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March 27, 1981 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-03-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETHEiltVISHAEk

30 Friday, March' 21, 1981

Gray Panther Leader Kuhn to Speak at Tenn ple Emanu-El

speaker of the temple's
Sunday Speakers' Series.
Ms. Kuhn has almost
single-handedly created
and built a national move-

Activist, humanitarian
and author Margaret E.
Kuhn will speak at Temple
Emanu-El April 5 at 7:30
p.m. Ms. Kuhn is the final

CONGREGATION BETH ACHIM

Presents

HY SHENKMANS

THIRD ANNUAL VARIETY SHOW
Sunday, March 29th, 1981
At 8:00 P.M.

Wasserman Hall

•LARRY BASSIN

Guitarist

In Rendition of Yiddish Soul Music

•DAVE HALL

Incredible Man of Magic

• CANTOR JOSEPH BIRNHOLTZ

Potpourri of
Yiddish-Cantorial and Hebrew Selections

• HEIDI HEPLER

Miss Michigan

Operatic Repertoire

Accompanied at Piano

Public Invited

Dr. Sholam Kalib

No Admission

Geo. J. Rossman —

Chairman

ment — the Gray Panthers.
The Gray Panther move-
ment is made up of 55,000
members, young and old to
eradicate "ageism," all
forms of discrimination be-
cause of age.
Aside from her involve-
ment with Gray Panthers,
Ms. Kuhn has served on the
boards of many organiza-
tions. President Carter ap-
pointed her to the panel on
the elderly of the
President's Commission on
Mental Health. She also
had worked with Ralph
Nader's Retired Profes-
sional Action Group before
that group formed the Gray
Panthers in 1973.
She is a former editor_
and has written many ar-
ticles and program mate-
rials. Her books include
"You Can't Be Human
Alone," "Let's Get Out
There and Do Something
About Injustice" and
"Maggie Kuhn On Ag-
ing." She was the subject
of two documentary
films, one as a panel
member in "Aging in
America," and the other

as herself in "Maggie.
Kuhn: Wrinkled Radi-
cal."
Ms. Kuhn holds a
Bachelor of Arts degree
from Flora Stone Mather
College of Case-Western
Reserve University in
Cleveland, did graduate
work in social group work,
sociology and ethics at
Temple University and
Union Theological Semi-
nary. She has taught at the
University of Southern
California, University of
Hawaii, San Francisco
Theological Seminary and
La Salle College in
Philadelphia. In May 1978,
she was awarded honorary
doctorates by Swarthmore
College and Moravian Col-
lege.
Among the awards she
has won are: Humanist of
the Year by the American
Humanist Association and
the 1977 Fellowship. The
1978 World Almanac
named her one of the "25
most influential women in
America."
Tickets may be purchased
at the door.

Bet El to Host Fackenheim
as Scholar-in-Residence

Prof. Emil Fackenheim,
distinguished professor of
philosophy at the Univer-
sity of Toronto, will be the
scholar-in-residence at
Temple Beth El today
through Sunday. The theme
of the weekend is "A Jewish
Existence in the Epoch-
Making Age."
At 8:30 p.m. today, Dr.

Announcing the

SHOMREY
EMUNAH
ANNUAL BANQUET

Wednesday, April 1
at 6:30 pm.

SOUTHFIELD SHERATON HOTEL
17017 W. Nine Mile Road
Southfield

HERSCHEL FOX
Singer & Comedian

Donation $90 per couple

PROF. FACKENHEIM

Fackenheim will speak on
"Jewish Existence After the
Holocaust." The Bar Mitzva
of Adam L. Brook will be ob-
served.
On Saturday at 10:30
a.m. Prof. Fackenheim will
lecture on "The Zionist Im-
perative Today." The Bat
Mitzva of Elissa Michele
Malkin will be observed.
At the Havdala Service at
7 p.m. Saturday, Dr. Fac-
kenheim will speak on "The
Sabbath as Messinic An-
ticipation: A Midrash on
Midrash."
. At the Sunday Morning
Breakfast Club, spon-
sored by the brotherhood
of the temple, Dr. Fac-
kenheim will speak on
"What Jerusalem Means
to Me."
- Dr. Fackenheim has writ-
ten more than a dozen books
and 150 articles. Born in
Germany in 1916, he has
lived in Canada since 1940.
He is a former Guggenheim
Fellow and a member of the
Royal Society of Canada.
His most recent book is
"The Jewish Return Into
History: Reflections in the
Age of Auschwitz and a New
Jerusalem."
The scholar-in-residence
weekend is sponsored by the
Theodore and Mina
Bargman Foundation.

ynagogue

Services

ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE: Services 6 p.m. today
and 9 a.m. Saturday. Michael Kraft, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE BETH JACOB: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi
Weiss will speak on "Love and Marriage Go Together."
CONG. BETH SHALOM: Services 6 and 8:30 p.m. today.
Rabbi Benjamin Z. Kreitman, scholar-in-residence,
will speak at late services on "Can Judaism Survive in
an Open Democratic Society." Rabbi Kreitman will
speak at 9 a.m. Shabat services and at Minha and at
Shalosh Seudot at 6 p.m. Saturday.
BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE: Services 8:30 p.m. today.
Rabbi Wine will speak on "Shrinking the Government
— The New American Rebellion." Lisa Schumacher,
confirmation.
CONG. BNAI ISRAEL: Services 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Via-
damir Wolozin of Buenos Aires, Argentina, will speak
on "The Mystery of the Red Heifer."
CONG. BNAI MOSHE: Services 6:20 p.m. today and 8:45
a.m. Saturday. Lainy Licht, Bat Mitzva.
DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE: Services 8 a.m. Saturday
Rabbi Gamze will speak on "Darwin and Genesis Do
Not Really Conflict."
TEMPLE EMANU-EL: Services 8:15 p.M. today. Rabbi
Rosenbaum will speak on "Alien Fire." Laurie Buch,
Bat Mitzva. Services 10:15 a.m. Saturday. Steven Mor-
ton, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE ISRAEL: Services 8:30 p.m. today. Rabbi Lane
Steinger of Temple Emanu-El will speak on "What's
the Difference?" Susan Weinberg and Julie Wechsler,
Bnot Mitzva. Services 11 a.m. Saturday. Michael
Rudin and Mark Rattner, Bnai Mitzva. Havdala serv-
ices 5 p:m. Saturday. Matthew Egrin, Bar Mitzva.
TEMPLE KOL AMI: Services 8:30 p.m. today. In celebra-
tion of Jewish Music Month, the choir will present
a "Musical Celebration of Jewish Immigration to
America from 1881 to 1981" under the direction of
Nathalie M. Conrad. Services 10:30 a.m. Saturday.
Gregory Katzman, Bar Mitzva.
LIVONIA JEWISH CONGREGATION: Services 8 p.m.
today. Rabbi Gordon will speak on "Kosher Does Not
Mean Clean or Healthy." Services 9 a.m. Saturday.
CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK: Services 6 p.m. today and
8:45 a.m. Saturday. Shalom Paul will be the guest
speaker. Theodore Sherman, Bar Mitzva.
CONG. T'CHIYAH: Services 7:45 p.m. today. U.S. Dis-
trict Court Judge Avern Cohn will speak on "The In-
formal Organization of the Jewish Community in De-
troit."
Regular services will be held at Cong. Bais Chabad of
Farmington' Hills, Cong. Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield,
Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses, Cong. Beth Achim,
Temple Beth ,El, Cong. Beth Isaac of Trenton, Cong. Beth
Tefilo Emanuel Tikvah, Cong. Beth Tephilath Moses of Mt.
Clemens, Cong. Bnai David, Cong. Bnai Israel-Beth
Yehudah, Cong. Bnai Jacob, Cong. Bnai Zion, Cong. Dovid
Ben Nuchim, Cong. Mishkan Israel Nusach H'Ari, Sephar-
dic Community of Greater Detroit, Cong. Shaarey
Shomayim (Jewish Center Jimmy Prentis Morris Branch),
Cong. Shomrey Emunah, Cong. Shomrey Israel (18995
Schaefer), Cong. Solel, Young Israel of Greenfield, Young
Israel of Oak-Woods and Young Israel of Southfield.

Rabbi Steinger to Address
Temple Israel Services Today

Rabbi Lane Steinger, who
will succeed Rabbi Milton
Rosenbaum this year as
spiritual leader of Temple
Emanu-El, will occupy the
pulpit of Temple Israel at
8:30 p.m. services today.
Rabbi. Steinger, who has
been assistant rabbi at
Temple Emanu-El since
1976, will speak on "What's
the Difference?"
Ordained at • Hebrew
Union College-JeVvish In-
stitute of Religion in Cin-
cinnati, Rabbi Steinger
served three years at Tem-
ple Emanuel, Greenberg,
Pa., before coming to De-
troit.
He is a graduate of
Washington and Lee
University, Lexington,
Ky., where he earned his
degree with honors.
Since coming here, Rabbi
Steinger has been active in
numerous communal
organizations, including
the board of Resettlement

RABBI STEINGER

Service, Michigan Advisory
Board of Bnai Brith's
Anti-Defamation League,
the Soviet Jewry Task
Force, Jewish Vocational
Service and the Russian Ac-
culturation Committee of
the Jewish Community
Center.
He also is a member of the
Commission on Social Ac-
tion of the Union of Ameri-
can Hebrew Congregations.

`--

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