It'll Be a Purim to Remember The biggest, grandest Purim of them all is promised this weekend when Haman's downfall, Mordecai's heroism and lovely Esther's interces- sion for her people will be celebrated by Jews through- out the world—Detroit, too. On Saturday night, after sundown, t h e celebrations will begin with the reading of Megilat Esther—the scroll of Esther — in synagogues and temples. (For individual times not listed below check with the synagogue). A few temples, including Kol Ami and Birmingham Templ e, will mark the holiday with family services this evening. Beth Shalom services 8:30 p.m. today will feature a pre- Purim spiel on Jewish humor by United Synagogue Youth. Following is a listing of special Purim observances submitted by synagogues and organizations : The Jewish Center week- end will begin with an oneg 8 p.m. today at the 10 Mile branch, sponsored by the raeli Students Organization and the Michigan Associa- tion for Jewish• College Stu- dents. At 7:30 p.m. Saturday Hashomer Hatzair and Ha- bonim will join for a party at the 10 Mile branch. The Jewish Free School, Jewish Student Educational Forum, Hillel and the MAJCS will show a movie, "The Dybbuk" at 8:30 p.m. follow- ing the Megila reading Satur- day at the main building. The party will start at 10:15. The Jewish Parents Insti- tute Purim party will begin at 10 a.m. March 18 in Shiff- Man Hall. There will be con- tests, Purim games, children in costume and a humorous skit for the, children given by the parents. Beginning at 1 p.m., the Cafeteria Cabaret Style Eatery, the "Nasherie," will be featured with its assort- ment of homemade deli- cacies, at nominal prices,. sponsored by the Center Senior Adults. A 1 p.m. parade in cos. tume by the Parent-Toddler Group will be followed by the Purim carnival of the nurs- ery school. "The Land of Dreams," an Omnibus pro- gram will be at 2 p.m. in DeRoy Theater.(See separate story). A presentation by the United Hebrew Schools and Jewish Center clubs will be given at 2:30 p.m. That evening at 8:30, Par- ents Without Partners will hold a Purim party at the 10 Mile branch. Temple Beth El Young People's Society will contrib- ute all proceeds from its 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. carnival Sunday to the building fund. The carnival, to take place at the temple, will feature food, games, prizes and fun. The public is invited. Cong. Beth Israel of Pon- tiac will be the site of a Purim carnival arranged by the youth group noon Sunday. Lunch will be available. The public is invited. Beth Abraham-Hillel Youth Group, after participating in the reading of the Megila Saturday evening, will pre- sent a talent show. Refresh- ments will be served. Class- room Purim parties Sunday will be followed by a family carnival at noon, sponsor of which is •the school's PTO. There will be games and prizes. The public is invited at no charge. Vocalist Marci Lyn Shul- man will entertain at the Metropolitan Detroit Lands- manshaften testimonial t o businessman Norman Cottler during its Purim celebration 8:15 p.m. Tuesday at Cong. Bnai Moshe. Guest speaker will be Dr. Judah J. Shapiro, national president of the Labor Zionist Alliance. Louis Levin will be toastmaster. The tribute to Cattier will in- clude the planting of a wood in Israel. Purim refresh. ments will be served. Admis- sion is by the planting of a minimum of one tree, per person. Mishkan Israel Lubavitcher Center's youth department will have a masquerade party for children after the 7:45 p.m. Megila reading Satur- day. The Megila will be read again Sunday at 8:30 a.•. That evening at 8:30, there will be a _"live" telephone hookup to world Lubavitch headquarters in New York to hear a public address by the Lubavitcher R e b b e. • Bais Chabad in Farmington also will have the Megila reading and a masquerade party Sat- urday evening. College stu- . * * * Nursing Home Residents to Celebrate. Too The Jewish Family and Children's Service nursing home program will have brought the spirit of Purim to over 300 residents of con- valescent homes this week. Thirteen sisterhoods plus the women of Nshei Chabad are participating in the pro- ject this year, along with can- tors and.rabbis. The groups will distribute individually wrapped packages of Shalakh Monet, read a portion of the Megila and sing the tradi- tionalMelodies of the holiday. An important aspect of the program is the intermingling of volunteers with residents and the visiting with the bed- ridden who rarely receive visitors. The nursing home project of JFCS is an ongoing pro- gram of regularly scheduled visits and holiday programs which serve the needs of in- firm and aged Jews residing in nursing homes. Many of these people have little or no family to visit them, and the JFCS friendly visitor is their only link with the outside world. Sisterhoods participating in the program are Adas Sha- lom, Beth Abraham-Hillel, Beth Achim, Beth Moses, Beth Shalom, Bnai .David, Bnai Moshe, Shaarey Zedek, Temple Beth El, Temple Emanu-El, Temple Israel, Temple Kol Ami, Temple Beth Jacob and Young Israel of Oak-Woods. dents are invited to partici- pate in the singing, dancing and refreshments. Temple Emanu-El's serv- ice 7:30 p.m. Saturday will feature the junior choir in "A Portrait of Purim." T h e Zionists Revisionists Organization of Greater De- troit will sponsor a Purim Ball 9 p.m. Saturday at Young Israel Center of Oak- Woods. The Israeli Sadia Floor Show will provide entertainment, and there will be music for dancing and re- freshments. Proceeds will go to the Israeli Sick Fund. For reservations. call Steve Goldin, 968-5575. Labor Zionist Alliance of Metropolitan Detroit will pre- sent an old-fashioned - Purim Adloyada Sunday, 6:30 p.m. at the Labor Zionist Insti- tute. There will be a buffet dinner, Shalakh Manot, the reading of the Megila, Habo- nim dancers, and Israeli folk dancing with Yaacov Davido- vitch. Reservations• are re- quired (851-1606). Adas Shalom festivities be- gin 8 a.m. Sunday as the Bar and Bat Mitzya Club and Minimester participants join adults for the Megila reading by teen-agers. Following the service, the young people will meet for breakfast and spe- cial discussion groups on Purim. At 1 p.m. the • syna- gogue's USY chapters will sponsor . a carnival for the entire community. There will be games, prizes and food till 5 p.m. Tickets will be sold at the door. Temple Kol Ami's Purim festival, with games, food and entertainment for temple families, will take place at West Bloomfield Middle School 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Sun- day. There will be costumes. booths, music, games and food. Bnai Moshe Senior USY members will read the Me- gila 7 p.m. Saturday in the main sanctuary. The Junior Congregation will hold an oneg Shabat pre-Purim lunch- eon Saturday after services. There will be a Purim skit and Israeli songs. Boys and girls age 5-7 who 'participate in the Saturday story hour will have a Purim party, in- cluding a puppet show and refreshments, Sunday. Cong. Beth Achim's Mr. and Mrs. Club will have a games party 7:30 p.m. Sun- * * * 5;000 Friends Share in Purim, Bnos Chabad, an Oak Park teen-age •irl's group, has found 5,000 friends to benefit from their Purim project. Although Jewish law states that it is one's duty to send two Purim gifts to a friend, Bnos Chabad went a step further and sent Shalakh Manot to Jews in Southfield and Oak Park. The 12 girls, with some assistance from friends, packaged 5,000 gifts consisting of two edibles and 2 pennies. Thus each of their 5,000 friends may fulfill the mitzva of Matanot Lo'evyo- nim, the giving of one cent to each of two poor people. They have distributed 3,500 packages to afternoon He- brew schools and day schools. In keeping with Lubavitch teaching of "love for one's fellow Jews," the girls will go door to door on Purim Sunday in Oak Park and Southfield area. day. There will be prizes. For ticket information, call Abe Meral, 557-8757. Shaarey Zedek youth groups is planning a carnival 1-4 p.m. Sunday. There will be prizes, costumes and food. Pinsker Progressive Aid Society will hold its annual Purim party at 8 p.m. Mon- day at Cong. Bnai Israel. Entertainment 'c m itt e e members Louis Levin, Na- than Samet and Harry Laker, planned the program. Re- freshments will be served. Odessa • Progressive Aid So- ciety wil have a Purim party 8 p.m. Saturday 'at its meet- ing place. Hosts are Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ring. Proceeds will go to the Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund. Yeshivat Beth Yehuda's annual Purim play will take place 9:15 p.m. Saturday at the Yeshiva. Entitled "Play Uforatzta for Me," the origi- nal comedy musical is open to all. Proceeds will go to P'eylim. Tickets will be sold at the door. Radomer Aid Society's post- Purim party wil be held 7 p.m. Tuesday et the Work- men's Circle Center. There will be a full-•ourse dinner, Israeli movie and games. Friends are invited. The Jewish Center's Re- tired Men's Recreation Club will celebrate Shushan Purim 12:30 p.m. Monday in Room 202. Dr. Eva Kahane, assist- ant professor and director of the Elderly Care Research Center at Wayne State Uni- versity, will speak on "Serv- ice Needs ,S ervic es and Service Utilization for Senior Adults." Traditional refresh- ments will be served. Reser- vations are required. Livonia Jewish Congrega- tion USY will have a carnival noon-4 p.m. Sunday at the United Hebrew School build- ing. Lunch, games and prizes will be available to all. . Bnai David Club Sets Oneg Shabat Cong. Bnai David will hold the first of a cultural series of oneg Shabat programs 8:15 p.m. today at the synagogue. The opening pro- gram is planned for adults and children. _ Dr. Irving Edgar, presi- dent of the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, will speak on "The History of the Jews in Michigan." The program will begin with traditional singing and dancing. Refreshments will follow, and the public is in- vited. Committee members are Rabbi Hayim Donin, Cantor Hyman Adler, Meyer Ber- man, Irving Belinsky, Stan- ley Finkelstein, Max Sosin, Mike Must, Arthur Chaims and Sandy Schore. For information, call chair- man Paul Sherizen, 545-8753. Hospital Bills Parents of Quints $13,000 CHICAGO — James and Lynn Baer, who recently be- came the parents of quin- tuplets, finally got their hos- pital bill — $13,000. A spokesman at Evanston Hospital said Blue Cross- Blue Shield would cover about 80 per cent of the bill, leaving Baer' with $2,500 to pay. The bill 'could have been higher, but Mrs. Baer entered the hospital before the rates were increased. Cantor to Look at 'Meaning of Jewish Music' at Adas Shalom Cantor Samuel Rosenbaum will address the Adas Shalom Adult Study Institute on "The Meaning of Jewish Music: for the Ages, for Now" 8:45 p.m. Tuesday at the syna- gogue. Executive vice president of the Cantors Assembly of America, he has served for over 25 years as cantor of Temple Beth El, a Conserva- tive synagogue in Rochester, N.Y. He has had many of his musical works published, among which is "Festival and Sabbath Songs for the Young Singer." In collabora- tion with Shalom Secunda he wrote a musical work "If Not Higher," which premier- ed in Rochester in 1964 and featured Richard Tucker and the Rochester >Philharmonic Orchestra. Since then, he has completed three additional works, among them a work with Shalom Secunda in memory of the S'ix Million, entitled "Yiskor," and fin- ally, a book, "Sounds of the, Sabbath," a collection of Sabbath songs which was published in January. The lectures' are' moderat- ed by Rabbi E. Segal. A social hour follows each lec- ture. 20—Friday, March 16, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS HABONIM CAMP TAVOR An Unforgetable Camp Experience All Camp Activities PLUS .. . Israeli Song and Dance Discussion and Special Events Work Program — Co-Ed 10-16 Registrar Ethel Silberg 968-8726 Slide Presentation Available YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK-WOODS Invites you to buy your home in Oak Park • a buyer$ market — Save money — lower mortgages • smaller lots — less grass to cut • substantially built homes by Etkin,. Markle, Wolok, etc. • excellent community facilities, police and fire departments • stabilized taxes—no new schools or street paving required • city water and sewer systems • neighborhood shopping • walk to Schul — ours • join a Schul—ours—very reasonable dues and building fund • give yourself a health break—rest Shabbos—walk to our Schul The Council of Orthodox Rabbisis Pleased To Announce the Opening of Another Kosher Bakery COUNTRY CORNER BAKERY LOCATED IN LARGE SHOPPING CENTER • FARMER JACK • CUNNINGHAM DRUGS Special This Week BANANA CAKE KA& FRUIT STRIPS .. lb. la IF Assorted Hamantashan for Purim 30760 Southfield at 13 Mile Rd. Southfield, Mich. CATERING TO SYNAGOGUES & COMMUNITIES 646-7159 O Under Our Strict Supervision. We Ask . The Community to Patronize the Shomer Shabbas V 3 Bakeries. AMPLE FREE PARKING WANTED EXPERIENCED SALESGIRLS