child herself, she

bears two children, both of whomare taken from her and sold ThereISmisery portrayed as Cehe clIng!>to her newborn bemg torn from herarms, for In the child she sees ahuman bemg to love and to returnlove

Later m the film CelIe encounters the woman who has her babiesShe follo\~s the \~oman mto thestore and starts a conversatIOnEagerly she mqulres about thechild Her eyes pleadIng, she a!>h

Wobegon ' but that was only fOI~ho\\ In our hearts, our loyaltle!>to home have always been moremode'>t dlong the hnes of the motto on :hc 101\ n s crest, Sumu" quod'>umu::. (\\ e are \\ hat we are) -clOdthe annual Chnstmas toa~ts onthe Son of Knute, 'There's no placehke home \~hen you're not feehng\~ell ' ..

He tells us, Left to our own de\ Ices we WobegoOlans go straighttOI small potatoe~ MaJe!>tlcdoesn't appeal to us We like theGrund Canyon better With Clar-ence and Arlene parked m front ofIt. smllmg We feel uneasy atmomentous events"

Wobegon ISa town where peoplelike order m their lives, eatmg cer-tam thlOgs on correct Olghts -macarom hot dish on Thursday,liver on Friday, beans and wienerson Saturday, pot roast on Sunday

What makes the town speclal'lFor one thlOg, the Statue of the Un-known Norwegian Probably thesculptor meant him to exude con-fidence 10 the New Wortd but tneauthor says that 10 the late after-noon, shadows make him look wor-ned

In the mormng he slips forward,hl~ nght hand extended 10 greetlOg

mn

Man Thu r 11 30 a In 10 00 p mFn 11 30 a In 12 a In Sat 4 P In 12 a m

Sun 12 p In 8 p In

18000 E. Warrenn ! DetroitU At the Pointes

______ .. ~~ 884-9100

Mssrs: Robert McKenna and RichardVreeland in association with DenniS WIckline Production", In<.:.

Located In

Proudly Present

TUTAG'S SUPPER SHOWCASE

also serving WIld Game

Greektown's Finest Cuisine

LAIKON CAFEMonroe Ave • DowntoNn Detroit • 963.7058

AuthentiC Greek CookingLiquor • Beer • Wine

NOW OPEN 7 DAYS

Food &. Spirits

Complete Menu

for Lunches &. Dinner

NO SEX PLEASE, WE'RE BRITISH(\ ~ Limited Engagement - Premiere .. Fnday, .Jan, 17L....J ~ By Anthony Marriot and Alistair Foot

PERFORMANCES ARE FRIDAY & SATURDAY EVENING~CASH BAR-7:05 P.M , SUPPER-7:35 P,M , SHOWCASE-B. SO PM

By Marian Trainor

m~Jt~o ~~~o~~u~P:?~~fe at~~~~~and Its power to sustam the will tosurVlVe no matter what cruelty,sorrow or physical suffering mustbe endured It ISa lesson In learn-mg how to care for one's self whenno one else does It IS a film thatIS put together with feehng, com-passIOn and understandmg for allpeople who stnve under ternbleClll:Umstances, not for wealth orpO\~er but for survival, somehappmess and to be loved and\'alued Cehe Harris (Whoopl Gold-bel'g) I!>one of those people She ISI dped by her supposed father and

'Lake Wobegon Days' ~ a delight

$1991~Supper Choices - PRIME RIB or PICKEREL I '1000" ()PIW.,( '-1(.111 I'I('()\

....drh Ihl\ lOIJI){~n

TUTAG'S ON THE HILL. 13330 EAST TEN MILE RD. • WARREN, MICH.CALL 754-5555 FOR RESERVATIONS

J.IMITW PERFORMANCF$ MONDAY THRlJ THUR-'OAY AVAil A8U • (,ROl'p RAll " "\AII AIII I

B)' :\Iarian TrainorLake Wobegon IS like no to~ n

that e\ er ~\as - and It wasn'tAllhough It was IncorporatedUIIJtl tile 1<1 Ii>:>vf ;\lulJlt::>vkt, It v,a:>omitted from the map due to the m-competence of surveyors It ~aslll:>t Hallled ~ew AlbIOn bv Ne\\EngJandel:> \1 ho thought I" wouldb('come the Boston of the West

Its ultImate name, accordmg tothe author, came from an IndIanphral:>e that means eIther "Here\\ e are or 'We sat 10 the ram\\ altmg all day for you'

If Wobegon didn't eXist accord-llIg to lexlcographer~, It certamlyhas been put on the map by Gar-rrson Keillor WIth hiS radiO showand no\\ hiS book, 'Lake WobegonDays"

It IS doubtful that any to\\ n atsuch anonymity has been so welldescribed, Idenllfled and mlOute-I) chromcled day by day, year by\'ear and season b\ season as\\'obegon '

"It's a town that time forgot andthat the decades cannot Improve,"the author ~ntes WIth warmthand gentle humor he proves hI!>pomt

.. In school" he goes on, "wesang a song - 'Hall to thee Lake

~

WEIGHTWATCHERSFrosted Treat

& Desserts

RAM'S HORN Lo Cal Menu

RESTAURANT SeOior Citizen885.1902 Age 65

Discount 10%17410 MACK AT ST. CLAIR Minimum Order S2 50

DAILY DINNER What's newSPECIALS: at the Horn

CrOissants, Stir Frys,

11 a.m, to 11 p,m. only Fresh Veg cooked toorder, Chicken

HOMEMADE Breasts, Chicken orSOUP DAILY Tuna Salad. Veg.,

WE ARE FAMOUS Ham & Cheddar,HawaIIan Ham"

for OUR DESSERTS' Crabbstlr,

ISun" Man" Wed, & Thurs. 11a m.3a m.Fn & Sat tll 4 a.m.

Classified ads Call 882-6900Page Flve-C

Thursday, January 16, 1986

IDSII.

salesPERSONALFINANCIALPLANNING

The Career Of The 80 S

IDS/American ExpressInc can oNer you a cateel In which YOlJ canuse yOUf successfulbUSiness expetlenceand college educatIonOur Personal FinancialPlanners serve chen Iswllh a variety of Invest~menl producllS and hnan-cm, planning S8rVlCIIS ItISa careerwlth Independ-ence profeSSional sailS-faction and an Incomeof more than $40000for many of our IIrsl yearrepre!.8ntallves

To learn mote about lhee:'Cl1mg opportunity lO10m our Grosse POinteoft1ce call StevenKopllz 26Q 1333 •

EQUal O,ppor1un TV EmpIoytf" M/F

4. HUr WANTED GEHfIIAl

TELEPHONE SALES'>ecklllg '~edsoned,' expen-

enced, dependable eallers to~ellll'dnted dnd needed autopJOtcdlon product<, (2 J to

qUdiJfled new (ar buyersIJ IOU (dn 'IlltJate the calldnd do~e the ~dle ",e want\ ou' E~tdollshed caller~pre;,ently edrlllng bet", een$2'i ~ ri pel hour (omml'>.,Ion FuJI trallllllg With ane\u'!Ient hourlj gUdrdntee\\ hollever }our edrlllng~nOlI ~ou II Improve WIth ourpro\ en ~U«.e~;, formula Ex.penence cdller~ ONLY to\101 I.. betlleen;) 30.9 3lJP m\Jonu<I} Thur~ddj InqUire!.I, pm doll!} imiln<lgl'menl opportul1lt~ a\aildbJe) H8l.>17bl

IlO:\IEl\IAKEH needed -d~~I"1 ~enJOr cltlten~ 111l'lelr home 'fran~pl)rlaI lOll Icl "I ell(e., re(jt.u (-dl'"qlldl lJpp0J'tunl'~ pmplO'11 Loll \ en ~elll<-1( Cltll'l \I"ck ,1(/1' ,;"<II Cd t:81 1;/-1

L:AbTbIDE CH.\RLEY ..,I;' 11011 hlflng for the 101.

10llmg P0.,I! Ions I Day01 night lood II dltrel>S,IlIght cocktail walt.Ie~~e~ hOl-t slaff kit.chen help FIe'""lIJ1e Jhour~ PolY dnd bene-fJl~ o\ppi) betwpcnto 12 noon, 2 5 P mda III' Au oss fromE<I.,ildnd Mall 81B2111t

LOOKING FOR A CHALLENGE?

4. HELl' WANTED GENEIIAL

Come 10 \Iork In our ed.,t~lde olflce We need a fellhIghly motlvdted mdlvldudb \\ ho want to enjO) thefl eedom of part tIme employment 1\ hill' edrnlllg aregular I\age plus comml~~lon If you enJoy lalk.mg to people. call Mr Stell a1t between 2 and 5 pm,In) \1 eckdd) at 771.811b6

EXECUTIVE SECRETARYTO THE PRESIDENT AND CEO

We are sedrchmg for a truly outstandlllg and capableExecutive Secretary who has the talent and 111.telllgence to proVide not only the reqUIred secretanalSkIlls, but WIll also act a~ an admmlslrallve asslstant to the PreSIdent of Lhls young, dynamIC andgrowmg company

The mdlvldual ",e are lookmg for must be capable ofIlldependent actIOn, InsIghtful to the needs of thePresident and WIlling to work With a mmlmum ofdirect superVISIOn

Wc are locate'j on the edst Side of a new faclhty OUlcompensatIOn and bel1lfl~ are hIghly competitiveThe atmosphere IS friendly, Illformal and highlyactive

Please send your quahflcatlOns and accomphshmentsto the Managmg DIrector, Box N.7S, Grosse Pomte]l.;ew~,99 Kercheval, Grosse Pomte Farms, MI 482J6

WANTED: OUR KIND OF PEOPLE

WANTED - clencal secre-tary for advertlsmg company DutIl''' llldude typolng fillllg phone Full tnneprelerred Send re~umeand ~aldrY requlrement~to Gro~~e POInte ~ew~,Box C 44 99 KerchevalGro~~e POinte Fdrm~ :\11~82J6

Are you the type 01per~on who Wilkes up each morn.1I1geager to obt<1111a ne\~ account? Do you feel enor.mou~ satlsfacllOn \~hen you surpass ~elf'lmposedquotas? Doe., thc Idea of bUlldmg a prestigepublicatIOn exclle you)

If you ve an~",('r('d 'Yes to dlllhree, )-ou re Our Kmdof Per.,on' Wc represent a metro area collectors'pubhcallOn \1 hlch ho~ts a broad range of generalconsumer advertlslllg Our Kllld of People earnsalary plus unhmlted graduated commiSSIOns whiletoting around a beaullful pubhcatlOn deSIgned fora very ehte and well known audience If you havea mInimum of ll~o) ear s snles experlcnce, a I'<ln.llIng smile and the enthuslil,;m to be an effectIvepart or our learn \I e'd love to hear from you PO';I'tlOn., are available for apphcants With eIther localor natIOnal experience Send resume, sales hIstoryand salary reqUirements to Sales Rep, Box 36789,Grosse Pomte Farm<; MI 48236

OFFICE MANAGERWe dre a growlllg. dynamIC $40 million company

Jocated on the east Side and we need an expenencedOffIce Manager

The mdlvldual we are looklllg for ~11l have had ex.penence In ,;upervlsmg General Office servIces m.cludmg Lhe,;electlOn and mamtalnee of offIce eqUIp-ment, mamtammg office supphes, SUpervISion ofreceptIOn and general secretarial functIOns, budd.Illg servIces and provldmg travel arrangemenl<; Inaddition. the indiVIdual WIll be responsIble for Per.sonnel/Human Resources mcludlng employmentserVIces, employee records, the admll1lstratron ofbenefIt programs, general salary admlnJstratlOn andthe development and malntamce of the CorporateEmployee Manual

Our faCIlity IS new, thc office IS very active, we aremarketmg/flnance oriented We offer a 1I1l1que0p-'portumty to the indIVidual selected to work With ayoung, aggressIve management group

Please send your qualifIcatIOns and accomplishmentsto Managmg DII-eclor,Box N-40,Grosse Pomte Ne.w,99 Kercheval, Grosse Pomte Farms, MI 48236

ATTENTION

4. HElP WANTED GENERAL

• DATA ENTRY• TYPISTS• WORD PROCESSORS• RECEPTIONISTS

S S I has many mterestlllgassIgnments throughoutthe metro area, mcludlllgdowntown EnjOY the var.lety and freedom of work.Illg where and when youwant Competitive pay'plus bonuses NO FEECALL NOW

DOWNTOWN963-2290

STERLING HEIGHTS977-5740

SUPPLEMENTALSTAFFING, INC.

GOOD, rehable people want.ed for profeSSIOnal cleanmg servIce Call after 6pm, 776.2826

HETIRED Sales personneeded for adverl1smgpubhcahon Good commls.slOn 774-7680

PART lime phone soliCItorsneeded Must have plcdsant phone personalIty JOIN THE ERA774.7680 REAL ESTATE

WANTED-Income tax per. TEAM IN '86son - experienced only,full or part.tlme Ask for \C\I dnd expell('nced dgent<,Chuck, Century 21 Aleardl, ncedcd to .,tolll OUI nl'1I16030 E 8 Mile, 8398800 larger office FI ee tl illllRACE CAR MECHANIC lllg Gredt (Omn1l'>~lOn

plan Cclll John 1\10".,dtto work part.tlme on modi T '\I'P '\.\ \ "\D \.':l~()(

lied ~tock Cdr Haced locat./ For Inlel \ I~\IIy Work one night durmg Hill &200\Ieek dnd/or one day on ---- __I\eekend ('HUHCH School COOldlJ1d01

Call 886 8631 - thl" 20 hour pel III'ckCAREER OPPORTUNITY Pdld pO::'ltlOn I., lor d pel\" II ~IJII II llh good OJ l;,lnll<l I,e established flnancldl IIlllldI ~kJlb dnl! <i l0ll11l1l1

plannlllg firm I~ seeklllg menl to chi 1.,lldll edu( <i

severdl high quailly mdl tlOn Pled~e dppll In \1 IIIvlduals to flll Cdreer POSI Ing to Church ~dlOOItlOn opelllngs Excellent bedrch Committee (;1 o.,~etramlllg, compensatIOn POlnte Cong! e~dtlOnd) J!lOand benefit pdckage tothose who qualify College .\meflcdn Bdpll.,l ( hUi(hdegree preferred, but will 2-10 ChaJ Ionic (rIO., ...econSider equlvdJent em. POlntc, 1\lIehlgdn 182,111ployment m sales, teach PLUMBERb, electncldn~mg, coachmg or related <'<11penter~ dl) II .Ill. ellfield Quallt} count::.. qUdl111tISEND RESUME TO doe~11I For dpp0ll1tmcll1

Glenn Housey Colli822.:i.l!JI2075 West Big Beaver ">ALES per~ons - full dnd

SUIte 310 pdrl t linE' p0.,ltton'o dl,1I1Troy, MI 48084 dble In jell clt y depdl I

ADULTS, rellrees, young ment Apply 111per::'O!ladults WIth cars for morn Mdloo! Solie., 211525I["I109 delivery of the DetrOlt IJCI St CJdlr bhore~Free Press on the EdS~lde CLERK TYPISTand Grosse Pomtes 882-004S Immediate opemng for an m.

---------- dlvldualto work at OUI01BURGER KING lice located III Gro~se

ThIS could be the opportulll POinte Farms on Kcrchely you're looklllg for m res. val off Fisher UOdd Candltaurant management As d ddtes must t)-pe accurate.Burger King A~~lstant Iy, mllllmum 50 wpm dndManager your job I~111be have the ability to deal ef.excltlllg, fast.paced, and flclenlly With the publicdemand1l1g You'll be run over the phone Must havemng a bus mess the sIze of good math skills dnd be fa-many small corporatIOns, millar With bU~llles~ ma.whIch means you'll bc chmes and office proce.maklllg Important and of. dures Apply 111 per~on toten complex deCISions am. 3 pmeveryday of the year II FIRST !:'~EDERAL Or'you have the ambItIOn, the MICH!(,ANablhty, and deSIre, we d I KERCHEVALlike to talk to you I Send reo GROSSE POINTE r'AHI\IS,~ume to Burger Klllg MICHIGAN;:177lJ, Falrlane Town An Equal OpporLullltyCenLer, BlJIld1l1g K 119, ' l<~mployerDearborn, 48126, Atten DRIVERb NEEDED I

lion Mr Ammer Good driVing record WillE--X-E-C-U-T-I-V-E-SE-C-R-E-T-A-R-Y-t ra In 1':\ce IIcn t m one~'

I needed With pnor expenence mdl-lIlg potent loll App. I lrl

IIltranSCrlpllOn and use of pcr~onPC Word Processor sys l'i'illl Md(k A\ etern Applicants must bemetIculous 111 their workhdblts and be self.motlvat.ed Call Mr Ismail at 884.3006 for further IllformatlOn

HELP Wanted - aide/com.palllon for elderly, semi'Illvalld, female stroke patlent ASSist WIth dressmg,tOIlet, bed maklllg lunchWednesday~ and Fndays9 00-4 30 Own transportatlOn $75 00 Call 886.2007 IfIllterested

THE TEMPORARYHELP PEOPLE

PUT YOURSELF ONOUR BEST SELLER'S LIST

If you're an expenenced real I

estate salesperson con.sldermg a change m compames, see us fIrst! I Wehave all the servIces youneed to make moremoney!

If you're consl dermg acareer 111 real eslate, fllldout about our free state ap-proved 40 hour pre.hcensetramlng

Call Bobbl Ligan, SalesManager of the Kerchevaloffice, 885-2000 Denms An.drus or George Smale atthe Woods OffIce, 886-4200Or Doug Andrus, Managerof the Farms OffICe, 886.5800

SCHWEITZERREAL ESTATE, INCBETTER HOMES &

GARDENS

HAIRDRESSER booth rentalor commISSion 779 6770

3. LOST AND FOUND2A. MUSIC EDUCATION

IXDEX TO CLASSIFIED OFFERED

If you lose meor find me ,

1. It CI u , cUIIn • cernIdMlIlIlfIIr 12 ........It .ICI ..

2.... CIlIJ 111111y, dNlIIIIe ...., ...

...... Ince......5ectItariIl 5e1YicePra,ersfIaI SlnablIfIa!tIM ..MaIc: UIIcatiIII......... EducItleaHIlIIIr iIlstnIctlenc.,sSl:IIIotsLost MIl FttIAll...... -.. GeIleraI.... -.. IlIedIc:aIIDeataI.. WilltId LepI~ :;::.; ~-............ lIo8lest1c..... Slttltig ServicesSIrYIces III E......SbItiH WaI1ed!itutIN WlIIltlld DMestlcc.nIllCHt CareCatIriIII_I.....nt AtenqRodaIsIHeIlltS, Apts" etc:Grosse PIlnte

M 1IeItaIsIJlOIle ... 11C:St. Clair SMrIs

• Apt$., IIttc:...,.. ....Ie 1IIItIIs/IIe1l8S, ... lie:

DIIr1lftII RllltlislIIoIllllS, Apts" et.c:

... ANaIE IleIIt witIl Option to IllyIf fer Aetlt F1ImIsIlelIII ..... tor IIIlII811 CMflce.... ReIlt61 IIrIIe fer Rent.... ........ S1DrI RelIt8Il .. $pice Rent&L sa.e UtlllI QIIartIrs• fIIrIlII vaeatioII ReItIts• ...... IilcllIgalI YacatioII........IiO VllcaII8Il ReIIab . • . 0IfIer7 ..... lit IIIlII11 .. lit SIIae LIVitlI

........-s78 0ffIceIS1Ife to Rent7C to IIll1t7D SpIce WlIIItlld8 Mbc _ ArtIcles fir

WeIA IIIap; 'bnt; 8aseIIelIt

SMesAIdlMlsIIstlIII satesMusiI:II IMtrIIlewIsAIItIlIIeS .... SIiI0IfiGI~AItIda ................ for Sales.w1l •••• Sfir SIIeCars fir SIll - AMC 'Cars tor Sale - Clllyslatin tor Sale - ftInICIrs tor SIIe - S.M.foIIiII CIrs - All OIlIerAIIIilIII - ... tarscar AId*sCIIIIkIII ...... ers

•at3DIE91010A1111.11111t1101ft11f118

21. TUTOIIING AND EDUCATION

We'll run your adFREE!!

882-6900

U. PERSONALS

1C. I'IlAYEIIS

111.SECRETARIALSERVICE

2 ENTEIlTAINMENT

~: I

2A MUSIC EDUCATION

HELIAI3LE DOOR BELLREPAIR

Free cSllmates • Hea~ondblcrdtes Complete door bell~ervlce

Bob 822 8331 1

WRITING/RESEARCH/ 1ARESUMES 1.1C

Brochures speeches edltmg 1Dmanuals, ~emlflars artIcles 2

882.3146 2A\0 {It "(.E!'! 21\O{\\{EI.S I 2t

OF (I. \~SlFlEn \u.'. 2D\FTEH 11\00' \10\ D \ \ '" ZE

__ \_(_) _I-_,X_{_'I-_:I_'_T_[(_"_!,!_I__ :SMALL DOG sIlting 10 mv ..

home Not over 15 pounds 41!,'xcellel't reference, 885 4C3039 4D

LOOKING for those people 4Ewho always wanted to 4Fhave a massage but were 5Just a little leery, a httle SAafraId After glvmg thou. 51sands of massages, I can :hOneSbtlysay edlnever hu1rt ,or em llrrass anyone. nyour own home Jim For.tune (LICensed) 331.7477(Portable table)

MASSAGE - In pnvacy ofyour home by tramed Myo-massologlst MichaelDoyle, 751.5587

PC Consulting - custom pro-grammmg, custom soft.ware, lramlng hardwareand software, Installation,system deSIgn and evalua.tlOn. 882.3877

FOR "Extra" Income m '86up to $200.$600 per month,parl-tlme, $2,000-$6,000permonth, full tIme Call886-6511, POBox 8593,48224

PROFESSIONALWORD PROCESSING

TERM PAPERS, THESES,DISSERTATIONS,

MANUSCRIPTSRELIABLE,

REASONABLE RATES884-0459

RESUMEb lhe~es, termpapers, reports, repetItiveleller~ WOHD PROCESbING Compehllvc pnce.,/9uaht)- work 521 3300

TYPING, WORD processing.resumes, $4 25 a page, 45ftaddlltonalonglnals Notal yS,C S 772.2809

ELM Word ProcessIngBusiness, AcademIC,ManUSCripts, Resumes,RepetItive Letters 777-0617

ON-SITE computer/wordprocessIng servIces by WOODS MUSIC IF YOU have lost dn animalprofeSSiOnal com puler please contactoperators Our computer STUDIO Anti Cruellv 8917188or yours Work guaran. GUITAR, PIANO, DRUMS. I.l'i6'l Jos Campdu DetrOItleed Call Words-On. THEORY IWheels - 779 7929 Home or StudiO !,'OUND YOUNG CAT

---------- 20943 Mack o\lmost frozen Monday,WEDDING/Shower mVltes I Call Weekdays January l.l, FIsher Road

addressed, stamped and 754.1144 172.7127 area Black/whIte male, 6sCUffed to order 772.1732 cl months, very fnendly, af.

PIANO lessons, qualified fect!Onate talky Fur ISLOSING YOUR BALANCE teacher, my home 882 like Silk Can nol keep,Let me balance your check- 7772 hdve pets of my own Must

book and reconCile your f dbank sLatements or keep PIA;\/O lessons - produc In good home 3814b96 oryour books for a small live, creative and plea- 38.H964 after 6 p mbus mess Reasonable _sant Your home, 886 0894 FOUND - woman's brace.rates 822-7756 GUITAR Lessons - 25yeal ~ let, Chnslmas week Ker.

WORD processmg, resumes, expenence 884...2573 cheval Avenue l31 74t8manuscripts, contracts, 4. HELPWANTED GEHUAlmaIling labels, termpapers Carol. 774.3591

MAGIC SHOWS - Availablefor birthday parties banquets. your SOCIal affaIrsCall JIm Shannon 461-1281

LIGHT HEARTEDENTERTAINME1'\T

MAGICIAN

ROBERT COOPER\1.L AGf<~~ OCCA">10:,\',

TUTORING EAST side auto dealer need-=mg mamtenance man full

ALL SUBJECTS lIme Contact Jim GregorST Jude Novena - May thiS GR \DES 1 TJlRlI 12 at 821 2000

Saered Heart of Jesus be PROFESSrOI\HL F \( l,l T'l I.COSMETIC clerk \\anLed foradored, glorified, loved, WE CAN HELP a busy dlscollnl slore Ap.and preserved throughout, GROSbE POll\iTE phCdllonl> Idken Fnday,the world now and forever I LEARNING CENTER J,lnuary 17 Monday,Sacred Heart of Jesus, I 6.l Kcrcheval on the flill January 20 Between 9pray for us, St Jude I 1110836 l.J l Ofll6 d m I p m Please seeworker of miracles, pray I REGULAR or SpeClilJ Ed manager A L Pnce, lB900for us St Jude helper of I teacher AVdllable to hclp Mack Ave Equalopportu.the hopeless, pray for us students reach their potcn . 1lIly employerSay thIS prayer 9 times a I tlal call Ann after 1 p m COMMISSIONED sale~menday By the 8th day your 8847114 I~anted Great opportulll'prayer Will be answered It ---------- I t), I11U.,thave car 886.7797has never beE'n known to I LATIN and Spamsh tUlonngfall I - expcnenccd, certlfwd I Cr\SHII'~R \I anted Expen.

PublicatIOn must be promls tedchcr famllla r \\ Ith I enced 19l.1oooed Thank you St Jude for Gros~e Pomte text BBI HETTREE Butcher - $5 pergrantmg me petition 0106 I hour part tIme 3911000M M M E"m\ partllmc $4()O.$1,200/

THANK you St Jude for I month Full time $2,000M M LOST Gold double hoop car. $;\ OOO/month 884.1465

THANK you St Jude for J M nng Village area Scnll !"lILL time typlsl!recep.mental va lue Bll61';6'; tlOllI.,t DIctaphone ex.

LOST Black toy poodle, pcnence Plca~e appl)- 111I tl.86. at Mocen's FrUlI I person 18';80 Mack Ave,Market Re\\iard AA.j.28IlJ Grosse P01l1te Farms

FOUND Grey tabby cat TELEPHONE OPERATOR/neulered ma Ie 7 MIle/Rei I RECEPTIONISTIy If O\\ner can t be locat PART.TIMEed re,;ponslole pel lo\(>r 2 loa}!; penl cek Good typcan adopt B~'l2441 eH'n IIlg .,klils Pdld pdrklllgIIlgs DETROIT

LOST Ladle,; black ~elko F!:':DERAL SAVI;\/GSwatch Saturda~ \ Iliage 511 VrOODWARDor Mack Avenue area RI': AT CONG RESSWARD r:"emng<; 7i"J.()6';7 DETROIT

%1 7600 Ext 10Equal Opportulllty

EmpJo}er>\l11 Y (on,ulldnh IIantedWIll II am III color an,dy!>ls.1II0 h(,dull (are Fnnla<,llcopporlul1llj (',1111onl dt 88411fi6

WANTED assIstant man-ager, evenlllgs, weekends,dpply at EsqUIre Theater,Tuesday Fnday, after 6pm

GOVf<~RI\o\1"~"ITJoo.,$16 04Q$';'l,2lOlj r ;11011' Iltnng CallBO';687.6000 Ext R 1626 forcurrent federa 1lI'>t IFee re IqUI red )

VOCAL and plano les~onsGrosse 1'>01l1teWIth ullIverslty degree now furtheringmUSical educallon atWayne State offermgclassll.dl "nd popular les.sons Phone 824.7182

PIANO teacher With degreehas opemngs for beglllnmgor advanced students Ex.perlenced m cla'>slcal, pop,ragtime, and Jazz 343.9314

PRIVATE LESSONS Plano,VOIce, organ UntversllymusIc educa tlOn degreeMrs ,Junker 823.1721

$200 If not

1A PERSONALS---

$8 00 per mch for

COLOR ANALYSIS$25Includmg color swatchesVALERIES HEALTH SPA

24345 HARPERCHARLENE BARBARA4452799 7757874WE can fIx ~tuck doors,

Village Lock and Contrac.tors 18554 Mack, Farms881 8603

OVERWEIGHT, tired anddepres~ed? Lose weighteasl[y and effectively 884.1465

PAIN, tensIon, injuries -therapeullc massage canhelp Kathy 882 8686, 776.3311

YOU'\'E tned them all ;-';O\\itry the one that reallyworks The best stayhealthy dIet plan on themarket 776.7326

INCOME TAXPrepared m your home at

your convemence Expen.enced, reasonable ratesFree consultatiOn Call forapPOintment

292-9171MASSAGE therapIst Llcens.

ed European TechmquesGift certificates avaIlable.Judy, 882.3856

~ \ TIlA ch .. rg ..... for caps boldd~rker borde" dot~ ,Ia"photos r[>\ers~ e(r

Measured ad $6 00 per lOchBordcr ad $700 per lOch

882-4968

RATES:

882-6900

1A. PERSONALS

EFFECTIVE MARCH 1, 1986

THE R's OFCLASSIFIED

INCOME TAXESPrepared III the convemence of your home Ex.

penenced since 1976 Call for appOIntment after 5p m and weekends 882.2016

The claSSifIed advertlsmg rates WIll be as follows

30' each ad.CASH RATE First 10 words, $3 50dllJonal word

BILLED RATE $1 00 bIlling chargepaid m 10 days

OPEN RATE $700 per lOchbordered ads

There WIll be extra charges for dark borders, stars,dots, logos, reverses or photos

The claSSIfied advertismg deadline for new copy ISTuesday noon (subJect to change durmg holidays)All changes, correcllOns, and cancellatIOns mustbe m our office no later than Monday noon

For further mformallon regardmg claSSified adver-lIsmg rates or for placmg your advertisement,please call our adVisors al

882-6000

BAAL ACCOUNTINGAND TAX SERVICES

11141Lancaster at MackGlosse Pomte Woods

Year End WorkW.2'S

PayrollsMonthly, quarterly,yearly accounting

FinanCial StatementsTax Returns, Bu~me"s

and Personal25 Yedrs Experience

886-6680

* * * * *CALLYOURFAIRY

GODMOTHERSFor Unusualand Creative Vdlentllle

Surpl'lsesMARIKA GHACE792.1515 885.5019

YOUR HOME, A WORK OF ARTPen.and.mk, IIatercolor of Your Home, Busmess or Boat

By CAROL A SINCLAIR 886.8468- notecards avaIlable -

BALLOONSHIGH FL YI]\;G HELlU1\J BALLOON BOUQUETS

For dll occaslOn~ for as htlle as $10- dellven dvalid bleBu~ d dozen 01 bu) a gros~ A GREAT way tocelebrdte

,~/)I'

FOR \ALE or FOR LEA.~Eor BOOTH RENTAL

A unique bail' salon is readyto open in Grosse Pointe.

Tbis SIX cbair, Greenwlcb. Village s~)lleloca/lOll is (/1/ excellent o!J!JortullIty

(or dedic.ated s~}llists.985 lVasbmgtoll

call Leon or D01nIJ1lc at884-9393

{or detarls

"BE A STARI"Hd I'e I OUI II edd IIlg (el CIII om

and Iecepl lOll I'ldpoldped IIIlull (0101 ,1IIc1 'ound

C \LI. \[E\IOHIE,> \ IIJEO7:iH 2H7)

10 "ord~ lor $3 252.>' e~ch addltlOnal "'ord

$1 00 blllmg charge$200,f not paId 10 10 da)s

RULES:OEAI)LINF~S Pre payment reqUIred onError correcllons musl be called 10 I Sef'.lce ads

by MONOAY MlON 2 S,luallon ",anled adsCancels must be called 10 by 3 Wanted 10 rent or share hvmg

\fONDA Y '1/00'1 quartersChanges 10 copy must be called 10 4 Movmg sale

by MONDAY NOON 5 Oul ollown or sUlle adsNE~ COPY deadhne IS n All Bulo ads oul 01 Grosse Pomle

TUESDAY NOON area'NO EXCEPTIONS ON THE

ABOVE'REGULATIONS:

Reponslblhty for a claSSIfIed adver We reserve the rlghl 10 claSSifyIIsmg error IS hmlll'd 10 Mher a eacb adverllsemenl uoW the .p-cancellallon oIlIIe charge for !he ad propria Ie headmg The publisher10 error or a rerun 01 the porllon In reserves the nghtlo edIt or re)pc1error Notollcallon musl be given 10 copy subm,lled for publlcahonlime for correctIOn \h lhe nextIssue We a'<sume no respons,blillylor llie'lllme error after lhe I,rsl 10serllon

"'-'_~_,,_._.-'- ~ 1/ r-

4

Page Six-C GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

S. SITUATION WANTED

SA. SITUATION WANTEDDOMESTIC

i. RENTALS/HOMES, ArTS., EYC:GROSSE POINTE

884-7220I)lv,,",,on 01 (ledtlvP "11,,(..,

HANDYMAN - All repellr:.,~mdJl jobl:>, Cill penter\1or k, Pdllltlllg Pete, 8822793

PHOFI-:SSIONAL BabYl:>lltel- expenenced teaeherbrlllg!> credtlvc dCtlVlty,,101JeS, etc 882-385b

D \ YCAHE - one opelllng1m l ') \edl old tulltlme0111\ $80 PCI IIeek 8 1:;<l III I> Pill, E\pellcllcedmom dnu IOJnlel eell hell'mentJI \ tedcllel Excellent retel eneel:> Llcenl:>ed(;Io'"e Pl'l11tl' RHhH7~q

COl\jpANION aIde aVJl!dbleIO! ambulator) Idd) dl:>hve III fIve dav!> weeki\'Expenenced dnd <.Ull!>CIClICIOU:. Gro!>~e Pomte dndarea I elerences Pleasephone I 614 1172

WE bu) good 1I1:>eddppllance;, dnd 11I1 nltul e dnd dohdu!lng Free e:.llllldte;,82H9~9

MAID TO ORDERHouse and office c1eanlllg

:.erVlLe, rea!>onable rate<;Reference~ Experiencedleam \Iork

Suppllel:> prOVided7787429

JUDY S HOUSEKEEPIl'.GSERVICE

Reasonabll' rate!> dependable, bonded refrrence:.,Jud~ AI meso 792 4298

Ct\fU"JG e-..penencednUl !>e...d Ide l:>cek... po<;ltlOnIII \OUI home Cookmgcle,lIl1ng Illlluded $4 ')()hourll II~'l9,l47

EL GRECO'SJANITORIAL SERVICE

Ht BBI~II HI-:i\IO\'ALl.l't u:' cledll up ~our ml'S'" At

tie!> lJ.lselllent~ gdl dge~, ojlice!> etc !\o Job too ...mJII 01too big You ndme II Vel I

I e,l~onJble I" Ie!> 1"11'1' e"t I111..11('"

839-1423CLEANING!

'I hJt :. II hdt IIe do be"tLet the

HOUSE-KE- TEERSdo all of )our gener,lIl1eamng

Excellent Icferenle ...5bS 4JOO )B2 -I4~,)

BONDED

~. SITUATION WANTED

jO HELP WANTED DOMESTIC

-4£. HOUSE SITTING SERVICES

EXPERIENCED cook, lighthousekeeplllg tOl 2 "duJ!,I or 2 d,1I '> He! erel1ce~11856355 .

PROI"ESSIONAL, rellable1V0JUdnlooking to hou"c!>ltvour home referen(el:>upon reque!>1 Cdll PdulJ792-3917 01 me~".Jge 1)490249

EXCELLENTIN-HOME CARE

FOR THE ELDERLY I• Strong male, 2J.3 years nur!>lllg home Cdre• J years hospital emergency

room techmcmn• Reliable transportatlollExcellent cool.. excellent

referencesKurt

OFFICE c1eclnJng b) Gro,!>ePomte Poltceman andII Ife, I elel pnee ...81111071

J'o<URSE'Sdldede:'lJe~ llle IIIP0!>ltI0l1 Good (,ro!>,!.'Pomte I d erenc e" I772-9112

CHILD Cdle - J \eall:> or Ioldel J 01 -I day" \1eekl~8l:l5 77 24 I

SI~TERS hou~eclealllng dndwall \\ d:.hmg Excellent Ireference!>, rehdble 77112472 774 ISlO aftel h p m

MATURE lady would like tube a companIOn for eldelIy lady, days l'd1l4bll478ldtler 4 pm

A 1 effiCient, rea"on<1bJerates Call Sdlly 774 729b

CASTLECARETAKERS

Two al ea re'oldent,> II IIIcheck on the \1ell belllg 01your home II hlle you al eaway VI:.ltS taIlored toyour mdlvldual needs 2'5°{,dIscount for next three (aller!>

l72-,l8Gll9 am 5 P 1\1

l\JONDA Y - FRIDA'tEXPERIENCED nur:.e III

pnvate cal e Available\\eekends and evenlllg~Excellent retel ence:. 7768621

NEED SOl\IETIII~G mOl ed'T\IO Pomte re"ldenb II IIImove or rcmO\.e large 01

!>mdll (j1J,mtltll'''' of fUll1ltureapphance~ pic!no" or IIhathale vou Call for free l'~llmate - l4.l-()4111or !In 4-111(1

RE1IRED lIA \ DYi\1 \ \l\ll11or repd Ir" carpen!1 velecln(al, piumblllg brokl'n~lndoll" dnd ...<1...h curdreplaced ete. !{e,J<,ondhleRefcrrnce ... 882 hTi'j

WANT a home you Cdn beproud of? I dm honest anddependable I live IJ1 St(Idll ~horc;, dl t'cl I hJI e

882-0964 882 7712 excellent I elel enees 445NURSE'S Aide seeh pnvate 2949

duty 20 years e},.penence :-L-:-A-::-:D""Y:--:d-e:'-I-re-!>-\l-o-:Ik--I\--:":I11current I efel ence!> 885. Cdre fOJ ;,Ick elde! h Good7180 hou!>ekeepel Relei ence:.

LOVING cal e 01 elderly 01 dependdb!e 885 5129convalescent III your home LOVIJ'o<Gmom of one seek"by expenellced private du full tllne nd nllY hou:.e-ty nurse, excellent releren- keepel pOl:>ltlOn In ) OUIces 839-J7I4 hume $l)O houri) BJ9

TWO hard workmg, rehable 9mSouth JUlllor,> Will do odd -E-X-P-E-I-U-E-N-'C-'-E-D-I-d-d-v-!>-ee-k-'Jobs Pdul 81156018 Alex 109 dome:.tlc I\orl.- Long343051>9 tel m I efel ence" Own

LADY WIll hve m or work 12 trdn"portdtlOn 1:\841410hour!>hlft,5days/week "Jo HOl'SECLEA;'IiI~G 101 dweekends I have good reo ~pal klmg clean home 01 offerences, 7 years expenence 1\lth eldelh I fll..e cdll Pell lll2 lO2'5smoke U\\lJ tl an:,pollJ II!01J<;~X'LEANING - LIll<11tlOn ~b5-7859 college !>tudenl Retel en

LOVI1'\G care of the elderly ces Betll ecn 8 a m _toExcellent references_ own cl m , dfle! b p m 822-14/0transportatIOn, LIve-ill 01 HOUSECLEANING by lieout 1-247-2492 liable, responSIble tho!

DAY Care pI oVlded IIll0vmg ough women ReasOl~c!bleHarper Woods home r<1tes, reference!> (111(1\

LIce ns e d re fere n c e:. ::::-1l;-::J::-:9::c09:::9::-():-::-:::- --,::--_creallve actlvltle" Call FURNITURE movlllg, 11001'885-5977 'J""T"'''~ I n W4sumg Free eshmates

BABYSITTING I " 52t 'BbO l\Idl gdret 291>97Hm m)' Ice n" Sue

ed Eal:>tslde home for pi e -' ~:::-:-:---=------:::::-:-!>choolers 884 Un,l LIGHT Hou:.ekeeplllg 89,l

EXPERIENCED ladv a\'ail _7_bl_2 _able to hve mtocareforel STAR BRITEderly l':xcellent Gro,!>e CLEANING SERVICESPomte refelence... l72 Home:., Olllce!>9375 Ap..trtments Condo!>

HONEST ANDDEPENDABLE

\\ dll IIal:>hlllgdnd much mOl e

4C IIA1Y SIfTER WANTED

40 HELP WANTED DOMESTIC

BABYSITTER - approximately 18 hours a week,pay $30, evelllngs 5-8, must!rve In P;lrk Call Liz 331-3809

BABYSITTER wanted days,2 chIldren, 1 and J III myhome Call 882-4948.

WANTED - mature \\lomanto babySIt 18 month old sonm my home, 2 e1fternoon!>per week Reference!> I eqUlred $3/hoUi Wdrren/Umverslty arfd 886-9253

EXPERIENCED BabyslUerfor mfantlll Grosse POllltehome Full time "Ith flex Ible hours References Pat336 2000 8 30 a m 5 p m

PART-lime In my East Detrolt home, Tuesdd)Thursddy 777 0617

IpEAL for mature \\IOmdllbabY!>lttlllg and hou!>ekeepmg 3 da} s per week mmy home for toddler dndmfant Days and hour~fleXible Non smoker WIthreferences reqUJrf'd Calldays, Sandy 884-9184

MOTHER'S Helper for the4-6 weeks ImmedIately fol-lowmg late March an Ivaiof second chIld Lighthousework, some laundry,SImple meal preparationand chIld care ApprOXI-mate hours 8 am - 6 pmMonday - Friday, but mayvary Grosse Pomte CItylocation 886.8631

BABY NURSEQuahfled person to serve as

baby nurse for newborn mGrosse POlllte Farmshome Must be available towork overmght and somedays Experience prefer-red but not necessary Ex-cellent references manda-lory POSition availablefirst of March SuperIOrpay for rIght person Resu-me to Box F-25, GrossePomte News, 99 Kercheval, Grosse Pomte Farms,MI48236

SENIOR WANTED NOWIIGrosse Pomte mother seeks

a LIVELY /LOVING/NEAT semor who drives,to care for a 4 year olddaughter ThIS pOSitIOncould be long-term and apotential IIve-m SituatIOnIMMEDIATE HOURS

FLEXIBLEBASICALL Y, 2 evenmgs

weekly, 2 late afternoonsfor approxImately 3 hourseach and pOSSIble Sundaymornmgs for 3 hours Yourmonetary reqUIrementsWIll be honoredREFERENCES 884-1989

IDEAL fQr experienced non-srnQk,ifl~, ,m~\~re wO,J;llan- babYSit 111 our homeMonday thru FrIday daysfor newborn GrossePomte area Own transpor-tatIOn Startmg FebruaryReferences 343-0330

MATURE woman needed tocare for 1 and 4 year old mour Grosse POInte Parkhome 7 30 a m -6 pm,Monday thru Fnday OwntransportatIOn and refere!lces reqUIred 881-6750

TENDER lovmg care needed for 7 month old, ourhome, Mack/Harvard, oc-casslOnal afternoons, someWednesdays, all ddY 81140961

FLEXIBLE, responSibleperson to SIt 2 year old mmy home 2 days per \\leek,7-4, occaSIOnal additIonalhours poSSIble 822-2351

MATURE non-smoklllgbabyslUer for 1 year old Inmy home or yours, 5-6hours, 1-2 days per ~ek.must be fleXIble 88'f4699

BABYSITTER for aerobiCclasses Monday Wednesday mornlllgs 9 15 10 45Eastpomt Racquet Club773-2403

WE SPECIALIZE mthe placement of profeSSIOnal domestiC and nursmg per:.onnelHousekeepers - Cook,Couples - ChIld Ca re - Da \Work - Maids - HOl11e PRIVATE NURSINGHeallh Care LI\e In or Out I \round the clock BEA l'TlFlJ I., "unn\ rcPlease Call In hOlTle hO"'plt,llol nlll ...Hlg modeled 4 bedroom'apart

GOLL home I{\ ... LI'\" \,l!P... ml'r1t "eff nedl lake \ellPERSONNEL I It dpp!lancc:. dnd l.',lrpel\l1g

l\)111 pa mon... md I' d en dddnl~ Il\e m... ~CI('I'lll'd ami Imml' lellc OllllpdnC}

AGENCY bonded 24 hour "I'I I Ill' $1l'50 8H~244-1106 Kercheval Llcensrd nur"e" for \11 (I{,\NFOHD Ldlll' lOll n

Gros!>e Pomte Farm~ Snrdlll(' Cd...l'''' hOIl...e ,",ccluden 10cdt\On882-2928 POI\Tf<~ \HI:A ,\l'!{<;E" near \ Jllagl' offer ... 4 bN!

State Licensed and Bonder! TU 4 !lllO I roOim ll",th<;, gardgp ,mdGROSSE POINTE CARPf<:T INSTALLATIOI\l I b" ...( men! Imrnl'd\dtp oc

1"!{E!': ESTIl\JATES I CUpdnC\ ';900 month \lltbEMPLOYMENT $200 Yd _ repair "01k, I ,e,lr Ip,1'>(' Rill 12()O) AGENCY CabmCraftcarpet&pad I JOll\"/O\E& JOII\,,'jO\!-,

885-4576 dmgsample"d\<lllahle 1fI (,IW""J: 1'0r\I~.){) years reliable !>crvlce year!> experten(e \!()\ 1\(," \ll "1 01{ \(,t: (II

Needs expenenced Cook... Charhe 0 77fi IfiBh I Hl',I',Ondhle H,ill'''Nanmes Maids, Housekeep CONScr,,:r-.T10US hdnd,,- I HI 1I,lIdl' "PI I II I'er<;, Gardeners, Chauffeur;, man Sm.i11 rep,11 rs' I 1 I (t' i':"llllld!I'"Buller., CouplE''', NlIr~e vanou<; odd Joh., etc Call __ l.I_Lo4HI_~22 44111_1__Aides Compamons anr! Day Vmce, Rll6 Hilll I CARHT \GE House chdrmWorkers for prIvate homes BABYSTTTI<:R _ granm 109 I bedroom ecurlt)',

lR514 Mack Avenue type \ollrhomp p\enmg, refelence" lea e S500Gro.,se Pomte F drm!> onl) 71)1B7R~ L 51 (,ro ...<;e Pomle :'Iie\"

COMPANION, live In for el ---"-------- I)'l KE'rche\al Gro ......ederlylady Mondaypm to AURA'S I POlntpFarm<; 482lllThursday or Friday a m HOME ~[TTI"'G ~ER\"[CE NEFF Hoad - ~t Paul ')References 886-0324 r L (' of ch,ldr('n eld('rl\ room lIpper flat Fire

HOUSEKEEPER _ com- Hourly O\prnlght ,)lHI 24 pldce, paneled dininghour rdle, 12, ('dr ... 1IIIh 1pamon to share home WIth room neller l arp(' mg

elderly \loman 881 3746 Mr<; Ilammon '" hO"I' ,Igen $6.'iO Incillde~ hr,l! garagl'C) <;erved (;ro ......e Pomte Very malure adult couple

HOUSEKEEPER - Mon OVl'r 30 vea rs Llcen<;ed prefl'rred Occup.mcy Febday thru Fnday, 10 a m Bonded ruary I Rll21)1;)(l1230 pm $4 50 per hour 2470283No smokmg, must have -. 1\1 \RYLA '\I)) near Charlpcar Harper Woods 8'\9 ":XPl':R1":NCED ;\1UH~i':~ VOIX - Lal ge 2 1lf'c1room0580 aIdes available Rea"onahlr 10\ler \\Ith appliance;,

WANTED !Ive.m care for rate<; Fra"E'1 Agency Slatel "'l'pdrate utllltl(,'" $325

I convalescent lady Re IIcen ...ed dnd honded 21)l J<:a"hlcle 1\Ialldgementferences please ')26-18'17 1717 RR4'If!(lO

U HElP WANTEDMEDICAl/DENT At

NANNY wanted to lovlllglycare for 9 month old babyin my Troy home Verylight housekeeping andown transportatIOn a mustMust supply Impeccable,profesSIOnal and personatreferences, mclude alsoage, educahon, past ex-penence, and any phYSIcalor other limitations Excel-lent salary, opportunity forthe rIght person Pleaserespond to POBox 254,Clawson, MIChIgan 48017-0254

NANNY /Sllter - maturenon-smoker, IIve-IO, 2chIldren, references882-5938 10 am- 7 pm

SITTER - my GrossePomte Park home, Wednesday or Fnday, excel-lent ?ay, non.smoker 823-3182

IDEAL for older woman -sItter needed 10 my home3 mormngs and 2 evenmgsper week 884-9346

PART-time help 4 p m to 9p m weekday evenmgs,care for 2 preschoolers.cookmg and laundry Musthave own transportatIOnReferences reqUired Call884-3792 after 7 pm

4C BABY SITTER WANTED

1A HEL P WANHOMEDICAl OlNUl

- --- --- - ---

41. HElP WANTED LEGAL

OCCUPATIONAL Therapistneeded for home healthcare contractual work mthe Macomb county areaSend resume to' POBox303, NOVI, MI 48050

DENTAL, hyglemst, part.llme/full-tlme for develop-IIlg practice 296-1820

PART-llme nurse for doctor's offIce PreVIOUS officeexperience and knowledgeof GYN procedures helpfut Please send resume toBox E-75, Grosse PomteNews, 99 Kercheval,Grosse Pomte Farms, MI48236

RECEPTIONIST for HarperWoods dental offIce -pleasant workmg comll-tlOns, expenence preferred, salary commensurateWIth experience 884-11llO

EXPERIENCED legal secretary needed for estab-h~hed dow!llown Detronlaw firm Job reqUIres highvolume of typmg from dlc,taphone tapes Word processmg experIence helpfulExcellent salary andfrlOge benefits, IncludmgBlue Cross and pensionperIOd Pleasant andsecure surroundmgs Sendresume and/or letter WIthquahflcatlOns to GretaSeflic, 3466 Penob!>cotBULldlOg, DetrOIt, MI48226

FAST track corporate law of-fIce seeks aggressIve per-son for entry level secre-tanal posItion Start $4 perhour WlIl become salanedupon completIOn of 3month probationary penodRapId mcreases III salarycommensurate WIth de-monstrated abIlity andproductIVIty Will be tram-ed on state of the art IBMcomputer systems Pleast'send resume 10 N Price,29199 Ryan Rd , Warren,M148092

LEGAL Secretary ex-perienced or WIll tram,good typIst. Downtown De-trOl t 963-7755,LEGAL SECRETARY

Expenence reqUired, wordprocessing preferred Im-medIate openings WIth es-tabhshed law hrm Excel-lent condllJOns and bene-fIts Send resume toJ F P, 1000 Woodbridge,DetrOit, 48207

DENTAL OFFICECHAIRSIDE ASSISTANT

Do you relate well WIth people?Do you work effecllvely as a member of a team?Do you see yourself m a health profeSSIon?

If so, we want to hear from you!

Please send complete resume toGROSSE POINTE NEWS

99 KERCHEVALGROSSE POINTE FARMS, MI 48236

BOX IIF-20

We understand the value of outstanding talent

Do you relale With people?Do you enJoy helpmg persons learn?Do you see yourself as a profesSIOnal dental

hyglemst?

If so, we want to hear from you I

Please send complete resume lQ.GROSSE POINTE NEWS

99 KE.RCHEVALGROSSE POINTE FARMS, MI 48236

BOX #F-20

~A Hi; P WA~TfOM{OleAI OENI Al

MEDICALTRANSCRIPTIONISTPart-time poslhon avaIlable

on the day shift for a me-dical transcrlptlonlsl m theCardiopulmonary ServiCesDepartment PrevIoustranscrIption experiencereqUIred Must be able totype 55 wpm Qualtfled ap-pltcants should apply at

DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN RESOURCES

BON SECOURS HOSPITAL468 CADIEUX

GROSSE POINTE, MI 48230343-1527

AN EQUALOPPORTUNITY

EMPLOYER

NURSES AIDESLPN'S

The sisters of Bon SecoursNursmg Care Center ISseek 109 candIdates Cor severa I newly aeated posI-lions The 200 bed center ISdeSigned to provide hIghquality long term care lor Ire!>ldents In a poSitIve andhomehke setltng

Part-lime opportunities eXIstfor expenenced candIdates IIII the followmg areas

• NURSE AIDES -ALL SHIFTS

• LICENSED PRACTICALNURSES - ALL SHIFTS

To apply, please call or app-ly In person at SIsters ofBon Secours Nursmg CareCenter, 26001 Jefferson, StClair Shores, MI 48081343-1526 EqualopportullJ-lyemployer

R N 'S AND LPN'sNow accepting apphcatlons

part-time days and aHer~noonsCOTT AGE.BELMONTNURSING CENTER

19840 HARPER881-9556

EXPERIENCED MedIcaltranscnptlOnlst Wages ne-gollable. Excellent bene-fIts East DetrOIt 445-3647

DENTAL receptIOnist WithInsurance experience, noevenmgs or weekends, askfor Charlene 772-9020

DENTAL asslstant- full orpart-time avaIlable, no Sa-turdays or evenings Askfor Charlene 772-9020

PHYSICALTHERAPIST

CONTRACTNeeded to do home VISlls on

the eastside of DetroIt andIII the Grosse PointeHarper Woods area

Payment $32 per VISitPlease contact Vlrglllla

KastnerVISITING NURSEASSOCIATION OF

DETROIT7700 SECOND AVE

DETROIT 48202876-8519

EOEMEDICAL assistant needed

(or a pediatrics office, ex-perience necessary Sendresume to PediatriCCIIIlIC PC, 25710 Kelly,Roseville, 48066,

SPEECH TherapIst neededfor home health care con-tractual work in the Ma-comb county area Sendresume to' POBox 303,Novl, MI 48050,

EXPERIENCED full timedental assistant - EastDetrOit office Call 881-3979or 775-1490

FULL time dental reception-ISt needed for busy dentalpractice Must have ex.perlence In pegboard 10-surance and bJlhng Excel-lent starting salary and be-neflls to right person 773-9660

PART-Time Orthodonltc as-Sistant, afternoons, Willtrilln R86-3390

U HElP WANTEDMEDICAL/DE NUl

R.N.'S - L P,N 'S- NURSES AIDES

ADMINISTRATOR COModern dental office in War- MPAN ION AI DES

renhasanexcellentcareer LIVE INSopportumty for an enthu- Pflvate duty nursmg m Grosse POInte area ImmedIateslasltc dynamIC mdlvldual opemngs ChOIce of hours and days Call betweenWith SUperviSOry ex pen- 10-4 p m Monday Fndayence of various dlSclplmes MACOMB NURSING UNLIMITEDDegree In busmess ad-mlntstratlon or related 263-0580field preferred Computer i'i====================:::;background helpful Excel-lent Interpersonal, verbaland wnllen skills reqUIredMust be capable of work-109 mdependently and as-sume responSIbility for thedally operaltons of the of-ftce. Duties to mcludemarkeltng activity, per.sonnel and finanCialmanagement, Ideal envI-ronment, attractIve salarycommf'nsurate WIth expenence Good benefll pro-gram Qualified candI-dates deSIring a challengmg posItion should contact We understand the value of outstandmg talentGenme at 979-2800

WANTED - Part-time me- I ';:=====:;D;:E;:;:N;T;:;A:L=O:;::;F;:;F;::C;:E::::=====~dlcal offIce manager Ex- Iperlenced In Insurance, HYGIENISTpegboard, bIlling and In allareas of offIce busmessEastside localJoil n3-8221

MEDICAL assistant ex-penence, part-time, 5 halfdays per week OB-GYNoffIce 884.2940

FULL time physical therapyaide In out-patient chmcSome evemngs reqUlreosend resume to PIPP andGllboe ASSOCiates, 23161Greater Mack, St ClaIrShores, MI, 48080

4 HElP WANTED GfN~RAl

ARE you lookmg for are-wardmg career? Real es-tate sales may be youranswer We have openmgsfor amblltous sales people111 our Grosse POInteWoods offtce We offer gen-erous advertlsng. floortime and superVIsionComprehensIve trainingclasses are offered for allnew people Cdll now for anIIllerVlew appomtmentPans Disanto - 884-0600

JOHNSTONE & JOHNSTONE

SALESCONSULTANT

Part time pOSitIOn m ourbndal ~alon Excellent be-nefits and pleasant workmg condilions Salary com-mensurate \\ Ith ex-penence Apply III person,9 30 a m 5 pm, Jacob-!>ons Personnel, 17000Ker-cheval

MANUFAl~URERSBANKhas Immediate employment

opport un' t H><; for P<l rl '"11f>tellers, applicants must behIgh school graduates With6 months work expenenceor post high school educa-tIOn Good math skills re-qUIred Cashier or pre-VIOUS teller expenencepreferred Applicantsmust be avaIlable for 2weeks of full lime tellertrallllllg Apply III personfor poSItions at Manufac-turers Bank of DetrOit,19701 Vernier, Second levelm Harper Woods, MIChl-gdn, dcross from EastlandMall Thursday, January23rd, 1986, 1 30 pm. 3'30p m only An Equal Op-portumty Employer M/F/HIV

START the new year wIth theCenlury-21 team A careeropportumty sessIOn Will begll en Saturday, JanuaryIll, dt 10 a m at 25814 Jef-ferson, St Clair ShoresReservatIOn requestedCall Century-21 AVid 778-8115

LOOKING for conSCientIOUSmdl VIdual to assIst mmamtenance depaltmentof mdustnal food proces-!>lIlg plant Knowledge ofbaSIC repaIrs and mamten-ance necessary send resu-me to Box G-8, GrossePomte News, 99 Kerche-val, Grosse POinte Farms,MI48236

'I:\INTEN \NeE MAN -(tramee) Must be me-challlcally mchned andamblhous HIgh schooleducation reqUired Call775-7011

FOR "Extra" Income In '86up to $200-$600 per month,part-ltme, $2,000-$6,000 permonth, full time Call886-6511, POBox 8593,48224

NEEDED part-time, 6 a m -8a m school mormngsResponSIble person to seemy 15 year son off toschool ReferencesHarper Woods 885-3708

MATURE person needed formamtenance and Jam-tonal work on a part-limebaSIS GratlOtl7 Mile area, ITechmcal School CallJoyce at 526.660(} between9 and noon Mondaythrough Fnday

FULL lIme posll1on avall-dble at the Camera CenterExpenence prefen-ed Call885-2269 for appointment '

SALESPERSON needed,downtown locatIOn Verysafe Call 963-2892

PHONE gIrls, pIZza cooksand dehvery persons 372-1460

PART-Time waitress,Golden Coffee Pot, 63 Ker-cheval, Farms 882-9555

WANTED snow shovelers oncall for condo $5 per hourCa II 776-6430 or 779-4100

VOLUNTEERS needed toact a!>"Big Brothers," formales age H)-H, With hmlt-cd faml!\ contact Child-Iell'!> Home of DetrOit 8860802

FAMILIES needed to pro-I Ide room and board fOl1\ orkmg high school gIrls,reimbursements aremdde Chlldl en s home ofDetrOIt 886-0802

WORKSHOP SUPERVISORHigh School grad or G ED,

\ alld dn\ er s license Witha CldSl:>J endorsement fulltune pOSitIOn SUpel \ I!>eand l:>etup job!> tor clientsdl!>tllbute supplle!> dndeqUipment I ecord tImeJnd productIOn accounts,II nte progl es~ note!> dndgoal dllall1ment pldn~ a!>..."1 Illth ...hlPPlllg and recell lI1g I e:.pon~lble fOIqUdllty contI 01 on wntral!job~ Appl~ to \\ayne(OUlll \ ASSOCiatIOn ForThe Helal dC'c! 9200 lon"I" Pc'''''''' \'1 t°.!l ~ \pp!JC'alJon... dlcepted until1..'486 E Eo. U C

th~emb!1 \\orkSJllO $350/ \\ eek

\011 Hlllng'Call 55, 1200Job'l;e1\lolk

2b0ll5 ~choellherr FeeAD \GEl\CY

DOli nto\\ n dd agenc) has en-tn Irvel posItion m mediadepart ment I\lust be goodJ.tdeldlls t\pmg andcommunleatlOl1 Computer expellence helpful OpportuIlItl to dd\ ance Call Pat19J'0.140

Constl udlon$10 $t blllour"Oil Hmng'('dll 5>7 1200Job :\e1\lork

2bO!FiSchoenhel r FeeDllver!> S5Da/Week

\0 Expenence Necessdl)Hiring :-Jail'Call 5571200Job Network

2b09-")Schoenhel r FeeHELP Wanted - full and

part tllne barmaid Toppa). fleXIble hour!> 822.226\1

Warehouse Work;'IioExpenence Necessary

Hiring Now'CdlJ ')571200Job NehlOrk

2009') Schoenherr FeeBOOKKEEPER full charge

through tnal bal a nce,computer a plu!> East SIdelocdtlOn, e\perlenced onlyJ7!-54G4

Factory $6-$20!HourDay!> and NIghts

Hmng Now'Cdll 55i 1200Job 1'\et\\ork

26095 ~choenherr FeeDRIVER VI anted, DetrOIt

Automotive Parts Entrylevel pOSItIOn Will tram,good dnvmg record neces-.,ary 882-')800

BOOKKEEPER - msuranee dgency III GrossePomte J-'Icxlble hours,2; ri hou!l:> per" eek Compuler knOll ledge ReplyBox 128 ~t ClaIr Shores,4110110

Forkllfl POSitIOns$12-$1l 50/Hour

NOW Hmng'C..Ill 55i 1200Job ~et ,I'ork

2b09) ~choennel r FeePART -tlme/lIexlble hours-

Accountmg DepartmentSome bookkeepmg ex-perience, typmg, filing,bank reconclllall~ andCRT expenence preferredRe;) Cen Send resume toGrosse POInte News, 99Kercheval, Grosse PomteFarms, MI 48236, Box D-IO

WORD Processing secretaryfor commerCIal real estatesales offIce, secretarialbackground With at least 1year word process 109 anddIcta phone expenence Sa.lar) and benefits, South-field area Call 353 5400,II 30 a m to 5 p m AnEqual Opportumty Em-ployer

PART-time \leekends, eve-IlIngs Not under 16 $3 75hourly 884.2994 after 5pm

SECRETARY /bookkeeper20 to 40 hours per week forCPA / Attorney m GrossePOInte Woods Typmg,telephone, dIctaphone, ac-countmg responSIbilItiesAvaIlable ImmedlatelvSubmIt resume to BoxD-12, Grosse Pomte News,99 Kercheval, GrossePomte Farms, MI 48236

IDEAL for retiree for part-hme work III funeral homeVaned dutIes asslstmgdirectors Must have fleXI-ble hours, neat appear.ance, personahty to meetpeople, drIver's license521-3133 Fnday bt'lween10 am -5 p m

PART1ime secretary GrossePOInte offIce, excellenlsecretarial skIlls send reoferences and resume toBox A-la, Grosse PomteNews, 99 Kercheval,Grosse Pomte, MI 482.36

BEAUTY Operators, Rosewood SuperIOr GrossePomte Woods salon wantsyou WIth us 88H072

VILLAGE Ma Ids needs menand women for day cleanmg Must have transporla-lion 886-9141

j HELP WANlED GEIjEIIAI

WAITRESSES apply m per-son Fnday, January 17,or Tuesday, January 21between 12 noon 2 p mMontego Bay, 17315 MackAve

MECHANIC or apprentl!>e,days Full or part-tllneTools 1-94 ChalmersAmoco

GAS StatIOn atlendent, full 01part tllne, experienced1-94 Chalmers Amoco

COU1'\TER Person, regIster,check out Convelllence!>lwe Full or part t!me1,800 Macl. BlIl

SECCHITY Guard~, lult andpart I Ime posltlOn~ a\ JIIable must be 18 dnd hal'cl,11 !Illl 1200

KEY people needed for nadonal Jell elr)' companyFIrst tlm( m :\lLchlganCubiC ZII ..olllal:> m 14ktgold or nrmel! Groundf,o, r opportumty for faim-lous mcome Call RRI-4011

wA~fEi) - cook for bardlld gl JII prelerably fe-male mature adult needapply InqUIre at 524 2r6(\

PART-tl me v, ord processmg;-ersOl' needed for GrossePomte offlre Must be efflclent and experJpncedI;reat opportumty for exIra mcome Call Mr Gra\a: !l81-1491 afer I) p m

SEltVICE StatIOn attendentAn~ shift 885-9610

GE~ERt\L laborer No experlence nece!>!>ary MtClemens area 791-0220

KELLYSERVICES

The 'Kelly GIrl' People~ot an agenc) neler a fee

Equal OpportullltyEmplo)'er

I\l/F!HCHAUFFEUR, permdnent

!lve-m 884-2431DRUG Clerk wanted - ex-

peru~nce preferred Good\\ orkmg conditIOns Call882.1043

LEAD vocalist preferrablyWith ke) board kno" ledgeand equIpment for asenouslv rehearsmg bandRock ddnceabJe t) pemusIc Call for dudltlon3il.8372 AI

DETROIT glass fabncatorEdst Side !>eekmg Gal Frlday for busy office Appll.cant must have prolenbackground In bookkeep-in~ and aple to ta~e fullcharge of payroll accountsreceivable, accounts pay-able, .lnd all aspects of orflce operatIOns Back-ground and experienceII Ith computer operatIonsIS an asset Typmg skIlls1\Ith 55-ro wpm ISreqUiredSalary posItion With bene-fits Hours 8 30 a m 5p m Respond to Boxtit l-l, Gros~e Pomte ;..,e\I:.,99 Kercheval Gros~ePomle Farms, 'II 48236

E .\R~ fantastic mcome msales and management -Health, nutritIOn and'I eight control Full orpalt time \\ ill tral.l 881-nal

REAL ESTATECLASSES

Held monthly $45 materialsfee 1'\ow's the time tostarta ne", careerCALL PAUL KITCHAK

774-4061EARL KEIM

BELL/SHORESCASHIER - 2 9 P m Good

math Village MobIl,Cadieux at Kercheval,Grosse POinte Ask forPhil

SERVJCE StalJon attendant-- 2 9 r m Village Mobil,Calheux at l<erchpval,Gro<;se POinte Ask forPhil

PART time typist - ex-penence prefen-ed GrO!>SePomte area 11853,)'\,)

REAL ESTATELarge real estate fIrm IS en

largmg offices Ha'i roomfor more salespeople onMack Avenue between 8and 9 Mile Roads Afterhcensmg - free trammg

775-6200

779-8100ROSEVILLE

4 HElP WANTED GENERAL---- - ~-- ---

(hoo,e } uur d<;"lgnment!>and edrll ex(ellent pJ}melll IIlCred~es dnd Pille!I acatlOns Call us toddlat

OFFICE manager New, Interestmg, congemal mallorder fIrm send resumeto POBox 36670, GrossePomte, M I 48236

LET KELLYPUT YOU TO

WORK TODAYI

• Secretanes• Typists

i,.plh "t>r\ '(f" h" ""pmf'

d: ~tc long and short terma!>Slgnment!> at JI ea compdllles \\ e CUIrentl\' ,eekextl"rtenced

c',(

-~ ~-~----_._---- •

- -Thursday, January 16, 1986 GROSSE POINTE NEWS Page Seven-C

LOWER flat - 3 bedrooms,hvmg room, dlnmg room,carpeted throughout $425No pets 82l 6970

NEFF near Jefferson -Remodeled 2 bedroom,first floor, all appliance;"immedIate occupancy~750 884.2444

YU HARC01JHT - 3 bed Iloom upper, l' ! baths, ap.phance;" fl replace, nopel;" $690 Evemng;" 822-0907

GROSSE Pomte Palk - 5room lower, 2 bedrooms:,tove, relrlgerator,IIa,hel dl) er, carpetedll.n \lar) land $350 plu;,ulilllle;, Aflel b pmpled;,e 882 5341

PAHK - Five loom 10WClllat $2B5/monlh plu:, seculIt) Nu pets, Ideal fOIddults A\ allable Febru-dry I 331 1944

GHOSSE POlllte area Aparlment, I bedroom, IIvmgloom, dllletle, kllchen..,IIpd, applJdlI\..C::', laUlI-dl), parkmg tl dnsporla-tlOn, Immaculate, decor-aled H B 0 . gd:' $,3258llb!J770,882.9549

LOVEL Y 5 room upper flat- 90b Nottmgham $340plu;, ullhlles Open SaturddY, 10 am -2 p m

HAHCOURT -lower, 3 bed-loom:" 112 baths, all' con-dltlOnmg No pet;, 822-7706

UPPER 4 room, apartment$475 monthly, 824-<1625

IMI\IEDIATE occupancy -FIve month sub-lease,completely furmshed twobedroom upper flat onHal court $600/month plusutlhtle:, Phone ChampIOn& Baer, Inc 884-5700ShIrley Kennedy

GROSSE Pomte Purk 3 bed-loom house on Marylandoff Kercheval DlIllllgloom, breakfa:,t room,bdsement, garage Redecorated m and out, plushcarpet, Oak trIm, availablel<'ebruary I $425 per plusutJhhes 881-4977,331.3230

\\J AYBURN near St Paul-Large l bedroom lowerWIth appliances, separateutlhlles $325 Eastsidel\lanagement 884-3890

GROSSE Pomte Park IDetrOit freshly decoratedthree, four and fIve roomdpartments, avaIlable;,oon m border areas ofboth Cities, no pet;" $225and up, 882-5892

NICELY decorated and new-ly renovated bnck home onqlllet street III the Farms3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,$900 per month. 881-3826,after 5 p m

VILLAGE condo, fully fur:Illshed Available midJune Call now to see andre;,erve Monday-FrIday,9 5, 882-2415

IN the Park Vacant, 412Ioom upper, heat mcludedH~U per month Secuntydepo;,lt Ea~tslde Real Es-late 882.2402

llll :-':EFF - 3 bedroom, 2 cargarage fully all' condition-ed, avaIlable February 7$675 Crane Realty 884-0700,88-16-151Ask for Janet

TOYSAT HES \LE PRICES

II MISCEllANEOUS ARTICI fSFOR SALE

WILSON 1200 men's golfclubs - 3.pw, 3 wood&, ex.cellent condItIOn 882-9116

MOVING Sale - 210veseals$100 each, 2 Shffel lamps$50 one metal desk $15,one lal'ge wood desk $25,one round wood table With-I chairs $75 one tall oaklhesl $150 one old gameIdble $15 After 6 pm 8B6-88S1

DOUBLE :,troller, excellentconditIOn, $109ne\\, a!>kmg$80 7733920

~TEHEO for ;,dle;,pea"er~ - Ken\\ ood3 \\ ay, tbO1\dtls per channel HeceJ\(~1 Kcnl'.oodlllgh ~peed Turn lable -onk) u extellenl lOndltlonH;u 1l1l536111

rwu retngerdlor!> 1 oIVOCddo I <.opper, 8825681

HI{EAKFA~T ;,et paddedledthel sedts, e.lsters, $195Bedroom sel Queen size. 6plele;, $195 SOld bed, $150.! ,,','. ,\ cl ~clio'.'. _h~lr::. p:ur$1l>UCholndeher (<.ry;,tall$40 !JB28') l2 atler ') p m

i\IOVING Sale - three e\.tralong 1111Jlhed", boys 201'llch bike fireplace'>Ul'en" edl II \meru:a:,redllllllg thdir" plc-'Irllhl'1lll1 p..ll'>OIl" IdmpIdllle 1l1l1L2.10

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6N NOIITHERN MICHIGANVACATION RENTALS

t. MISCELLANEOUS AIlTlCLES 'FOil SALE

SPRING LAKE CLUBNew model, unfurlllshed 2

bedloom wIlh loft, 3 bathcondornllllum All apph-dllte;" fIreplace anddmemlles mcluded CallBdyheold He.1l i':state, 45lEdst Lake ~I Peto!>key,1\hlh -19770

(61&) l47-3;;72or(61bI347-7b90

SKI MICHAYWE7 J\Ille" ,',oulh of (,a) lord

Beautllul ,l bedroom homefOi Ielll h\ \1('ek 01 IIeekpnd FlI epJoIle llrculolr,10111,>modern kllthen IIIdpp!l ..IIII e'> 2 bdth" Ca(hedrdl Ll't1J1lg;, DOlInhill I,1IId U lJ"'>Lountr) "kling,"lIo\\lI}()bIllng el( 111\hlhlg.1ll '>bl'..JuIIlul \orth

flll, $211

ORIENTAL RUGS WANTEDAZAR'S GALLERY

One of the large "electIOns of Ol'lental rugsat mllllffium pnces

251 E MERRILL, BIRMINGHAM644-7311

OFFICE ;,pdce \Ianled - approximate!) 200 ;,quarefeel rn Farm;, or Wood!>Da)!> 219 81hl, e\ elllll!hJ-Il0271 1\IOI\IS TOY AlfIC

A To) Resale Shop166.17E Warrne

NORTHERN 882.7631J \lIES \ :\1O"\"IG

FIREWOOD CO. f!OOI\SELLEREx( l'ptlOnall} Flnc Mixed l'illl I<.EKCH.~'" \1.

I1.lrd\\ood lll-'u ISlJal-. A!>h Hlckol\ .tr,o Fnllt ....elelled boo"s boughl and

\IOadS soldGuaranteed to bl' Quaht~ I CLOSI-:D MONDAYS

Sed~OIll'd Flrl'plaLe Wood or MAHOGANY drop leaf dm-Your Mone\ Back$4R Per f>'acc ( ord Illg table With 5 lea ..es.

777 4R76 $3'i0 mahogany chlllacabmet (lighted). $425,60"

STAMP and com appr.llsals TrddltlOnal buffet. $75,54"for eslales and private col TradItIOnal server, $150lectors. also. old home and RR25622eslate search for hIddenand concealed ..aluables QUALITY BOOKSJohn Stendel 881 '3051 DESERVE

QUALITY PRICESANN MARIE'S GRUB STREET

RESALE A BOOKERY22217 KELlY RD 17194 East Warren,

- - I near CadieuxEAST DI:o;TROIT DetrOlI, MichIgan

Women children and men" I 882.7143clothIng Handcrafted L- .....J

Item" 1...-------------,Hours

Monday Ihr\1 ~alurday, 105IThursda) 12-7)

7776551

SNAPPER 20"SNOWTHROWER

Brand ne\N 11e\<'>1'bt'en u~eo\\ on III conle,,1 $I')() firm1$-1')011,,1price I R2l 1885after 'i p m

FIREWOOD - mIxed hardv.ood" delivered and sl.c1.ck.ed $')()a cord Cash preferred 8H6747R

61. SHARE LIVINGQUAIlTERS

IiM, FLOIlIDA VACATIONRENTALS

6N. NOIlTHERN MICHIGANVACATION IlENTAlS

EAST Warren/Cadieux !\fatUle gentleman, $160 pelmonth Evelllng!>, 88l 1212

TWO bedroom home III I'lIr kBenl, utili lie,> 822 91ltll

!'JOi\ ~J\IOKI"IG \\ orklllg female 10 ,holll' large uppelIl"t III IW<Jutllul DelrOlt,111'.1 II Ilh '>allll' ~J7:> plu;,1 ulllIll(''' 811,7%'i Il'''\eme",age

\ OL N(, mdn h,l;, Hdt to;,hdl ell Ith ;,oIme 882 ')",II

EJlIPLOYED '>tudenl need;,loommatt' mu;,l be cleanmature ll11lb')O/)

QUIET pi oj e,>"lonal \IOmallto !>holle lollgl' tlat \Ilth;,ame %1 l7.j.j Mal \

JUPITER -PALM BEACH "II \ Vl't ('Hl-:EK/BlIldIlC

\lldllgdll belllcen TrdJupiter {)(l'dn dlld HdUluet l(l;,e ('It\ dnd Pelo,>key

Club II Tl'nlll'> coul'h 2 l ontl'mpul dl I hou::.<.' ;;puob \\.1I"lflg dl~tllnce 10 bedloom" l b.lth" oIndfhe Oledn 2 bedr oom lOll ;,alllla bedUlllul!) dewral IdOP"Plum {',1Jl bIb 111UOl cu 1.111111\ lllJl\lHulI dill,132ibYI U o'>s Lounll y ;,kllng 111

POl\IP ANO Bedch. luxun door poul Ie"ol I ldllhtlC!>;,tudlo wndo, oceanlroni i7b 29-t<j882 7ll&Oe\ ellmg'>re;,urt type ;,etllng, aVaIl ::,KI Bo\ nl'l!lghland" (O/Y<lble IIeek 01 Api'll 2bth LOlldo "leep" B \ wuntr)Md\ '31 d $-l20 Call dUel B8l> B(11~S 30 P III 8866144

FA1\IIL\ ~"I thdlet IH'dlORLANDO, Apopk.l) Errol Bo\ Ile 1\I0ulltdm 1 bed

E;,tates, pnvate country room;, 2 bath, full kitchen,club, 2'1 hole goll cour;,e flreplolce \Ieekend or ;,kl BABY!>\Ilmmlllg, tellm::., eHel Ileek rentals 8853-167 FURNITURE.lent dllllllg Luxur) 2 bl'droom, 2 bath, lully eqUip TORCH Lake condo. avaIl EQUIPMENTped kItchen, laundry con dble :,kl wee"end or weck A I J{E~ALI-_ PJ{!( E~do on nmth fairway Week, lully eqUIpped, J bed \\oI1nut CoInop(' CI.hmonth, ;,eason 40 mIle" to room;" 'J bath;, 885-8-199 1'01'1a BedDIsney Leave me;,;,dge ItAHBOH ,:,prmgs area Ileal' :\UI ::.er) Lamp"313 29-19381 Bo) ne Hlghldnd;" condo '\ 'lilque Wood Hlghl hall

TOWNHOUSE - 2 bedroom lor renl 3 bedrooms plu!> Wilker Changmg Table::.2 bath, sleeps 6, pool and hnl"hed basemen I With Foldlllg fhgh ChdllJlICUZlI ~outh I"ort hdlh and bed;" $IlU pel \\ ,llkel s!\lcvel;,. 10 mmule;, lu night, plu;, cleamng ex- Inldnl ,:,eahSan'lbel and beach, \\dlk to pense 88b-7700or 885 2620 - Teelel 13dhl"shoppmg Nel\ Avalldbll' BOYNE Countn fdmlh Johnl1)' Jump UpJanudry I\PI II Ma) 7n chalel - .. bedr Doms fire SII) ngomatlc62-15 plale. 2 baths, 30 mmutes \nllque Ba:'Slnel

ORLANDO - Dl~ne) dred fl om alt "kung B) IIeek or Step Slool;,d C I I I \Ieekend 882 'i7-1<jor 391- Poll' Chellr;,con onumum omp I' e ) \\ dlkIRlde Horse

furmshed. 2 bedroom. 2 61BObaths, tenms hedted pool nl,\HLEVOIX __ lIell lu\. EleelJ IC Feeding DI;,he"

Cnb!>Weekly monthly or ;,ea U!\ condo lIo;,e to ;,kllng Boo!>ter Sedlssonal After 5 pm. 884 2 beth uom" 111 10\\n on Oak 01 e~;,er119l Id"e d\ oI11..Jbleb\ IIeek 01 ;\11),11~ '1'0\ A I"J Il

CAPTIVA ISLAND \1el'''eml 1))2 I-Ibl Illh17 J>: \\ dl renFLORIDA BIl2. 76l!

Capt\\ a HideaWay t'olldoLuxurv 2 bedroom 21mth ASPEN _ TI\O hedroom (IIlPPENDALE BedroomHe<lted pool, cable TV, pn condo do;,e to downtol'. n ;,et \6 pieces) mahogany

cuslom gldS;, tops allvale dock, ;,auna tenms fuJl.veqUIpped 5-108-19bd If b ptl'CC', $1 I~)(JChippendale

an go near y An un- FI{ENCH Hlvlera - Pelll -I po;,ter bedroom ;,et (-lcArowldebdlPIJace III the sun hou;,e apa I tmenl on 1\ledl plcles I, $750, Extra bed-

Val a e anuary 19 to terranean summer month" room piece;, Ibeds vam-March 1st $650~el week, .1VoIildhlp 2 l\l'ek mlOl tie" mghl>ldnd dressers,$2,-100per mont mum ('.ll! Hill.87l!! lor In mIrror;,. and chests I, 882-

B81-0696 formal 1011 5bl2MARCO Island, South Seas 1-'-IL-I-O-\-I-r-l'-\-J)--P-J-'I-1 SNAPPER 20"

condo on the beach bed -" 1m 02 ... th be t' f II \ Dune' Villd 2 bedroonhroom. va. dU I U Y HHI,".'1' SNOWTHROWER

f u I'm sh cd .1II eI mem I te;" ---:;...,-;-;";-'0--';-'';-;;-;----,_---;--;--_ Iweekly monthly Call IlA\~'\1l ~"Idnd -: Kona BI,ll1d ne\\, ne\er been used.after 5 p m b5222l7 Beach club, accommo- \1011III ('onle~1 $350 firm

::-:--:-::::-==,=-:-::-':'::-:---,---;::-- dates h people, Apnl 1-1, 1$4')0 hsl pnce) 821311B')LAUDERDALE by Ihe Seol Apnl 28th 1111621')J .lftel 5 p m

Oceanfront condo pool --'------------ I:,Ieeps 4 A..allable Feb- HAWAIIAN HOLIDAYS ....KI EqUlpmenl Kastle 175

\' H d t hegll1ner tu Inlermedlateruary l'i 22, 884 00'i5 our a\1dll con 0 \ aca IOnd Dolomite bool.:>61! lady s

DELUXE Flonda \\aterfronl ~~:~~~~st All' tOil 0 lell 'j \ rolla 150 billdlllg;, WIthhome. lOmplelely furm"h """"""',--::-:-::-,--=--:---::---:- I)lake!> Tomll poles, Scotted Palm Bedth dreel $')')0 I i\1\ RTLE Bedch South oInd ~mllh goggles andper \Ieek 2 \Ieek mml I Carolina - nell lu\.unou;, \IoI::.tl'1 ;,kl 10lk polekagemum, adult;, preferred 'io 2 or I bedroom ocean front ~2()(J881-IlO-lOpels Use of 18 motor boal <.undo::. Full \ Iull1l;,hed305626-4620 pool, Jacu'zzl, glass

=:-:-:::::-:-:-:---=~-:-:-- elevators, golf paclo.ageDELTONA - Excellent 2 <Ivallable Call now for

bedroom, 2 bath, condo chOice I\eeks 360 IU8 ('011\ el!oI-~led/Wheelsnear Disney World 1l1l2 :-c--:-:--:-:----:-: -..,.,---_12,l2 \( \1'1 Lt 0 \ Illd 1:\.jl('IIUllt I ,:,Ied GUol!d Seats

=-:-::-:::~""""'---':---:--- III( Pilldt \ .IIHI IU\.llI I III \\ood ~IedsDAYTONA Beach condo -l \ ill .. 11\ Ill!! lul/\ "f.l!led 1\Jlh :\<len';, Hocke) Skates Size 9

bedroom ocean fronl nH ,II ,,('I I lU' l h"ullllli I III 80)!> or Girl s Ice Skates,,"vaJlable nO\1 Jllonlhh 111101IlldtlOIl t.dl HHI>II'IIH II Double Runner Ice Skatesonl) 8840-159 . 1111.111"11( I l ,III HHh,XXI

HARBOR Spnng;, \\linterrental - ,l bedroom condonear ski re"orl 752 2926

BOYNE/Peloske\ Localeddlrec Ily on 'Ihe pillecovered shores of LittleTraverse Ba} thl!> 1 bedroom, 2 bath, post andbedm vacatIOn home features fireplace, dl::.h1\asher .lnd microwaveSleeps 9 BIl'i932')

II01\IESTEAD condomm1Umfor rent Glen Arbor.'1lchlgan On river lookmgout on Sleepmg Bl'd! 13,1)~Iecp,> 8 10 f{eol"on<lhl<.rate~ WalJacp l;lendemng'1618180 or ail4 1724

HAH130R Spnngs chd)elLow('r unit wllh kllchendnd pn:catc entrdnte -;,leeps -I Ju"t mlJlule." fromBo) ne Highland" .lnd '\Jub<;INob $')() per nIght BIl62-11'3

"I-.I \Ilthlgdn" \0I1h('ln( nunlf\

Pe'o"k('\ 1l.lrbor "prlllg"L.l"<""ldt ( lull ( 0lldol11111lUm"

dnd '>pnng r "II-.e ( luh (0111pl<.>tell lurll1,hNl luxlIf\ 2bedloom \1Ilh Iqfl ,Illd 1/)\111

hO\1',<.>n'nta]., on HoundLdkl' ,llld ,<"prtngL.l"e

LOLdl<.>d\1Ithln mmlll<,,, of thp<11(<1" flm'''1 "kl fl'"orh(1'0"" (ounll \ from \0\11'cloO! on groom('d 11',111<.1{('lax III nUl mooOl pool 'pafacllll1 H('nl h\ 1111'\IC<.'"l'nd I\('<,'k month or "<'>!I"onI

L \1<. E'>IDf>_ CLl B-Ill I.: L \I<.E ~T

Prlo"kl'\ 'lJ('hll.~,1Il -1'171111616 \-17 1;72 Ihlhl 1-17,!>'XI

SKI Boyne Sylvan, etc 4 bedroom 2 hath, electnc kllchen, garage, sleeps II, nopelS $75 per mght $.'l.'iO perv.eek #1166, Mlch-aywe/Gaylord, I 517-939-8914

SCHUSS Mountam - Weekor weekend -l bedrooms,2' 2 haths, fully eqUIpped~k 1 to :-Iopes DaysS81 -l350

66. 1I00MS FOR RENT

6H. OFFICE FOil IlENT

&l. SHAIlE LIVINGQUAItTEIIS

PRESTONBUILDING5 SUITES

AVAILABLE,NEW FIRSTOFFERING

882-9300

61!. STOIlAGE SI'ACEFOIlIlENT

5J. lUlL DING Oil $TonFOIlIlENT

IDEAL for profeSSIOnalgentleman over 40 - Nocookmg, 4 dom;, flom bus,re;,taurant, laundry Safe,clean, carpeted, room \\ Ithpflv.lte phone hnl', coffeea m $50 a week Diu"depo;,lt 885 3019

NICE home - ;,leeplllg I 0001or room dnd board loreldell:, or WOIkmg pel'>on~t ClalrShore;,alea 773519l

I 9-1 expressway and WhIttier Cllmc or offIce. flrslfloor WIth off-street parkIng ApprOXimately 2,000square feet $600 permonlh, mcludmg hedt WillconSider optIOn to buy

HART REALTY885-1220

THE MARK I BLDG.23230 MACK AVE

ST CLAIR SHORES()ftlce "ultes available

Upper levelVanable Sl7es

Modern Affordable771-669t 8Rb308bKELLY/IOl\hlc Ne\\l., con

;,trucled profe";,lOna(sulteOfferlllg seLretanal conference room /hbrarvXerox, 1Ins\\ ell1lg sen Ice7736201

FURNISHED office III nc\\I) renovated buIldlllg All'condItioned Off 511eetparklllg Localed m GI n""l'Pomle Park on ChdrlevolxBIll LeWIS RN 6'300

MINI STORAGEIII Gro""e POlllte Indoor

street level fenced, alarmed douhle lock!'!! 24 hournccell" 12x7 vault~, only$)()/month Larger vaulha\al)able BIl4'l81O

HAVE completrly furmshedhome mcJudmg ca t, needyoung lady to share expenses, I 94/7 MIle Jenmfer, 885.4996 or AA2-215~

66 IIOOMS FOil IIENT

6F. FOil IIENT FURNISHED

WE are now takmg apphca-tlOns on the followlllg rentals

881 6100LUXURY Condo overlookIng

Chnton RIver. mcludes 40'boatwell 2 bedrooms, 2baths, \\hlrlpool tUb. appllances, tJreplace burgldlsy"tem garage

RIVerVle\\ Club31695 South [{I\ er Rd

near Jefferson884-078R

WATERFRONT - lOn La"eSt Clair, 15' 2 and Jefferson l StudIO apartmentne\\ly renovated $~75and$-120m~udmg all utlllliesReferences reqUired 88b7499

ONE bedroom apartment23301Kelly Road, East DetrOlt Kilchenette carpelIIlg $360. last month s rentplus SecUflty reqUired ail;;1794

POINTE GARDENSHarper Woods, acros;,from Queen of PeaceChurch QUIET, well-mallltamed complex nearshoppmg 1and 2 bedl oom

THE BLAKE COMPANY19806 MACK

GROSSE POINTE WOODS

fie RENTALS/HOMES APTS HCDETIIOIT

EASTLANDVILLAGE

APARTMENTSA TRADITION OF

FINE LrVING

TWO bedroom, lower flatWIth new carpellng. neutral decor, apphances andfree heat mcluded Garage, fllllshed basementand lawn care also Includ-ed $350, one year lea;,eAVaIlable Immediately at312 Alter. near WmdmlllPomte Dflve Call John at886-2496 between 6 9 P m

STUDIO apartment;, -GratIOt/East Outer Dnve372-3363

BUCKINGHAM - SpacIOus3 bedroom upper, hvmg PLUSH, pl'lvate office;, -room, formal dmmg room, furmshed, $150-$175 W.1IIcentral all', separate en to wdlllarpetmg, utJlllle'>lJances. basement and I lnduded Ideal fOl atutlhtle:- Couple prefel red tOlne) ,aclOuntant manuNo pets $325/monthly factureI';' rep 1\10nthhCHAMPION & BAI<:R lease dccept.1ble Imme

884 5700 dlate occupancy 881 b827=:-:-:-:-......,..---,-------- evenlllg;, 885 68b9TWO bedroom apartment, FOR LEASE

3525 Nottlllgham, carpet- ,mg, apphances, $315 heat HAHPER at Brys 1,600 leet

. mcluded 822.16-1S dlstmchve offIces 10 car

Iparlo.mg

LARGE deluxe 1 bedroom VER \'IEI{ al I 9-1 I 5110feetapartment - Harper/ lOPdl for <ltl\'- ('(>rporate\\Jhlltler dred Include;, I offices Just -redecoratedhedt Idedl for mIddle ag- l<'ISHEH at Maumee 1.2per.ed and elderly I 682-6528 son sUite Pnvate Jav

CHALMERS/Outer Dflve ParkmgNICe 5 room lower flat, FOR ~ALEspacIOUS, $195 monthly, KELLY -712 l\hle Ilclrpelsecuflty 881-353& Wood" -l.400 feet olflces,

ONE bedroom apartments, mostly leased Land ConGratlOtlEa~t Outer Dnve trdct terms372 7544 ' Vlrgmld S Jeffne!>

Realtor 8820899JEFFERSON/9 Mile Newer

360 square foot pnme pro-fesslOndl SUIte;" $375 amonth IIlcludes utllJtle!>771 3440

II \RPEH II 'lll<.' Dl'lu\.e 01!lel' "ulle I\tlh Il'Cept\<l1l..Ill'.! I 'i00~qudle feet ph",E,,,,\ dlle;,;, I 9-1 \ell hedldll lOlldlllonlng JU"1 delOloiled (;, edt 41l'd KBl>bll'l'i IIIBill>l'b I

INDIVIDUAL office - onMack, between 7/8 Mile,95 P m 881 8362 after 5pm 8820449

NEAR 1-94opposIte EastldndShoppmg Center 776-5440

EXECUTIVE olhce;, -Woods. lobbv area, an;,wenng service avatlable882-46&2

I PHYSICIAN OJ dentl:,t NewI bUlld1l1g 1 600square feetI pflme V.oods locdhon Full

ba"ement ,1IIU parklllg882.-IfJ62

ATTENTION profeSSIOnals- offices from $175 amonth lIlcludmg ullhlle;"secretanal :-efl'lce, parklIIg kitchen prt velege;,ne\\ carpelll1g Anddr).8865b70

9xl0 OFFICE Phone, secreI<!nal, ~OP) 1I1g, ;,CI \ ILe;,aVailable PnltJ~ Sf ClairShores l'Ocdtlon, $125 .1month Mr;, Hobelt!> 77l-92bO

CADIEUX/I 9-1e\pre:';,11 d)FII st 11001'.formerl) AII-:,tate ITlsurance CompanyApproxllnatel:, -1,000square feet WIth adjacent,60 cal parkmg lot 1mmediately avaIlableHART REALTY

885-1220

ST CLAIR TERRACE Jef-ferson and 10 MIle, nearthe lake I bedroom, ne\\ly decorated and carpeted

SHORES GARDEN Excellent locahon on MackAvenue between 8 and 9Mile Roads QUIET ANDSECURE COMPLEX 2bedroom, heat mcluded

A qUIet communlly ofspacIOus one and two bedroom apartment home;,convemently located nearEastland Shoppmg CenterMonthly rental from $490$665 Leasmg center lo-cated off Vermer at

20600 BALFOUR

886.1783

60. IIENTALS/HOMES, AI'TS., Efl::NEAR AREA

LUXURY 3 bedroom condoon the lake, bOat well, mground garage 296 7602

LAKEBREEZE apartmentShook/Jefferson, large 1bedroom - I,l,alk m closetapphdnces heal water 111cluded, nel\ I) pamtedcarpeted $345 per month794 7424, 469 0658

GROSSE POInte area <. bed-room apartment, prefernon smoker $385 1182-l088

MALE professIOn a I non.smoker Excellent condi-tIOn St Clair Shore" 776 I5926

ATTENTIONEXECUTIVES

One and 2 bedroom apartments Completely fur.mshed $29 50 per da)' andup One month m1l11mUm

46<J1075 771 4916See VILLAGE CONDO

under 1I6 1182.241S

6C RENTAlSiHOMfS. AI'TS HeOETIIOIT

SARATOGA - 7 Mlle/Schoenherr 2 bedroomlower WIth apphances.basement Secul'lty depo;,It, no pets 882.4662

AlfRACTIVE 1 bedroomdpdrtment, 1-901/Whltherared, ImmedIate occupancy, stove, refngeralor.Cal petmg, large closets,laundrv faclhlte!>, heat m-cluded' In $300 monthlyIenl Call for appomtmentdftCl 6 pm 2b8-6436or 7119030

BEDFORD 011 ChandlerPark Dnve 3 bedroomColoma!, fll eplale. partlollh hlll!>hedbd;,emenl, 2 cargal .1ge, $475 NegotlableOthel s m good area ofDetrOIt LaVon;, Propelt)and Renlal Molnagement,7732035

TWO bedroom duplex - KelIy/Morang Bl'lck, veryclean, carpeted, basement,galdge, near shOPPing.Iran:-,.lOrtatlon, non ;,mokmg ddull preferrE'd Nopets $3S0 771 2474

GHO~SE Pomte/Detroltborder, 3 bedroom upper,stove, refl'lgerator, sewr-Ity deposIt $275per month774 5398

ONE bedroom, overlookmgtree hned DevonshireFreshly painted. newcarpetlllg, levolor blmds,$350 mcludes heat, 88blQ24, 8843810

OUTER Dnve/Mack area 2bedroom upper, newly decorated, carpets, hard woodfloors, $290 plus securityCouple preferred References No pets 882-9820

GROSSE Pomte - St Johnarea 17720Chester, 2 bed-room duplex Apphancesdnd carpetmg No pets$375 9bl 6131, evenmgs2960428

EFFICIENT apartment forrent 2 bedrooms 881-1540

COURVILLE/East Warren,3 bedroom Colomal, dmmgroom, 2 car gal age, }' 2

baths, apphdnces, $450plus secunty, references882 7761 evenmgs

ONE bedroom apartmentcarpet and apphances All'condlllOlll ng, ne\1 Iy remodeled Heat mcludedOuter Dme/East Warren$260 per month 882-8250,If tel' 6 pm

BEACONSFIELD - 3 bed-room bnck home Immedi-ate occupancy $350 permonth, utlhlles not mclud-ed 884.4818

ONE bedroom apartment,utiltlles furmshed $280plus secul'lt)' 521-1980

GRAYTON/Warren base-ment apartment, 4 roomsand balh $200 monthl),heated Secunty depOSItOne lady preferred Nopets 882-1044

TWO bedroom duplex, nearSt John HospItal, $350 permonth plus depOSIt 3727628, 885-6896

BISHOP near Warren - upper and lower avaIlable, 2bedrooms each, natural I

fIreplace, redecorated,'$325 each EastSide Man-agement 884.3890

THREE MIle Dflve nearMack - Large 3 bedroomhouse, den, 2 car garage,natural fIreplace, $375EastSIde Management8843890

KENSINGTON near Warren- redecorated 3 bedroomhouse, natural fireplace, 2car garage, $395 EastsideManagement, 884-3890

YORKSHIRE - Mack, largeupper flat, 2 bedroom Withbalcony hvmg room WIthfireplace, leaded glass.wmdo\\s, dmmg room, ne\\ i\\all 'to wall carpet, apph Iances lIlcIuded, excellent Icondition $410 mcludes Ihea I 88.') 7254 I

WHITTIER/Hayes areaTl'.o bedroom bungalow, Icountry kItchen, fIreplace, j2car garage Stove, relng.eratoI', \\atel mcluded I

$350 References SCcunty ,depoSit 1-1299791 after 6pm Immedlale possesslon

ALTER-CHARLEVOlXGrosse Pomte Side, allractlVe

one hedroom apartment'>Heat mcluded From $220'3'3178.12,R2470'39

l'\\ () hl'riroom "Ingle lwm('",Inri t Id'" S2'iO S2f" ~2il,)S11i q')O S17) $1'1, S-I2')"-Ih') S,l, t hiloren dnd p<'1'>\1 e J( 0111(' ;.B 91l 1

THRr:f>~ bedroom "Inglehome!>and nat~ mce area"$275 $29'i, $325 $'3'>0 $365,$42S, $47S $')2.'i $'i9,) children and pets I,l,clcome 543'J71'i

SPECIAL olCer - '! month'sfree rent on a mce 5 room10\\er Heflll1;,hed ha I'd-\1()()(! floor" appliance'>garage De..on;,hlrelHa\erhlll/Chal!>\\orth $26.'i,$'3'i5 14102')'i

NOTIINGHAM - ne\\ly redecorated 6 room lowernear Mack, natural fire-place and wood floors, apphances mcluded $250permonth plus secuflty 88279711,882 4213

EASTLAND17 /GratlOt area- luxunou", qUIet terracegarden one bedroomapartment $290 'i21.222.'>or 979.3965

RIVERTERRACE

611 IIENTALSIHO"'ES AI'TS. HeHARI'EII WOODS

TIIHEE bedloom ;'Inglehume" alld 11,lh Illce ..IIea::'::>275$2!l5 $321 $ l,O $17;$Ih'i $-12j $-17i ::.'i2, $,'1;dllldH'1l dnd Jll'l~ \1l'!c01lll''i-1I 'Ii;;

rwo bedloom "lIlgJe hOIlll'''and IJoII, $l,O ~2b; So211'i$11:i $llO $l71 ::>39;;~-I2,::>-1l>;::>;2')ehIldll'n oIlldJl{'["I\('llome 5-11'1,,1')

HARPER Woods - 2 bed.room home, basement,garage, stove, refngerator, washer, dryer, cur-tams, $425 plus ;,ecurltyno pets, refel ente:- 751-3957

TWO bedroom house III

Harpel' Wood;, $3% plu:,;,ecul Ity depo;'lt Between

iiIiiiIIIm'9m 321 8799, 1

J

THREE bedroom slllgiehome, newly decolatednear,st John HOSPltdlAvalldble Februal y 1st$400 a month 886 6102

NOTTINGHAM/Mack -bnck home. 3 bedrooms, Ibath, IIvmg room WIth fIre-place, completely redecorated $300per month andsecul'lty 757 3120,286 3949,52b-2759

HOLD everythmg' Beautifullower flat on Bedford $395,(Illcludes heat, apphances) Prefer non smokers Must see' Brian, 2b8-5983

HOUSE on Bedford - Char-mmg 3 bedroom, gal age,fll eplace, major appli-ances, carpetmg, drapes,newly decorated $425 permonth, security depOSit886-4163

FIRST lime rental - 4620Haverhill $500 per monthplus utJhtJes 112 monthsecurity depo!>lt 3 bedrooms, 11L baths, 2 cargarage, basement, naturalfIreplace, refngera tor,stove and garbage disposalmeluded Gas forced all'No pets 1 year lease preferred 881-0925

HAVERHILL/Mack Ideal,adults, 4 bedroom, 3 batlli"meludes heat untIl March1st $525 881-0389

ATIRACTIVE, bnght, 3 bedroom ranch, Grosse Pomteof DetrOIt, carmg tenants$550plus uhhtJes, move mcondltton 886 6611

PRESTIGIOUS LUXURYAPARTMENTS

Jefferson at Grosse POlllteCity LImIt - 4 story eleva-tor bUlldmg WIth largerooms, one or two bed.rooms References andsecunty reqUiredWalker-AlkIre Realtv

8B6-{)920 •

OUTER DrIve/Warren 5rooms upper flat, vacant$220 per month SecuntydepoSIt, EastsIde Real Es-tate, 882-2402.

TWO bedroom lower - hv-mg, dmmg and kItchenWIth apphances Basementand garage Clean, recent.Iy pamted Cedargrove atHayes $270 plus secunt:,and utlhtIes 628-7772

UPPER - one bedroom,Cadieux/Mack $300 m-eludes utthtles 332-2.611

NEAR St John HospItal 3bedrooms, family room,$450per month plus depOSItand references 792 1737

MORANGI7 MIle, one bed-room upper, apphances,$220 month 892-6950

ONE and t\NO bedroomaparlment!> Heat furmsh-ed, no pets, close to BonSecours HospItal 872 2719

IF you both are approachmgrettrement age or yourstay at home family sIzehas been reduced, why paymore for heat and housekeep for a 2 floor largerthan you need - 5091HaverhIll IS 2 bedroomwllh all rooms on one floorNear churches, school",buses and shoppmg $3')0

THE BLAKE CO881-6100

A LITTLE LESSTHA:"i 10 MINUTES

TO YOUR APARTMENTON THE RIVER

FROM DOWNTOWN

ChOIce of StudIO I or 2hedroom aparlment~ on aprivate I acre nverfronlcommon" Parquet \\oodfloors and new kItchen, m.c1udmg bUill III mIcrowave Rent from $415 me1udmg heal

7iOOf~AST ,JI<:FFf:R~O:"JR245000

TWO heaullful umts, lowercarpeted 2 bedroom hvmg room dmmg room,large decorator kItchen\1Ilh apphance!> hath \\ Ithshower full basemenl$12,'i Upper, carpeted<;harp one bedroom hvmgroom. small den, kitchenand bath, With enclo'>edporch $270 2 car garageWIth second floor hohbyroom fo'enced yard Excel-lent Hamtramck neIghborhood 585 7570

NOTTINGHAM - I bed-room upper, stove, refrlg-IeratoI', heat, $28S seLUnlyand references 884.35S9 i

, RENTALS/HOMES APTS HeGROSSE POINTE

FORCLASSIFIED ADS

CALL 882-6900

iA. IlENTALS/HOMES, AI'TS., HC:ST. CLAIR SHOIlES

JEFFERSON/II MIle -Large I hedroom apartmenl. carpf'tlllg. dish-Ila"her central all'\Id ...hl'r and drver m kItthen \'0 pet" '$420 7767260 on v" or 11847276 e\ enl11g'i

1l i\T1LE/.Jl'fferson 2 bed.room" I' 2 hath all apphdIlCC" <.arpeted through-out carport Immaculate,\ le\1 of lake BIll 4810

ONJ>:hedroom apartment -"tove, refngerator, all'condItioned, carpeting,heat ne\\ Iy decorated 6.14.ROO6

14MILE/Jefferson - on thelake Large 3 bedrooms,den, double garage, fire-plale, Flonda room andboat dock $700/month plussecunt:, depOSit and references Call after 4 p m 293--I6.l1 Occupancy FebruaryI

LAKESHORE Village, 2 bed-room, second floor. apartment, pnvate pool andclub house $525 monthly81H-0501

DESIGNER decorated onebedroom condo, furmshed,ecllnl:, depOSit, references $650per monlh 44588-100:\ LAKE ST CLAIR

Condo Canlagc House 2bedrooms 2 bath;" greatloom fireplace all', gar-age lake Vlev. and access\ ac,1Il1:-oon ;bkmg $750amonth Secunly Owneralter fJ pm \\eekda:,;"d l1\ t lnH' \1eekend" 2q4'l(J')6

IIIHr.l: h<,'r1rool11 "Ingl<.IHlInl'" dnd 11.11'>111((' ,In'd""'1" ':>1'1, ::.il, SJ,O $ lh,)"'';1, ::,-1,. ::>,2, ,:>-,'1, thildrtlldlldpl'I'>II('ltome ')-Il'I,l)

1\\ () twdronm "lngI<' home"d1](1lid h ~2,)0 $2h, $28l

"01) "hlJ SIll Sl<j', $421'>If>, ",21 t hdrll ('11 ,mo J!('I'>1\ ( It 0111(' ;-1) 'I, l,

__ ..-=-.........t: ~ __ .._J ..........~ __ J._ .. ~.....L ~ ~ ... _ ~...:I. • .._

Page Eight-C GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

FORCLASSIFIED ADS

CALL 882.6900

1111 CARS fOR SALEfORO

11C. CAliS FOil SALE -G.M.

1974 MUSTANG - 4 speed,good reliable transporta-tIOn, good gas mIleage$650/best 885.1316

1978 FAIRMONT wagon -excellent condition, AM/FM, rear defogger $1,650881-5318

MARK IV 1974- one owner,53,000 nules, runi> excel-lent, loaded $2,500 921-4093

1978LTD II, excellent condi-tIOn, 59,000 miles $2,095881-2698

MONTE Carlo 1978 - load-ed, 84 000miles $2,000 885~562

CADILLAC Eldorado -1979,excellent conditIOn, Im-maculate 771 0455

1981 OLDS Delta 88, 4 door,air V-6, autom<ltlc, 71,000mllel> $2,5lJO823 2924after5pm

1985 OLDS BroughamI{oyale, loaded ExceJlemconditIOn 886-2706

1981 BUICK Century - 4door, 10""' mileage, welleqUIpped, ol'lglllal ownerVery good condition$4,600 882-8023

GREAT buy, 1982 PonllacT-l000, excellent gds mIle-age 4-speed 881-8623

1982 BUICK Skylark SportCoupe - excellent condi-tIOn, sunroof, AM/FM cas-sette, new brakes, clutch,i>hocks, struts, tIres $5,50001' best offer 885-3761

1985 GRAND AM, 5 speed,loaded $9,300or best offer884-7020

1982GRAND Prix W -load-ed, mint condillon, 37,500miles $6,400 525-7894

1982CAPRI, excellent condJ.hon, all', AM/FM cassette,automatic $3,200 893-5126

1984CUTLASS Clera wagon,power steering/brakes,AM/FM stereo/cassette,CIUlse, lllt, WIrei>, luggagerack 527 5846

1975 MONTE Carlo - newexhdust system, goodllres, AM/FM radIO, goodtransportatIOn 881-4768

BUICK Electra 1985 wagon- 9 pahsenger, loaded,stel eo, GM executive car,10,600 mIles, extendedwarranty, Immaculate$13,500 885-3290

1979 OLDS Cutlass, verygood condItIOn, low mile-age, many extras $2,900294-2313

MUST SELL - MUST SELL1982 Celebnty - 4 door, 4

cylinder, automatic, plushIIlterlOf, all'. AM/FJ\!stereo Will sell for balanceoWing RiCk, 881-4200, 9am-6pm

1984PONTIAC Fiero -load-ed, black, 5,000 miles$9,500 261-4470

1985 PONTIAC 6000 LE -loaded, extended \~arranty, 20,000mlles $9,500 MrToermg, days 974-1762,eyenlllgs 778-4575

1978CHEVY Malibu, 60,000,good condition, no air$1,500 885-4286after 6 p m

1978 PONTIAC GrandLeMans station wagon, V8,loaded $1,100 343-0271

1981 OMEGA - loaded,42,000 mIles 8396822

1983 OLDS Regency Broug-ham, 4 door, fully eqUipped, like new $9,000 886-4232 days, 822-5778 eve-IlIngs

1983 OLDS Clerra - mlllt,loaded, 34,000miles $6,800Days 774-8180, evelllngsand weekends 885-6907

1985OLDSMOBILE Delta 88Brougham LS - 4 door,loaded, 10,500 miles$11,300 1315176

1977MONTE Carlo, automa-tic, power steermg, all',59,500 mIles $1,700 886-7995

FIERO 1984'~ - Silver, 4speed, all', AMIFM stereo,17,000 miles Must sell$5,999 R82-9388

1977 CHEVETTE, engmeruns great New prakesover 100,000 mlles Looksgreat r Come In and see' 1

$4~0 R8~093,1 dfter 5 30pm

1977 CUTLASS Supreme,good conditIOn new tires,nms 773 1)250, work 884-21)39

Il)s'l GRAND Pnx Broug-ham, 47.000, excellent con-ditIOn $7,675 1983 FIre.bIrd, 27,000, like new con.dIllon, $7,950 1lJ78GrandLel\lans, ne\1 tlreslhrake<,/tra nsmlsslOn/ carburator and more, $2,410885 R839,775 01115

1979 CADILLAC - 4 door,full po\lier, low mileage,bUSiness venture forcessale $3,950 882 0542, 774-0747

19S,,;SEDAN deVlIle - G Memployee Excellent condl'llon, loaded Gray 751.3409

1982 CAMARO Berhnetta,fully loaded Maroon NewIIreS, exhaust, 41,000mlles,excellent condition $6,60088S-3f186

1'l77 MONTE Carlo - auto.matlc, power brakes/steermg Very good condllion, 78,000 miles $1,5007768536

11 CAliS FOR SALE -AMe

•1111. CAlIS fOil SALE -FOliO

11A. CAliS FOR SAlE -CHIIVSLER

\0 (II \:\(,E'"\0 (' \:\CELlol

OF ( L \SlolIFIED \U~H'IEH I~\00\ \lO\U \\ ~

\0 fo.X<'El'llO\lol'

1984RENAULT Alhdnce DL,2 door, automatic, loadedPerfect condition $5,2008844822

ALL AUTO ADSOUT OF GROSSE

POINTE AREA MUSTBE PREPAID!!!

GROSSE POINTENEWS

1!184LeBARON, 25,000mIles,rust and pamt protectIOn,power door locks, I ear de-fogger $6,500 772.7-183

198.1DODGE Ane!> v.agon -automatic, all', power,crUIse, stereo $4,200 Ex-cellent condl t 1011 822.5523

1979ASPEN, 37,030 mIles, 2door, () C} Imdcr, mJnuJI,regularly mamtamed, newelutch / batlerv / exhaust,more No rust but muchbody discoloratIOn $1,,150885-2255

1976 DODGE Dart - 69,000miles, slant 6 engme, 4speed manual transmls51On, brdnd new clutch,very good mtenor, i>omerust on body, good trans-portatIOn $&00or best of-fer 589-0107

1984 DODGE Diplomat -$3,200 63,000miles, formerpolice car 881 7612

1983 TURISMO - frontwheel drive, AM/FM,power steering/brakes,36,000 mile!> Asklllg $5,000823-5739

1982 CHRYSLER LeBaronwagon - full power, excel-lent condltlon, 16,000miles,orlgmal owner 881-3942after 5 pm

1978 DODGE Coil Goodmechamcal condition $800or best 884-9366

1874DODGE Omm, 4 door, 4speed, 22,000 miles, all',AM/FM stereo, rear de-frost $3,995 01' bei>t 343-0757 perslstantl)

1984DODGE 600 ES, 4 door,10dded execullvP car$6,800 or best Low miles884 7830 alter 6 p m

1984 HORIZON - 4 door, 4i>peed, crUli>e electriCrear defogger, 31,000miles Excellent condlllOn$4,200 774-6640, 772-7224.after 5

1963CHRYSLER Cordoba -$6,500 Low mileage, load-ed 884-6551, after 6 p m

1981 HORIZON, 2 door,radl(;, power brakes,power steering, 1 7 Excel-lent conditIOn $3,100 orbest offer 777-3756

1985 LeBARON - 4 door,brown, 21,000 miles, load-ed Reahonable 882-6384

1978 VOLARE Sport CoupeArizona car Great shapeAutomatic, all' $1,550 881-7062

1984 CHRYSLER Laser, ex-cellent condItion Mustsell Best offer, 886-5356

1982'~ DODGE 400 - 2 door,all', automatic, stereo,cruise control, good m p gMmt conditIOn, excellentwarranty Best offer Evemngs 01 leave message,885-0122

1982CHRYSLER LeBaron -navy blue, vmyl top, wirewheels, all luxury mterior,4 door, all', AM/FM, reardefrost, low mileage$4,500 885-2904or 965-3282

1976VOLARE statIOn wagon,3 speed. good transporta-t lOn $550 885-5977

DODGE Aries wagon 1983-$5,,100 After 5 pm, 885-

!. AIITlClES WANTED

!to AIITIClES WANTED

lIE. OFFICE EQUII'MENT

10. ANTIQUES FOil SALe

110 ANTIQUES FOR SA'h

l3ISHOP GALLAGHER15TH ANNUAL

ANTIQUE SHOWAND SALE

JANUARy 17, III AND 19FRIDA Y A:'-lDSATURDA Y

10 A 1\1 8 P MSUNDAY, 1 PM 6 P MBISHOP GALLAGHER

HIGH SClWOL1!l360HARPEl{

''1EAH J\IOHOSS/I-94)HAHPER WOODS

Thli> i>how IS i>ponsored bythe B G l"alher's Club dndthli>ye,1I we elre featurmg.I large IUllllture shO\~<llong With glassware,doll!>, toys, ,ut deco,Jell elry, pnmltlves, pottel ~, IIghtmg fixture" etc

Gldi>i> Iepau' dnd refrel>h-ments

DoncltlOll $21'11"0 JC VvYNO

772-225JANNUAL WINTER SALE

THROUGHJANUARY 31STi\1ANCHESTER

Aj\,Tl~uE MALL116 E MAIN

MAN'CHESTER,128-9357

RIGHT hdnd secretanaldesk With chair, 30x&OWithIbx30 typewl'ller leaf, ex-cellent condItIOn $75 orbei>t offer After 5 pm,331 6201

KAYPI{O 2X - CP/M, dUdldisk dnve, DSDD monatOli>Oftwclre,manuals, carry-IIlg case, cables, pflnlcrmelny extrai> $1 200 882-0440,9-5 P m

THREE othce de..,ks for sdle2 wood. I metdl 885-1944

EASTSIDE book seller deSiresSIgned IUnIted edItions, fmeIllustrated children's literIUIe, art, AmeflcanaDetlolt, CivIl Wdr, militarycounly hlstol'les and Wolth-II hlle books for collectIOns IIIALL CI\TEGORIES Cashpaid and Immediatelemoval:\dtlOnal Searcheri> For

Out Of Pnnt Books~udlfled APPI alsdli>

GRUB STREETA BOOKERY17194East Warrpn

near Cadl<:'ll\DetrOIt Mlclugan

882-714JCOLLECTOR would hke to

buy US and foreign slampsdnd U S COllli>,1690906

WANTED to buy old costumednd Rhlllei>tone Jewelry,brass lamps, ceIling flx-lures, IIall scotjces 882-0J'16evenIngi>

BROWr--INGS and Wlllche~tel S IIanled other qualityfll edl m~ cOIli>ldered Highe~1 cash paid 41>5-4J5-1

TOP $$$ paid for color TV's,mlClowave, all' condi-tioners, washers, dryersIlorkmg 01' not 77-1-9380

WANTED fur coat orJacket Must be m excel-lent condition 88,1-7635

BUYING quahly ladlesclothmg - deSigner, onconsignment Will paycash 582-0530

CASH Pdld for your old founta III pens 5,16-1)254

SHOTGUN~ and nfles\\anted Parker, BrowllIng,Smith, Fox WlIlchestera lid others Pl'lvate collec-tor ,1785115

WANTED to buy exoticdlllmal rugs, AlaskanAfflcan and IndIan Items,books frames, fixtures,papel Items, toys. man)othel Items, odds and ends~ee us at the BishopGallagher Antique ShowJanuarv 17-19 For a con-hdentlal appomtment,lall ')75-%'11 ReferencE'sThank you The l\Iaples IAntiques

BUYING OLD JEWELRY, 1978 ZEPHER- - PowerFUR COATS, steering, power brakei>,

ACCESSORIES, automatiC, air, AM/FM!,'HOM \1)20'S TO \950'S, ~!el eo, i>h.yblue. excellent

OLD DOLLS, TOYS. I conditIOn $2 200 88') 7561A:"JTIQUE after 6 p m

:\lISCELLA NEOUS -19-=7':":6..::G=-R.:..:A.!::N-:-A""D=-A..,.----4--:-do-o-r,358-1298 V-8, loaded 1977 Granada

VETERANS - German - 2 door, V-8 clean VII-.Japane~e Amencan war lage Mobil, Cadieux atsouvelllrs, all t)pes de- _K_e;,..r_c-,he..,.\=-a:-:I~:-:-:~_~Ired 83t l447 1980 MUSTANG, 70,000

ml1es, good condition, 4c)lmder, new AMIFM cas.sette $22,900 R863496

1l)80 MUSTANG Ghla, mmtconditIOn, very low mIle-age, automatic Pov.ersteenng/brakes, AM/FMcassette Reasonahle, 885-7694 evell! ngs

1978 COUGAR OIce car$1,700 Days 886 42.12,eveOIngs 822 ')778

1985 T BIHD, turbo coupe,15,000 miles. loaded. ~unroof 88,.8555

1l)78FORD Fairmont. automalIC, 2 door, 78,000miles$750 823 2Q24,after 5 p m

1976 MONARCH - 86,000miles, good condlllon $700886-7953

1973 GRAND Tormo - 2ndowner 81,000 miles $£00822-8638

1985 FORD Crov. n VIctOria&tatlOnwagon - complete-ly loaded. low mlleageBe~! offer 886 0590 eveIlIngs

1976 MARQUIS - 4 door,loaded, $900 776.4097

purcha~ed for cash or appraisedestates also deslred/m home consulatlOns

JOHN KING961-0622

Michigan's Largest Book Slore• Clip and Save thIS Ad •

IBOOKS/USED AND RARE

88 AUCTIONSIESTAHSALES

ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIBLE SHOWJ \NlJ \H\ 24 2') 26

SUPER PLUS TRADE CENTERAND ANTIQUE VILLAGE

16100 10 MILE ROAD!'':AST DETHOIT

IH<:TWEEN GRATIOT - HAYES

!"IU<:!'':ADMISSION !,'REE PAHKING

FOR INFORMATIO;\l ON SPACE CALI. 7767,110

HOUSEHOLDand

ESTATE SALESConduded b) KServlclllg Wdyne,

Oakland dndMacomb Countlel>Kay 247-0361Ann 771-0197

110. ANTIQUES fOR SAlE

lIC. MUSICAl INSTIIUMENTS

,

9. AIITIClfS WANTEO

COUCH, stereo, table,chall'!>, m Isce lIaneoui>,17135 Chandler Pal kDnve Thursday, FridaI'9-4 pm. .

SHIRLEY Temple doll,Shlrle) Temple books, OccupICd Japan, toys, Royal1I0ulton, pl'lnlltlve" dndmore See Kathenlll' AI'110ld - Bishop GallagherAnllque Snow, Moross and1-94,Fnday, Saturday and~unday

OAK chma cabmet, CUriOstyle, excellent cOllllJtlOn$250 882-5419

TINY mahogan) !>ettee -$125, dresser - $35, largebrass bucket - $30 steameltrunk - $35. CIanberr) col01'Mosher glass vase Withgold overlay - 16" hIgh$95, very old, pnmltlve-coffer chest - carved fronl

$350 885 7855 or Fnday,10 a m -12 pm, Saturda)lOa m -1 p m J33Mci\hl-Ian

DUCK DECOYSAnllques, gooi>e and [Ish

Sold, bought, appraisedBishop Gallagher Antique-~how, January 17 lB. 19th7252179

BOOK dealer With over 500books on antIques. dndtheIr pnces, Will be atBIshop Gallagher AntiqueShow on January 17-19

DENLEY'SANTIQUES

USED PIANO SALEBABY GRIVoJDS FHO'1 $!l!J;)U~ed ~telllwa) - Chiclo.ellllg

1\1..1'>011& HcllIllinGrJnd PldnOi>

ABBEY PIANO COIWYAL OAK - ')41 (Jill>

PIANOS WANTEDTOP CASH PAID

GUITAR 6 i>trmg Yam<lhaG lbO,steel i>trmgs, Iecent-I) Ie strung, ILkenew, wllhcase $150 Arter 5 p m 8815184

ACOUSTIC gUltar - oVdtloni>tyle applaui>e, new Withcase, acce,sones BUIgundy fllllSh $220 823 2JI2

CLOSE out - new clanneti>,flutes, trumpets List -$225,below cost - $99 9214614,921.4&46, after 1 p m

KIMBALL Spinet - frUilwood flllli>h, excellent condlhon S750 885 .10')4

BAB Y grand pldno (bl'O\111mahogany) $1,800 8825b22

HAMMOND organPhoemx Auroa II, lIkenell', 5 years old 884-3748

MASON and Hamlin babvgrand plano and bench886.1665

HUNTINGTON' upnghtplano, $125 882-1239

KIMBALL Splllet plano, excellent condItIOn, $800 88510';4 Ilork 977-6850

Cadleu'> al E \\ an enllll24l%

THE COLONIAL SHOP25701 .JEFFJ<':HSON

1\:EAH 10 ;VilLi'':,\nllques furllliure chllla, bu)

and .,ell Highest pl'llC'>paidMonda) Saturday 11 h

772-0430FURNITURE reflmshed re

paired ~tnpped, an) type ofcanlllg !"ree estlmdte!>47489')1

Furlllture, clocks, Deco),toys, dnd prnllltlves 2i112Harper, bet\~een 10 dnd 11,95 Monda) through Fnda)Call first for Saturday haul'S

772-9385WE BUY AND SELL

KENNARY KAGEANTIQUES

Open ~ edne~da~ Thur.,dd\Fnda\ 124 pm

Salurda~ 'l a III to,l p m\\£>.: Rl''l .\ND SELL

FRIENDLYPROFESSIONAL

SERVICE

IIA GARAGE YARDlIASEMENT SALES

tit. AUeTIOMS/ESlATE. -.SAlES

SUSAN HARTZ886.8982

Grosse Pointe City

DO you want to sell vourhousehold thmgs? We buyat reasonable prICes 882-1139

MOVING Sale - Mackl7al ea Lovely sofa, chairs,p<ll1ltmg, trampoline, floorplant. ffili>Cellaneous 88')6599

RUMMAGE dnd AntiqueSale - movers commgsooner than expected, lOllprIcei>, musl i>ell ThiS sai<'onh Anl1que drei>ser, $35large brasi> bucket, $30other very old furllltureand glcll>Sl1Me, golf clubi>,$20, IIasher, $100 doubleoven, $50, twm bed DhUllie lug'> 10 bluei>and beigeand a b,l!>ement lull 01goodlCi>, '>ome anlll!uemll>cellaneoui> Fnday, 10a m 12 p m Saturday, 10a m I p m 3J3 McMIIldfl

MOVING Sale - fUllllture,bikes, Ilorkbench, all' condltlonel, mli>cellaneoui>11011Lakepolllte

ESTATE AUCTIONFflday, January 17th al 7

pm, Saturday, Januar)18th al 11 a m SundayJanudl" l!Jth elt 12 noon

FedtUrIng the Jewelry ofMRS WALTER B FORD IIIProceeds of i>ale to benelLta major public mstltutlOn),Signed Tiffany art glasi>

lamp, Tiffany Sterling, .Inllque guns and pIl>toli>sevres, KaIsrr dmner ser-Vice, Eli Terry and Sonspillar case clock, Chlppendale dmlllg chairs, Helll edon dllllng room SUite,European IVOI'les, rook\Iood, pall' pomt and Quetal art glass, Oflentdliaantique A\lstflan crystali>erVICe,dnllque Ameflcanweather vane, mechalllcalpet cow, much, muchmore DuMouchelle's, 409East Jefferson 963 6255

885-0826

Household Sales

DUMOUCHELLES409 E JEFFERSON

DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48226(313) 963-6255

"-I11\1I_lIlt f1lt 114l (r1n ......l !'Ulllit LI( I

I -Ill, I1II IIlllh 11,,1<1 I "llIrd.,IHIII-( Illllpll 11 ....., 1\ H I j ~( II I ( lilt ....

L KATHERINE ARNOLD, ANTIQUES

APPRAISALSANTIOUE'> PURCHASED

771-1170

HOUSEHOLDandESTATE SALES

TELEPHONE 421 5O'l6 OR 882 229!l

L \UtE -..:E ('11\P\. \ \, ,ilL! S \, 11I I HIS,(II \HLE" P KLl\(, ....\~\lITIl

SA GARAGE YARD8ASEMENT SALES

VOUR SPECIALPOSSESSIONS

ARE MYSPECIAL CONCERN

lIlI. AUCTIONS/ESTATESALES

SOUTH BRYS

We are buyers of elegant oriental rugs, sliver, crys-tal, European and Amencan furlllture, estatejewelry and fme art We handle entire estah, andhome sales We pay the highest pnces, be II onesmall Item or an entire estate Payment IS Im-mediate or sold on consignment and IS highlyconfldentlal

WHEN YOU WISH TO SELLTHINK OF DUMOUCHELLE

FINALMARKDOWNS

50% OFFAll wlIlter children i>

clollllng Infant, loddler ,1-14 girls andbovi>'J'huri>dd), FrIday

~dlUl dal Onl\'9Joam'')pin

YOU:,\G CLDTHES110 KerchevalGloi>se Pomte

tiartz[il

CHAPMAN, WILLIAMS ANDKLINGENSMITH ASSOCIATES

\Ufo, PLEAlolEIl TO ,\:\ \OU\CE oun SEH\'I( E~

SALES - ESTATE & HOUSEAPPRAISALS - ESTATE, INSURANCE,

PRIVATEPRICING SERVICE - An Option For The

Individual WIshing To Conduct TheirOwn Sale, Be It Garage Or House SaleEtc;

For A Modest Fee, We Will AdVise YouConcerning Proper MerchandISing Tech-n1ques, Secunty ProviSions, AdvertiSingand Pncmg.

BARGAINBASEMENT

SALESpring and Summer

Clolhlng at cost pflcei>or below Infanls Tod-dlers and 4-14girls andboys Bal gams, Bargams, Ba rgams rThuri>dclV.Fl'lda",

Satul dd) Only-930 a m - 5 P m

YOU:"1GCLOTHES110 KerchevalGroi>i>ePomte

MOVING SALEFurmture, lamPi>,end lablei>.

pIctures, mlsceJla neousglaSi>....dl e, tooh. toys, i>kli>porlable l>aun,1 TV i>,bllo.es, dnd a IIhole lotmore Fllday, Sdturday10a m ,I p m J4-l5 Ha\'er.hLiI All mu"t go'

MOVING Estate Sale Fnday.Sunday, 10am -4 p m1857Allard, Grosse POinte\\;oods Furlllture, appllancei> chair lift, miscellan-eous

IRAINBOW ESTATE SALES I

!lOUSE ~ A;\lTIQlJE SALEJA1\:UAHY 24TH A"ID 25TH(See next I\eek's Issue for

details I

THE RESALE SHOP14901E 7 Mile

Art Glai>s, dntlquei> & colleeIlhles Fme furllliure ~,mall apphance!>Anllque Lamps Hewlred

LOW LO\\ PH ICES\\ E BlJY ENTIRE

HOUSEHOLDSCall FlIst

J72.25lJO

8 MISCEllAtnOUS ARTIClESfOR SAlE

THE SALT WORKS20 POUND BAGS

$2 ')0 EACII81\2 U'¥l 8llIl '171'4

SNOW thrower - 5 h p ,20",smgle stage, self propelled,$200 776-8536

TORO Snowblower - $110,Toro 16" - $90, after 5p m weekday~ 88,'; 4706

EARLY 1900 dmlng roomset Table, buffet, chma,chairs 822-9438

COLLECTIBLE 40's metaltrucks and toys 882-7631

WASHER -- dryel Kenmore $250 82,1,1251after 6pm

ROLL top desk - ,I', $600 01best offer Da)i>, 824 6300

GE electnc rdnge - 40double oven, self-elealllng.almond. excellent condl-lLon, " yeaI'I> old Asklllg$450 884 1655evemng!>

GE electriC range - 30'Ilhlte good conditIOn, $50BIl41655 evelllngi>

MOUSE collectIOn for i>ale-Bai>lle 'Idlthev.s andotherl>. $200 Olle PIl'lUl eb) Kenlllt z BIll 2%2

ELECTHIC range - Ropel30 \1Illte II Ith bldek glcli>i>0\ en dool Vallable tempel ,IIUie 01011t'1 7 monlh,old S2lJO881.>llt3I

SOF<\ - 92 lon~ r('centhdCdlled 'luted gll.'C11'goldi> ,lIld ('a Ithtonei>\eerl> good home Ex<-ellent condlllOn $200 382096,1after 1 p m

POSSUM fur coal - likenell. stroller length, Sitesmdll Call 4lt,)1881after 6pm

lJ'IIQUE dlnlllg i>et -blue/gre) table With mottie gold gld~i>top, 8 m<llchmg II loughl 11'011 ch,lIrs -uphoblered !>edts, !II0 i>ervmg tables Must be seenGre) sleeper couch, $100Orange chair. $10 Gold reelmer. $50 Chartreusechair. $50 8864270

ROSSIGNOL Sprmt skiS -150's Soloman 127 bmdlIlgs Nordica boots Site 7poles $100 or best offer81l6.1758

MAHOGANY dlllmg roomset, 7 piece ThomasvilleNewly upholstered chalri>Excellent condllLon $1 2lJOor best offer 882-5673

HOLLYWOOD sauna bath, :lGR78-15 tires, 2 blcyclei>884-2431

ETHAN Allan - pme cannonballlwm bed and matlrei>S8229438

KENMORE eleclnc dl vel'$50 822-5953after 5 p.m

ADMIRAL refngeratorwhile, 2 door, 17cubIC feet,excellent conditIOn $35077J-8038

IMPORTED italian porce-lam chandelier, blue andIlhlte 6 bulb Askmg $29')8M 0165

ELEGANT Luna mmk i>tolelike new 77,1-9786

PERFECT condition TorosnOI\blower $200 886 6353

WASHER Sears Kenmoreavocado green $75. mustI>ell 881-5773

HAND puppets Stelff unusedorlglllals reasonable 8842.~00evenlllgi>

MOVING sale - sofa andchair, brand new SlrIped$600 777-8773,9-4

SIX piece hVlng room sofa,loveseat, coffee-corner,end tables' mml conditIOnLess than 2 yedrs old $900885-0324

CAMERA - Mmolla X-7oo35mm With many zoom,IllO telephoto leni>es/lIl-cluded $385 or best otler773-8097before 2 pm, 892-5672 after 4 p m

TV, color, RCA, 25" console,excellenl 1.0nditlon Tom,882-5978

FREEZER - Sedrs, 17cubiCfeet, cI'est, I ke new $150886-2718

24" ~EARS snow throwernew 7 h P engme, 2 stage,self propelled, 4 speedsplus reverse $.175/0ffer771 fl917

BEDROOM set - t\li Ill.cherry dresser With m1r-1'01', mattress and sprmg IfdeSired $225 885-6124,after 4 pm

SPACE heater, $25, endtable, $20, 2 SUitcases, $10885.4679

THREE office desks for sale2 woods, 1 metal 885 1944

WHIRLPOOL refngerator,automatic Ice maker, $2505000 BTU wmdow all' condltlOner, $250 Brand new884.6551, after 6 pm

FIREWOOD - solid hard .-:==================::!wood . spht/seasoned one Iyear ImmE'dlate deliverymcluded $55 dumped, $')8stacked 839-2001

TEL-12 MALLANTIQUE SHOW

AND SALETELEGRAPH AT 12 MILEThursday, January 16th thru

Sunday, January 26thMall hours Free adml~-slon Free parklllg

<Doll repair. lamp repair,books for sale)

WANT to buy old rhinestone)eYr'elry- clear or coloredAlso buylllg old costumeJewelry, old perfume bottles and dresser sets, beaded bags and clothmg PriYate 772-7434

7 PIECE contemporarycherry dllllllg room setWith buffet and chUla cablnet Ideal for smaller dUlIIlg room $300 or offer 8845226

REFRIGERATOR and double oven electriC range -good condition $250/both7io 0859

GRAND OPENINGJANUARY 13-

FEBRUARY 16LEVEL IV'S

~EW EAST SIDE STOREPRO SERIES COMPUTERSSOFTWARE - SERVICE

GRAND OPE!'IINGSPECIALS

FREE PRINTERDRAWING

2.!.u GREATER MACKST CLAIR SHORES

11AM.7 PM.l\1ONDAY-FRIDAY

II A 1\1.-4 P:\-i SATURDA Y771-1440

SNAPPER 20"SNOWTHROWER

Brand new, n.'ver been used\\on Ir. conte~t $350 firmr S450 list pnce) 823-3885after 5 p m

V1ArLE dresser, mirror.he~dboard, footboard,double $225 Days, 754-5516

TWO wall umts - medIUm\\ ood fmlsh, excellent con-dition, $65 each Full sIzemattress - $40 Sofa -gold-cream velvet, $225:',84.6215

W -\SHER. dryer, $175,microwave, $75, Roperstove, $150. refrigerator,$100, gas stove, $50, elec-trtC range, $100, dlshwash.er, $50, new child's water-bed, $125, 8' pick up toolboxes, $250, TV, $200,VCR, $250 After 5 pm,881-4729

SPECIAL low auto rates foryoung safe dnvers Call774-2140 for computerquote Bomor InsuranceAgency

TWO new children's SchwlllnbIke earners, $15 each 3school desks, $5 each OneWicker rocking chair, $20One hexagon-shaped table,$10 772-5431

i\;OCHAM;ESNO CANn:U;;;

OF CI.ASSIFIED AUSAFTER 121\00111 '\10NUA YS

NO EXCEPTIONS!INVALID chair-lift Uphols-

tered burnt orange Usedonly 3 weeks 773.1404

WOMEN'S downhill skipackage Rossignol 160's,Tyroha bmdmgs, Nordicaboots SIZe 9, Scott poles, ex-cellent condItion, $175772~, after 5 pm

II MISCEllANEOUS ARTIClESfOR SALE

MINI STORAGEIn Grosse Pomte, mdoor.

streellevel. fenced alarmed double locked 2,1hoUia.:cei>s. 12x7 I aults onl~S50/month larger vaullsavailable 8843810

GLASS top rattan tablebeautiful. one veal' oldReasonable 331:5840

GAS stove 42' good condllIOn 2;, color r \. eXI.Cl

lenl condlllOn $100 7733573 after 3 pm

SEARS Ilasher and dner,5225 ~ood conditIOn Ga!><.l0\ e l\Id)l' Chef $100886-0632

I:':HERITANCE Sale beautlful authentiC 1880empire\'Ictonan sofa 6 Wedgel\Ood blue goose dOI\n 1111ed \'E'1\el lust rccol'eredb) Rabauls for $1.100.ask.IIlg $1 250 Perlect conaltlOn. maple rockerperfect. $75 Hexagongames table pedestal. 3leather s....l\'el chalr~ 101$125 Lifton B Cro\1 ndishes ha nd pa liltedsel'\'es 12.$275 2 pale celen couches from ScottS'huptrlne. lIke nel\....ater Silk velvet 1-6' 1-4$800 both Coftee tdblebrass, plate beveled glasi>wood. 3' square, $350881-6722aftel I2 noon

TWO mlllk capes excellentconditIOn. lUXUrIOUSskms1blonde. the other medIUmbro ....n 886.8375

Mahogany Interiorsl Anhque & FlIleFurmture Shop I16135Mack AI'e

ICorner of Bedford &. l\Iack)11-530 pm

ORBY \PPOI,\T'IE\TBaby Grand plano, break

front With crown glass.i I/x7', bachelor chests.Queen Anne sofa (pastelgold Damask I Chlppendale hlghbo), mahogan~Duncan Phyfe dmlllg roomset (7 pieces) IIllald mahogan~ Tambour Sheratol1desk, chaIse lounge. mahogany bedroom selS, VietOrlan fainting couchChlppenda Ie kneeholedesks, VIctOrian sofa, andneediepolllt Side chairsFrench cuno cabInetQueen Anne dllllllg roomtable 16B"x44" With 1lea\esl, mahogan~ vamt}French sofa With matchlllgchair. cJOIssone crystalchma (dIshes) 882-5622

jl

II

Thursday, January 16, 1986Page Nlne-C

QUA('TV PUPPIES

STUD SERVICE TO

APPROVED BiTCHE S

A K C REGISTERED

• BOARDING

• GROOMING

1&, PETS FOil SALE

1•. REAL ESTATE WANTED

16. pns FOR SALE

11. GENEIIAL SERVICE

F.\MIL 'r want~ home oncand! St ('lUll Shore!>Pnvate owner 351 )i74\\ ollieI'. evelllng!> ')4.1 :J2,2

PHlVAn; Pdr" ~I.,he!. topUf(ha~e le'>IJentldl/<.ommercldl land conlr"tl'> mGro,><,e Poml\' ')1 ('1.111'"hol e'> or IIdrp('r \\ 00(10,,John - flW, 7!l'iH

. 1iA. ADOPT A 'ET

15. IUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

We II run your adFREEII

8826900

CASHFOR HOMES

~ervlllg o\l'('d "mce 19J8STIEBER REALTY

775-4900\\ \ "!TED b) pfll.Jte pdrty

,>tdtel) hO!lw Glo"ePomle needlllg 10l'II1gC,lI" lo be I'( '>101I'd tom Jgmdl gl dlldull' lor m)I e'lden(c \\ Jlh Iuflll!>hlng,>II <l\dlldble 7i~ flllbJ

!lUIUJI! !IIJ{"r""u\I'r\11 td~h 101 10UI ('qllltl \()

1I1"pl'(lIOI!'- II'!ldll" 01 red1'!lH Imm( did! ( dPI)!,"'I!I t If U ~

"()l I1'"H"~\ ""'{I( I \'I!'''/'.; H ),lJ

IlE,\lJT), ",l1on fOJ ,all"ellil .,tdlllln, E.lq],lr.d

~ 71J211HIII<111("-, l' 112-1'1\1\ \'1 I~ Iplldel d(',"c d IO!

1t'II (ond" uml ~I, Ud" )I eJ! I1lllllgdge dt 11III) -t~:J111!>(J

I'Ht WE,,>.,I()\ \L bLJ~lne, ...IJldll !l('pd,> 111\('..,101 \1 Ii I

<;,12IH)0to IIlLled'>( hi' 11I ('nlol I III '>111D!t,.., nl('lchdnd,,\' \\ 111,>et UIe In

\ e'>lmenl d Ild pel\ s,Jlld IIIIl'l e'>l J die,> I1,H lJi III

I- H \ \CIII~I: bU'>lIl('''' 10ldll'd III ~I Cldll "hili e,101 '>,111' (dO,>, Olpi"212 OliO (lI~ nel \\ 01 h~I-I hOlll '> ppI I' ('1'10. \el0\ (I S-IO(JOO S,ile Pll( C$11'1 iUIi Blllh('1 [epl) 10llo\ C-t, (, I O'''l' POlllle\('\1'> !JI) Kerthe\.I1(J I O",>PPOIllIl' 1".11 m" 1\111H2l!>\ \1)"'(' \PI\L bU~lne,>., 101'.11" '-2(J IHIO.l \('.11 prol11 B.!: r;i 1

HI! I IVI \ \ \ <"pdnll'i, JI1dlt011(' \(.11 old lel1l,de ~~(,<ll,old \),lhl'ollll XliIII)i7

LABI{ \DOI{ PUPP\ bldchmdle AKI' (hdmplOllbloodlIne ~211() ii'i 1i If>

(; EI{ \IAN Sh('phel d pupple.,101 '>dle $hOeach liB') i;)11

hE/{]{'l fJ \ \T~ KE\NELI':,,(epllondl Ii111.'1 horn De

(('mllel HI l'llli lm,)le., 2I('III.llp,> lell gl .II" ,mdIlI,llh,> ']',Jhlllg dep{J">lhIpd(iI 10 go I 'ebl lIdl'l 1~

7)2 lhflh,I\\IE~!'_ uo'>~ gld\

\101 '>l'!dbtJ\ Illdlh cdll(O~ 10 HmOl1lli., old one \ edl"III 1'1 '>pddl'd ')21 Oi~B

I'()CKEI{ "Pdllipi \h(\I,de - neull'l ed 18lI10llllh ]l1'1letl pel 101 IeIllul (oupil I11dllldu,lI 011,111111\ \1 lIh hid'> ( ,/d .111('1IIP III or ,Ill \1 pl'hl'nd, 77i'7211.1r--- --- --- -l

I)f you lose meor fmd me

i

FHEE to gl eal homebldch 1,lbrndor Pure bredIll'. I 13111

FI{EE pdraheeh - l m,lIe1 1('111<1](0 BHfi hbll7

J. I{EE pupple,> h \Iel'h" old~pdl1l('I!Shephero Expe(lpd full Ilelghl 4111b,1'1,111111'<1 plegn<lnl\ Bolli1),11('111'> good I~11h (hildI t>11 Dr Vme '> 1'01.11 Dogllooh II ('(' \1 Ilh e.l( h PUPP)\\ormed anci \a(undledi2h i7~1 Ihome lor i21>ll'i HI110110.,

HOURS 9 DOA M TO 6 00' MCLOSW SUNDAY & HOlIOAYS

BUS!NE% ANDINVESTl\IEN1PHOPEIn'IES

13D. VACA f10N/RESORT _'1l0PERTY

130. FARMS FOil SALE

l3E. NOIITHERN NOMES

HETIHI,\(; 10 Flond,,') COli Ido on Gull oj \lexl('o 1111'Longbodl Kl'\ tOI .,dle 011111I11,1(le 101 cO!l1p"ldbl('('.Ilul' 111condo 'll homethl" ,lied 8!1 121» ddl'>772 !lJ2J evel1lng~

1•. REAL ESTATE WANTED

13N. COMM~RCIAL 'IIOPERTYIIUllOINGS

PETOSKE'r \\ ,dloonLdke 1 bc(l! 00111 IdlICh1!J7h c"lhedl,d e('lling,II 11ldlll~ ch 1\ (' hi"': II ('e,>gl edt \ Il'\\ III «()UIlIl\nelghhOl hood _ nlll;fr om L!he dnd public bO.l1!duJlch 4 mllC''> ,>oulh otPelo'>he\ ':>i~ lJU()01 he"lollel \1'>02,() ,1(1 e mounIdln 11('\1 dool ~Id 11114

~h! Lodge - Gd\IOld clo'>e10 Ol~ego dnd ')\ h dnKnob I !>Ion IllIng loomI bedroom'> "Iel'p" IIImodel n hltdl"n HCd,>ondhle I t7 b-ll"

-I~OACHE I,mn II I"h I hlhIhollI 13I1lmu!e" 110m De11011 1)7 oil..I(''> IdlclbJe 1011.It! ('pd,lure 0\ l'1 2000 dpplt) II ee..... lH ~ 'Ill ( ....\\clI,md Iell'dl <I'>PII\ dte hU1l1IIlg pi ('~el \ l' 1!lgh ndll\('phed,dnl dlld \1I111l' 1,111popuJdllon Good Ienl.1l IIIcoml' Irolll Idlld dud I,ll III

hOlhl' lilldt'l "'1)110 Pt'l.1(1 (' (',i11 {, \ lIb411 'j i

CHAMPION~

TOY POODLES " ~\• APRICOT r-:"I,

REDS • BLACK ~(

VORKSHIRES \ftj)\,:;: ,SCHNAUZER 'il) "-~

2:J~(10 'lE.1- !J(e fl fl e..{1-

MARCEl AND MARIA DAGHUVT- Phone 293-1429

33633 HARPER AVENO~ST CLAIR SHORES MI 48082

WANn:D - :,1\1 \1 Lf<~H110 L ..,Eo:

l"i THADE FIJI{ I \J{(,!':I\H('t IfIl1g O\~nel '> 01 ,I , b('1!

100m -I b,llh (;IO",,('I'Ol1lt('homc' ,"lIlloi bl(' fOl lell gefolm1l1 \ldnllo1r<ld(' 101 .1'>mdJler 1be(hoom Gro",>,.1'01111('home \1Ilh ("l"h chI[el('ncl'

0\l1lwnw\oIJul'ddl"'121111011 I O\r:L'r 1>I00I'huI Irc'elohd'> m,lIl\ de'>ll dl>ll' tt>a (,001) homl' hB, (;2 ;111m t>'- dnct" I" ,In ('[1,\ \1 d Ih ito~oulh Il1gh !fllll('re,>ll'd IIIllrddl' pled"(, repl\ \lllbde Idils 10 B(n I, 1IJ2 RELIABLEGro~"l' I'omlt' :\e\I" 'I'll MAINTENANCEKNl h( \ ,d (T1 o'>'>t>1'011111'1.'.lrIm l\hlh -IHllh 11\ COMPANY~eblu"rv 1i 1'Jllh \11 In I Im"IDE:\II\L \\1)CjUlne<,~ 1111)(',W"\I l'r('d 111'1 ( O\T\IEI{C! \ L"llIcte~1 conhdem e : All 1\ IX''> of IIIrloor 1 ouldoor

I WI I L (on,>lder 011\ Illg \ our I m,lInlena nee \~orkhome or l>u"'lI1e~" \\llh no 1;!{Ol P I{ATESmonl''; dOI~n dnl! \~III ,I, I \Ql \IUI \I "f<:I{\ H 1\(;.,ume lour l"-I'tmg mOI'l FHEE f<~,"I I:\I,\TE~g<l~\l' 77i 2011 XXh liH

Exclu"l\ ellS \LE.., - LEAO:;E"

E'\(,1!'\I'IIGE"

\ IIg\llld ~ .1elfne~ I{edltor IHIl2011!!9

IE \,)f \\ \IWE\ nedl BUlh

I JIlghdm 1\\ 0 medlldl 01 01lICe builJll1g, J ~lI(J'>qudl eleel I bliO<'qUdll' 1{'l't (.111for del,ul,

Pdlm,> Queell /{1',dtOl', Hllb ~~4~

I'\)VE'iT,\IE\T propel I, -remodeled ,101 ellOnl 2bedroom upper dlMrl menl1\llh dltd(hed g,lIJgP llKI1l'llJ

('Ol\1 \I EIU I \ L LEA~E,\lllddl\t' .,torell onl m,,\ b

u'>ed 01" Ilot!m ., Offill' ordg('I1( \ I iOll "qu,II (' Jcoe\Poll hlllg ,1\ dlldhll' PI Ill\('

IOtd1lon nedl \me \hll'KeJlI "red (.i11 ~thulle,>Redl E'>I,ll(' 118Ia",),)

I~ 1 \JITS aparlmenl bUIldmg, Gn),>.,p Pom!e are.lGood cd,h J10\1 Lllld LonIrad d!llerm,> negollableHlllllj770 Xll2 Il';-I'l

13. RUl ESUTE -GENEIIAL

13A. LOTS FOR SalE

The !>e.lrch end~ here al1047 WIIITTIEH

A chdrmll1g 4 bedroomF'leneh COIOllld!' nalUl.lIflrepldce, 21_ b<llh!.lIbrary, family room!>PdCIOUS kllchen, leeroom, gue:>t room over dlIdched gdrage, !>erVlce,tdll!> 10dd!> of amemllC'>f\dJdcentlol d\ alldblc ('dlltor dC'tail ...

7&&""eff Income Propel't)Fedlurlng 5 loom,> 111 eachuml Ga!> heal 2 CdI' galdge gre.lt renlal .11'1'.1\Idlk 10 VIlldge PI Ice He-duced i\ldke oJlel

11~2 Ldkepoll1le (dCdt!>tdllel home BOd:>tll1g of1 bedroom!>, Idrge p,trltl)le( ! 00111 gd!> heJt 2 C,lIgdldgC \\'<1110. 10 1;11",chool dnd ~hOpplllgJlu/II'

13C. WATEII 'IIO'EIITY

TillS exrcutl VI' Engli'>hTudor home I'>'>eLluded 111Ihe \1 ood" on 20 dcrc,> nedl"1 ('Idll ..I nd c'nJov,> Ilontdg(' on Belle I{I\ er 'I hehdCk 01 Ihl'> elegdnl homeI!>ne,lIl) ,111 loll ge'lhc'l moll\\ llldo\\ '> 10 Idke \ e<lI'l'Ound dlll dlltage 01 d reId "lllg I 1e\1 A Idrge polebUlldlllg to \ HO bordel '>LI1'.1Icd 1,\Ild lor u.,e ",hOI,e !J,HII bOd I ,>tOldgeell.. WJlh IhI e(' I,ll gl' lJvelhedd dOOl' dlld con( I eleflool on one hdJl A 'Ill'al .II~1bi UlU)Phone,J \ B,Khlei I{('dltor 1 ill) BB'), 01 II 7b, ~ ll7

II \ 1{~E\'" hldnd \ dCdJlt I11\ l'1 Iiont 101 on "oulh II hdllJleJ E\cl'1ll'nt 'l\llIll Inllng 11,>llIlIg IHJdtlllg I

PI OPl'11\ I'> nul III .1 ( Jd'"I lIood lonc dnd h",> ne\elb(>clI 1I0odl'd ,\ppl ,11'1 dbel\\('l'n ~l-I 11011\-t:; 1.(11)FOI "die nO\~ ,11~2!JIlf)() 771

I'" \~T BE'! HOlT I Il07 II C(')..cld\, 7 HI ,'Iii I221172BedLOn"lield ';lIdl n I " l'( !..''''(!-

bedroom brick r .Inch I' ----------1b,lth~, natUl dl fll epldu' :,PE( 'I'M L L \l{ ~ buh oom

2' IMlh \'ltlOlldn hOI1(Jdmli) 100m plu!> Flollddroom centrdl dlr III1I,I1('d (ompll'le ~ Ilh IllIlel lu Ibd!>emenl \~llh 41h bed (dl(d on lhl 'l\'lghluloom 01 oflice :"Jell fill dldllnl'J Julh Ifhlilolkd Ind(e PI Iced rlghl ,lnd lomplt'll'lI lI.odl'lll

I/l'd 17! 6,11 71K'14,X I

lB07 Grd\ Ion Cu\(' .Ind 1..0/\

3 bedroom brick bUl1g,lIo\1N.llul dl flrepJ,,(e 101l11dJdlllll1g room c.lrpetmg,gd, hedt mdllliendnce 111'1.'e"lellOr lmmec!ldle po~se~~lOn pi Iced Jar qUid~dle

OPF,\ ~L \1> \, !;H,ll pel \\ ood<, 19211113('"

tOIl~held Sh.lfp 1 !I('d100111 bungdlo\l upd"I('c1kllchen 1I'IIh edllllg dl e<lga~ hedl full b,,!>em('111do'>e 10~hoPPl1lg dnd biNne'>!> i\ gl ve ,1\1.1\ ,1t~J4,\I00

GROSSE POINTE \\ O()IJ~Contempor.l 1') CO" d nd

Baker bUill 3 bedroom ('01omal elo~(' to lake, fdml"room. nJtural flrepldcedtldched gdl dge 11

halh!> Kllchen buill Ill'> elllordable luxurv 0\\ nel.InXIOU, Lo\\ 100,

1!l01OChdndler l'.Irk DII\ enear St John Ho!>pll<ilASSUMABLE LAND CO,,\TRAlr 1 bedroom hilt).,bungdlo\~ ne\\ 1\ hm"hedbd!>ement, plu!> ne\1 ,dumll1um Inm, !.Iorm~ ,lIld~u een~ acl fd!>t on thl.,Oil('

FIKANY REALTORS714 NOTRE DAME

886.5051OPEN SUNDAY 2-';

15b7 Sunmngd,llec.;IWSSE POINTE \'vOOD~"pdUOU!> 4 bedloom CdP('

Cod !>tyle ovellooklngLochmoor Counll \ (Iub2 lJl)() squal e teet on ~dCl('101 Kllchen bullllll" IdllliII' room 2 flrepldte<, letroom, attdehed g,H dgeCd II lor exlld deld\h

H.\RRISON TO\\ NSHIPGorgeous -t bed! oom l)lld

Idnch all huge, IIIcel) II (,(>eJ

COIner 101 2 full bdlh"tdmlly room, luep!acemce countrv hltchcn EnJO) Ihe cou-nlry dnd Jdkeclo;,e b) $71,900

Dell Oil ~ Golden COI ndorLlIlark - Gorgeou.., 1 bed

room bflck III pllme ,II edNcw kllchcn flnl'>hedba;,emenl fireplace BedUtlflll decor $0 do\\ n$'l-l !100

STIEBER REALTY7i3-4901,

TOWNHOUSE condo 111VIIlage - 2 bedroom, ne\\lydecorated 88';-6fi'll; for appomlment

7 'vilLE/GratIOt, 4 bedroombrick bungalo\~ 2 car ga-rage, $28,000 or sllnpJ<o dS~umpllOn R_J'J_07_'l_I _

~ICE Ea,>!'>lde Dellollhouses for '>alc or renlGibbs Heal E,ldlr l4 IOM8

LOT III Prt Labelle, FlondaBdlance $8,000 77'1 ,frill

ATTENTIONBUILDEHS 11\iVE~TOHS

Almo~t 71Jdue,> on 211i\llle,1\e'>! of Grallol f{echl( pd 10$.'i8,!lOO Can dIVide or ~ulxll~IriC for r~ldentldl 1'lea"e;J<,k for Annd Ct>!llun 21MacK('nllE' 779 7';(M)or ~4,)6il7

LAKI-:FHONT BEAUTYE>.cephonal St Cia II'Shore!>

lakrfront home on deep lotFanla<,llc vle~ 1 largeIwrlroom~ 1 on flr',[ floor2 on second floor II Ith IdkeVle\\ balcony Gredt roomconeepl, forma 1 dilling,gorgt>ou~ klll'ht>n, fir..,!floor laundn oil ...t>mt>ntl\b,olulC' m1l11 condltwnLovC'ly drcor

CALL <ill. WITTf<:NIlER(,''I'm: WATEH

SPf<XIALIST'CENTURY 21, AVID

771l R]()O

ST. CLAIR RIVERComfortable home on high

ground 'l bedroom~ 2balhs, lovely VieW, 2 cargarage $79,500

BEAUCHAMPREALTY

~21}47'i '; 32lJ 4403

13. RUl ESTATE -GENERAL

CHARMING NE.WENGLAND BUNGALOW

2 bedroom one bath, hvmgroom With flrepJdce dllllllgloom WIth hardlloodfloors, nel\ er kItchen, deckwllh gas gnJl, 1St floorlaundry. 2 car garage

JUST REDUCED. $79.50067 MUm885-2511

OPEN SUNDA Y 2-';MOROSS/KeJly area, 3 bed

I room bnck bungalow, f1l1I Ished basement garage,

above ground pool, sharp,$21J,000 372 7229

SIJOREPOINTE Condom III

lum. front umt - 2 bedrooms 2 balhs $1') 000 881911~

HAHPER Woods - 208.')9LItties tone 1 bedroom bnckranch, cenl ra I a II', II!balh., hm~hed ba<;ementupdated kilt hen naturalflreplace, 2'_ CdI' garage,new CirCUit \1 Ire box, ne\1carpellng and drape~$M:;OO 0\\ ner M1 0317

ST ClaIr Shore;" III_ Mackdrea '1 bedroom 2 bath,hnck 21! cargalage, fullha,>emenl, $')I,'JOO 77B517';

HENDRICKSand A~~oclate~ Ine

COi\lFOHT and qualily III

t111~fl\e bedroom I\~o fulland I~o half bath Coloma I\1Ilh e ounlrv "llchC'n coryfamIly room dnd hbrar)Wdlk to Ihe lake dmi park~

TAX PAYER~ DHEAM'Two fdlllliv bnt>h Illeome\\ Ilh '>eparalt> ultlltle,>FIreplace'> Bal galll'

OFFICE BuILDING Landconlrdct Might lea~e

884-0840I THI~ executive Engll~h

Tudor homr I'>'ieeluded 111tht> \\1000'> on 20 ,l('re, nearSl ('lair and C'nJo),> fronlagr on BrlJ I{II er Thehd( k of 1hi'> ('leg.1Il1 hom('I'>ne.lrly elillargt> lht>rmal~Indo~~ to lake )('arround ddvdnlage of relaxII1g VI('\~ A large polebUlldll1g 40 xBO' border~c1C'ar<>d land for u'><>ashor~e barn, boal ..,Iorag(',ele With 1largt> ovt>rht>addooN and concrele floor onone half A steal at$165,000 Phone J ABachler, I{t>allor, 765 RR9,') Ior 76') 4117

824-6637

GROSSE POINTE NEWS13 RUl ESTAlE --

GENERALGROSSE POINTE PAHK GROSSE POINTE Park _

BY OWNEH Windmill POlllte, 775 Bel k-Custom bulll bnek rdnch J !>hll'C;'Engll",h 4 bedrooms,

bedroom!>, II _ balh!> ~ L IMlhs, ne\\ furndce/n<llural fll'eplace Fml!>hed I oof/kllchen, -tCdI' gdrdgebasement, 21

! Cdr gdl dge With <lpallmenl $11l5,OOOWllh opener No blokel!> Land Conlrdct 8U-77782867517 dfter 5 p m Open SunddY, 23 P m

CONDO - 2 bedl oom rdnch, IN Ihe Pdrk - 5/4 Illcomedltached gdrdge, St Clall CII~ cellllJed $49 down 10Shores 886-5851 allel ~ Veie, dn Ea!>blde Hr.llly,pm I 111122402

BY O\vner - Hdl per \Vood~ I -B-Y-(-h-~n-e-'I----1 -b-e-d-IO-o-m-,I bedroo~ bllck IdrKh I hflCk bungdlow, largeLoaded, $;:,7,900 (.Ill /01 (Ounln kitchen Flondddeldll!> llB2 &O.l<! loom I' bdlh" \en \Iell

RETIREMENT home lTIdlllldl;ed nedl SI' JohnconvICnenl to bu'> ~hopp 1I0!>pllal nOllh 01 I\loro~,mg, selllor actl\'IIll.'!> Lo\\ A"kmg $41900 882 7i~1im<ll1llendnCe, ldl.e!>, utili dltel 5 p mlle~ .f room~ JuU bd~(, -G-I-W-S-S-f<:-I-'-o-ln-I-e-W-(-lO-d-!>-menl,nellel lurndce, 2 ColI' Open Sunddy 2 p m ~ pmgardgt> $4B")00 111111119 205bFleel\~ood lbedloom882 9272 Colonldl A!>klllg $&9'JOU

OHLANDO - (Apopk<l) Er _1l_1l&_-5_8_2_1 _101 E!>tdte!>, pnvdte coun-I THREE bedloolll Idnch IIItry club, 27 hol(' gC11f Wood!> With Idrge pdneledCOUI~e, sWlmllllllg tenl1l'>, I fdmlh loom, lIvlllg loomexcellent dml1lg lllXlII \ 2 I \' 'Ih ".llllr tI III ppJdeebedroom, 2 bdlh fully dllllllg L 2 Cdl d!ldchedeqUIpped killhen Laundl y gdl'age large kllLhen, nellcondo On Illneth fall'll <l) IUI ndce dnd cenlldl .III'.$b9,300 Musl !>ell 40 mile \1ell m,ul<lled dnd (Omto DIl,ney Led\'e me!>!>dge plete!) mamtendnC(' IIee31J-294 9JB1 S911900 llllb 56&5 dltel J

BABCOCK CO 01' APARTS P In for dppollltmentHarper Wood!>, Wlld\~ood, \\OODBHIDGE EAST

between Hdl per <lnd CONDO ~I\ldCk lollge 2 bedl oom ~I Cldll Shore, We IlJye ..I!>econd floor 0\\ n \IJ'>hel Fd IrldX dpdrtment 2 beddryer looms 2 full bdlh!>. ccntrdl

DetrOit, Bluehlll al MdCk I all" bUIll-In!> \Id!>herbedroom, 1st Jloor, vel y dryer Club hou!>c Withmce bUlldmg Immedldle pool, secuilly gUdrd, b)occupancy dPPollltmenl only

C W BABCOCK & SONS PETTINE REALTY7773310 / COMPANY

CLINTON BEAUTY 521 -IO,lOGal held, 17 Mile area Tru ONf<~ block fI om ~I John

Iy gorgeou!> 4-5 bedroom HO!>Pltdl, Detlolt 8'1% d!>Colomal With beauillul wmdble 2'_ bdlh~ 2101,large. he<lted mgl'ound ~\\ lI11Inlng pool , bedpool SpacIOus kitchen. for I OOIl1~2 III eplace:> formalmal dmmg, huge famll) dllllng ! oom, manye"trdsroom, flrepldce 1st floor $57,900 fIrm' 81128184laundl y Profe!>slOnally THREE bedroom Colonldlfllllshed basement \\ Ith I' _ bdlh"" sunroombar Lovely .Ired 1m pee- Flonda room 1JI 1306Cdbly clean home ----------

AGENT NE'\H SI John - J bedroomCALL 4b3 751J bungalow, brick, flllished

bd!>ement. II_bath, 2'_ CdI'20879 COUNTRY Club, Hal' gdl dge SJ ~ 'lO0 B39 JIOO

per Woods Lovely I bed- ----------room bungalow In a \\ on- I ..,HARP 2 bedroom condo at-del fulloeallOn Full brick I l<lched gardge cenlrdl dlr

1 L bath~ III '>C'eluded !>el\\ Ith dlummum tnlll, 2 targardge Gro!>se Pomte I tmg comemenl to "hop!>ehools, pOSSIble a!>sump plllg dnd trdn~poltatHJn

$5-t 500 Cenlm \ 21 AVidtlOn on IS year fixed 1'.111' 77B lllOO 'mortgage Askmg only _$62.500 882-0421 BABCOCK - One bedroom

dpartment. Jrd floor,S1' Clair Shol es - bnck elevator !>en Ice bdleon)

bungalO\> - by o\~ner, I e Cd! pet, drdpe~ spotle!.,duced, ne\\ kItchen, np\~ -t!l70 Op,1I 88i ~51broof 7786385 DETROIT '1'0111'1" condo

EAST DetrOlt - I 2()()Squ.ll e mlll\Um lotdted on lhe Dcfoot 3 bedroom bl'lch IrOlI River 2 bedroom~ranch Large kitchen den/hbldl'\, 2' , balh'i All11Ilished bd,emenl I _ lhe dmemlle!> 01 gl dCIOU'>bdlhs, attached 2 Cdl hVll1g C.l1l Bevellygarage $5B 000 772 bl'i& Sthwellzer Redl E!>ldte

88b -1200HARPER WOOD~

$49 'lO0Gorgeous 1 bedroom bnck

I"nch 2 b.llh, tenlrdlJIIprole!>,lonall) fllll'>hedbasement, gdrdge ExcepIlon.ll bu) Cenlur)21-Nance 774 'J01i0

13 RUL ESlATEGEHEIlAL

907 BEDFORDSOUTH OF JEFFERSO/\i IN THE PAHK

1713 BROADSTONE, WOODSThree bedroom, I' 2 baths. famtly room. 11\Illg loom

natural fireplace, flmslJed basement ndtural fire-place, library, remodeled kitchen, nel\ furnacenew all' conditIOner, 2'! car garage 1\Ith aulomaIll' door 16'XI6' deck

OPEN SU:\lDAY 2 'i P m886-1620

16 MOORLANDGROSSE POII\TE SHORES

Hanch ,J bedroom, 21! bath, 2 fireplace!> conlem-porary mlenor New carpet, light fixture!>, velllc,1Iblinds, deek and kitchen Recent roof, furndce dndcentral all' Good floor plan move In condition$187 900 Open Sunday 1 5 P m

8853586

561 PEACH TREE LANEGROSSE POINTE WOODS

ExceptIOnal custom-bUIlt four bedroom centerentrance Colomal on qUiet eul-<le-sac III pnme WoodslocatIOn 111 Llgge!l and Sial' of the Sea area MoveIII condition With many amemtlcs SpacIOus hVlllgroom. formal dlllll1g room, remodeled large kllchenWIth eatlllg area, two and a half baths, famIly roomWith brick patIO Convement traffic pallern $224.000

0\\ ner 881-5027 or 773 8800

M WARNER REALTY885-578B

Perfeet home for the young couple Cenler enlrdnceColoma I III move 111 conditIOn 5 bedrooms 1'!balhs, large hvmg room wllh natural fireplace dillmg room, year-round sunroom. updated kItchen\\llh breakfa~t nook New furnace and dlumll1um~torms/gutlers Newer roof and hot Woller hedlerNice lot ~ Ith 2 car garage

ASKING SlJR,500NO BROKERS PLEASE

GROSSE Pomte Woods -Shore!> .lrea - beaullful Col-omal 4 bedroom!>, Jl!

baths cenlral all', almo"lne~ carpelmg Ihroughout,new!\ decorated InSide dndoul, - new rooJ $163,000(close 10 $200,000 value)703 Pearlree Idne 885-1719

GROSSE POlllte FarmsNeat dnd clean 3 bedroombl'lck With d!lached gdragednd fdmll" room $82,500

25 NEWBERRY PLACE FARMSElegant two-slory Cape Cod Lake vle~1' l-)l) foot fron

tagt> Two slory foyer TraditIOnal ~Iory panelI1brary With balcony and natural fireplace TI~oflr'>l floor bedrooms plus 2 up Also 2 room~ ~lille-t I balhs Flr'it floor laundry room J<'londa room'1'\\ 0 natural flreplace~ Over 6,000 square fel'l 1CdI' garage An exceptional home for thcde'ienmlnatmg buyer

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5WALKER REALTY, LTD, 886.0920

GROSSE Pomte Woods -Tolally remodeled brH:kbungalow, c'ontempor .trymlenor $75,!IOO

CENTUH'll 21-AVID771111100

BY O\~nel - Best vdlue 111

Glos!>e POinte Wood!>'Blick bunga 10\\ Fel r)'>chool dl~11 ILl Ne\\ hdewl dted, excellent condilion $bS.!IOO Newer looflurndcc Wllh central all'circuit bl edkel s Eatlllg!>pace 111 modern kItchen\\ llh ne\1 dlsh\1 J'>herL.lrge !Jvlllg room \\ Ilhgolf COUIse vtCw. fireplace,Jull dlllll1g room 2 ,! Ca Igal dge Musl ~ee Call BB59139 weekday!> dfler 6 p mNo IIIokel!> pledse

WEST Bloomfield - Contemporary 3 bedroom, 31_

b.llh home bUIlt 1T11980,hd~2' _ Cdl dtt.lched gdrage!>ILeable closet!>, dnd I'minutes ft om WalnulLake Owner Iransferpl'lce negotiable $120,000(G21SUN) Ask for AndreaYoung, 886-4200

SCHWEITZERREAL ESTATE

BETTER HOMESAND GARDENS

FOH sale by owner, 118B7Easl Outer Dl'lve,lovely Jbedroom Colomal on prestlglOUS !>treel fireplace,hvmg loom, new carpet,full fllll!>hed basement,den, remodeled kllehen.dlshwa!>her Central all'I' ! baths ApPollltment on-ly 445-2551, 773-9707

INCOME - 522b Devonshire,belween East WarrenlChandlel Park DnveCU!>lom brIck 5 largeroom~ up, 5 lal ge roomsdo\~ n, 2 natural fireplacesne\\ kllchen new carpel •mg newly decorated VA/f<']IA

5100 YORKSHIRE bet\\ eenEdSI Warren/ChandlerPdrk Dnve, unusual brlchColoma!. fIrst floollavalory, famlly room,assume 71!% mortgagemonthl) payments $227 In-c1udmg taxes, price reduc-ed to be sold as IS Ideal forh.lndyman

1000 YORKSHIREThl~ SpaCIOUSexecutive home featured on Inl<>rnahonal

Home Tour and Garden tours IS hemg offered for~ummery of "86" occupancy

FII,,>t floor IllcJudes new Mutschler kItchen, formal hI'IIlg and dmmg rooms and famtl), '>un room

SC'eond floor fealures master bedroom SUIte, 1 4 addlIional bedrooms and mUSIC room Fllllshed recrea!lon room WIth wet bar and wille cellar III ba!>Cmenl.3 full and 212 baths, double lot Amemlles 111 thISPerlmutter-Frel.vald, .James Evan Wllhams dcslgnc<lhome are too numerous to menllOn

BUYERS ONLY PLEASE, $275,000882-3289

7H ~74:;

11J. CAR IIEPAIII

110. FOREIGN caRS -ALL OTHER

11H. VANS - TftUCKSalL MAKES

13. REAL ESTATE -GENEIlAL

12. IOATS AND MOTORS

1111. CARS WANTED TO auy

1979 I\IEHCl<~DES JOO-D -blue on blue dbsolute mml\\lth e"tl.l~ $IJ,500 negotlble 774 7&89 01' 894-0JOO

IYll2 HONDA PI elude - red,I un 1001, A1\TI f<'l\1 !>tereo,good ulIldllwn Sho\\ n by,lppOJlltmelll llHI J&&4

HONDA PI elude 1!l8J - blue,3 ,peed .Ill, A1\IIFM ed!>-'>eUe $8 OOO/be!>1 Evenlllg!> 1&1l!J[,l2 day!> 2591,1;0

1YllU SlBAIW 4WD GL\\ dgon \\ ell mdmldmed,\ \l1f'\1 Ld,>,etle dedn$2 200 11113!llfll

l'JllO HONDA ('I\IC - All'UllldltlOlllllg dutoma tiC,.,Iel eo Be~t ollel 792-2U I

'101' S$ PAIDFOI JIll1h \1 I eehed dnd un-

II.lnled Cd!!> and IruchsBULL AUTO PAHTS

1l')-I.HllH

1\\ AI\IT) OUI bedt up t<ll Blll172-'lRH4 Dd\~ onI\

Ill' SEARAY -mboald/oul-hOMd E Z load traller$:J,OOO 82:~-3751

CARVER, 1984, 2b' e"pre!>sCIUI",er, !O\I hours, everywncelvdole opllOn, manyIlC\ el u~ed 1111' bOdl atII ,It!> ddmlling LOmmenlsel el , \\ here dnd I, Ihe.,hdrpest 26 on lake$29 '/00 774 1307 \\eekda) si 4B 1!l77 \1eekend!>

197224 Flberform Cdtalma- Illll h P l\lercrUlser, mbOdrd/oulbodrd ship to.,hOl e I adlO, depth guage10\1 hOUl!., pi ofesslOnaJly.,ervlted need!> some co!>-metlc \Iork Blue book

'Value - $7 800 Asklllg-$5,i50 or be!>1 offer Pat-nck 1186:;1J81 dfter 6 15pm

BOAT CLEANINGTHE

CALCATEHRAB( lATWOHKERS

I{i\), S FOI{EIGN ('AI{GAHAGE

\\ (' '>('1I 1(e.l11\ dlld dll fOI('Ignldl'> ,pt>CldliLlI1g In\Iel (ed( '>, Volvo VW,r"ngl"h d nd J ,q)d nl',e\ ehlde'> ~2 \ 1',11' e"pellence lice pl(k up dnddell\ el v llll p m 1\lond.lYFlldd\ X noon ::'dtUI dd\llll-t1l1l7~ l'U~OE.bIW,lIlen

TODAY'SBEST BUYS

GROSSE POINTEI fanl1h. ,I furnace!> 3

lenanl~ .\ mone, maherc.lll lor det,lIb '

22' O'DA Y - 4 !>dlls, on E-Zload Iraller, 6 h P Ol1t-bOdI'd, !>lceps 4, mce condlIIon 101, of extrd!> AskingSf! 500, Will h~ten to a reasonable offer Can be seendt 186 Grosse Pomte BOl:le-\ drd 343-0882

(.I{O~SE POINTEI bedroom 'Inglt> fOl m,lI om

Il1g room. full ba,>pmentgd'> hedl lenced m Jdrge1 dl d 2 Cdl gdr,lge reduct>d 10 ,,('J) $ 12000 !':dWlerm~ .

761 LINCOLN~"l1gli,h Tudor I hrl!

room I' balh,ol('dkf,l'>l room marble fIrepldce dtlached 2 cargdrdgc' Immedlall'pO."e'>'ilOn SII, 1l(J()

PALAZZOLO &I\SSOCIATES I885-1944---------',

GRO"'~E POIl'TE:\e\1 hSlmg 2 hOthe:> on one

Jot CondlllOn require",Ollle \101 k bUI pnced 10.,ell lor cd~h ('d]] for de1,111,

CROWN REALTY821-6500

'J 0\1 \1eDOl\,\LD & "0\HARPER WOODS

21721 NEWCASTLEI hl'droom hnck bungdloll• \I'I~ 2 CdI' gdrdge• \e\1 h f)ecoralerl !Il

l'd rill I011('''

• I'lu'>h beige carpelmg• i\lodNn kllchel1

884-9129FIHST OFFERING

\10\1' In conrlltlon 1716\llard -t lwdroom. fdmll,;

100m ndlural fireplaceI' hdlh \('\~ c"rpct dnddt>cor<ltl1Jg Brick and<Ilumlllum colonial$lli '"H) \ppoml mel1t only118iH2l1 /\io hroker~

I III'. \ 1'1': I{ lh,m renl' Dt>Irill I K('1I1 \101 0..,'>drl'a 1h('(11oom IJlI( 10. I'! tar~"I dg(' "'2211(HI $6 ("'0 d~'-\11111'''' "'271, hou'>l' polYnW111 171 4 lOll

11C. CARS FOR SALE _G.M,

110. FOREIGN CAllS -ALL OTHEIl

PONTIAC 600U STE, 111114IOddl'd l'''( Pllellt (ondJlion e"lelHlt'd \~<lll dllt\negolldblp Blli 0!J'1ll

1!!7-l CIIEVY i\1<lhbu - e"ceJlenl condilion 10\\ n1l1".Ige IUlb good ::>12(M)01 01leI 327 llilO

14114 BUICK '-,k\hdllk ~door, j)O\lel' ,>teel IIlg/bl .lke,1 dnl('llI1.1 .Ill deloggel 1& 000 mill''>A1\1IF\I '>11.'1eo ~,;("I (dll37,92111

1!J71 GHAl .....D '1'011110 lOllmJle!>, .IUIOmdilc .111PO\~CI '>t eellllg/ bl olio. e,$1 27'i/bp.,1 ollel 7111 11,-,2

1!J79 PO~TIAC SunlJll dGood londltlOn no ru,1AI\I/F'\I td"eltp ne\" iJdlleI y h7 1100mil(',> '-I lIJUllllb 0071 I!JBO CHEVY Luy PICI- up

19BI (JLD~ Omegd ~ doO! \Illh cdmper :.hell ~J 000d II Po\~ l'! ., I('('I IJlg 01 be,t OU('I BB441&9bl dke, ~I BUO B8l 7)7) I!J7'J DODGE Van '1'1dde!>dller i p m I m<ln \ PI Y good ~ondltlOn

1978 CAl\IARO dll p(mer ""e\1 tile!> ~2,OOOll!lb7&511,teel mg/bJ'dke'> bOth 111 1474 j)O[)(;F '_ !('n Pl(\.,.good !>JlcIj)e \1egolldble up Ii C\ hnder -I~peed l'\ol819 1&-t5 u!>ed COll1ll1elcldllv $1 1l0U

BUICK ::'kyh"\I)." 1')7[1 onC' 777 ilhll 'O\\llel \ &,dUlom,ltK, dllextl a!> Tut! Ko1e excellenl COlldlllOJI <;'1 9')0 all,109J 774 II 1&----------

1!l79DELTA llll - 4 doO! V II<Ill, Ll Ui'C ~Iel ('0 7H i3:;201 R84 72h~

19114FIHEBlHD Tldll!> '\m,bldCk, T lop, 10ddedc1cdn must ,cll 2'1l 3301

1979 OLDS Cu!>tom ('I Ul,elexcellenl condlllOn Oneowner 55,000 Illlle~ 1\ e\1111(''> PO\lel ,Ieellllgibr<lke,!I~ II1do\\ ,110ch,$2200 O! be,l 0111'1 11111119&

1!l84 SILVER TO! on.ldoloaded, Dobell11.lJl dldrm$11,000 22,OO() mile!> 'i2i-0204, Ho!>ednne llB-I91!J~

1978 OLD~ 4 dool , Delld 88fully eqUipped $1 700 df IeI'6pm J439017

1984 PONTIAC GOOOSTEblack/gre) 26.000 mile,loaded, gdrdge kept Hdndwdshed 821-31'i-l bel\leenII JO a III -:; P m 01 38&-t081 bel\\ een :; p m 1lJpm

19B2 l'\EW 'r 01kt'l PO\\ 1'1!>teenng/bl dl-eb, cIPan :'iolUSt 772-0-l'ill

SUNBIHD 1984 - 4 door, 5speed, all-, AMIF1\I !>teleo,cloth seats defl'osl Zle

, barl, excellenl condillongdrage hepl $,5 ill'i BllI3055

1979 HED Chevelle -- goodcondlllOn, AM/F;\I Cd!>sette, $900 N 1-2022 or 94910.21after 5 ,10 P m

1982 TORONADO ga~ 47,000mIles Loaded $6,500 882-2402

OLDSMOBILE - 11J85 98Hegency Broughdll1 - fulIy loaded Sun 1001 IJ 000mile., Be!>1 ofJel 8Bb O:;!J()even1l1g~

I'lB3 PONTIAC 1>000 LE -Lighl bl 0\\ II, ~ door 10dded ne\1 lire,> I u~lplOofB1l5-8141

19115 PONTIAC Pdll!>lelllle1\agon - all PO\\ el mo~1optlOn~, under \~'<in <intyCall 881 20&4 $II,O(JO -

1978 PONTIAC GI and Pn"PO\ler steertng/bldhe~,AMIFM :>Iereo, .Ill !Jlue$2,200 88&0141

1971Jl\IONTE Calla - excellent condItion 2.~ :;00 mlle~$4.500 885-')!JX2 118';BIOI

1'l711 CUTLA::'S Supreme58,000 mile, 2 door ne\1tires, \ ery good condlllOn.Ill power opl Ion,> S2 'lOO884-1111 dfteripm

1'181 CHEVETTE - -I doordlr Al\1/Fl\1 e <I~,ette$ ~.UOO88:; ll-i6l 1.'\el11ng~

I'JH~ ..,I'\BlHD .lulom.l!Ie .Ill' PO\\ el "I('ellllgibrdhe, rear defl0.,1 '>\Inroof A1\11Fl\1 "tpreo l'Xcellelll LOndlllOn $i HOO2'n b054 after') 1O p III

IYB4 Z 211 C,lmdro )iOellgme red I11ml condltlOll PO\~('1 ('\ el'l Ihmg10\1 mllC'<Ige t lop~ llP,~4-12h 1:;2-,151 e\ I 120;\ldureen Burke

PONTI \C Pdn~lennt> I~agonl'Ill-t - \\ ood gld1l1 fullpo\~er 20 m p g 17 (J()(Jmile<, $'1:;00 172,i;8

1972 CADILLAC Sed.lndeVille - ~2 000 ongm,limlle~ ~mgl(' 0\1 Ilrr mU'>1'leI! $1 ,';0 oft('r XR~i'lH

1%2 ME HCf<:DE'i mU~1 ~('1I~('nou~ mqu1Ilc,> onh ii~')2%

Illi 1VOLh ,,\\ AGI.:\ (on\('1tlblc - Iun" l1ecd~ 10h of\Iork $HH) RXi X211

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l'170 \'\\ IlPrt 1(' ('\( ell('nlu111(11 lIOn ;'1 001/ d( I Ild IlTI11('> SHill P.2-t II X7

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Page Twelve-C GROSSE POINTE NEWS Thursday, January 16, 1986

Now A vailable ForImmediate Delivery

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Advanced TechnologyCadillac Luxury

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