72 Friday, September 14, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

ON THE AIR

CLASSIFIEDS

WHERE HANDBAGS & JEWELRY
ARE A STATEMENT OF FASHION!

Hunters Square, 31065 Orchard Lake Rd. at 14 Mile

851-4460

0 11

Mon. thru Sat. 10-6, Wed. & Fri. 10-9, SUNDAY 12-5

for All
Your Needs

RANDIE DESIGNS FALL SALE
HANDMADE DESIGNER SWEATERS

Mohairs, Chenilles, and Novelty Yarns

SATURDAY, SEPT. 15th
through
SATURDAY, SEPT. 22nd

THE JEWISH SOUND: 6:15
a.m. Sunday, WMJC-FM (95) and
8 a.m. Sunday, WNIC-AM (1310).
Rabbi Yitzchak Kagan is the
moderator.

HELLO JERUSALEM: 5 p.m. I
Sunday, Cable Channel 43 (SPN),
features from Israel. (Program
time is subject to change without
notice.)

RELIGION IN THE NEWS:
9:05 a.m. Sunday, CKWW (580),
Rabbi Jonathan V. Plaut is the
moderator.

RELIGIOUS SCOPE: 8:50 p.m.
Sunday, Channel 9, Rabbi
Jonathan V. Plaut will moderate
a program of Jewish interest.

NATIONAL JEWISH TELE-
VISION: 1-4 p.m. Sunday, Cable
Channel 26, a program of interest
to the Jewish community. (Pro-
gram time is subject to change
without notice.)

COFFEE WITH HY: 8 p.m.
Monday, WCAR (1090), a pro-
gram of community interest,
moderated by Hy Shenkman.

HA KOL: THE JEWISH
VOICE: 4:30 p.m. Sunday,
WDET-FM (101.9), Dave Leben-
bora and Sheldon Ross will discuss
Jewish art post World War II;
Larry Bassin and Yossel Green-
baum play Yiddish music; Leben-
born and Howard Simon of the
ACLU outline church-state sep-
aration.

-

10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

2980 W. 12 Mile Rd.

YIDDISH IS HEIMISH: 8:30
p.m. Monday, WCAR (1090), an
all-Yiddish program of music,
news, interviews and other fea-
tures with Hy Shenkman.

CAFE SHALOM: 9 p.m. Mon-
day, WCAR (1090), music, news
and features from Israel plus
community announcements, withJ
Bella Greenbaum, Fay Knoll,
Masha Silver and Marilyn Smith.

(next to the Berkley Theatre)

Eban-narraged 'Heritage' TV
series begins Oct. 1 on WTVS

543-2697

no credit cards

0

Salon

TESE121.3.-

The Sculptured Nails Artistry

of

Maria

loehmann's-hunter square
31225 orchard lake road and - 14 mile • farmington hills

855-5055

To film the historically sweep-
ing first episode of the nine-part
series "Heritage: Civilization and
the Jews," which premieres Oct. 1
at 9 p.m. on Channel 56,
producer/director Peter Rosen
and his crew set up headquarters
in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv from
which to direct filming on loca-
tion.
Shot in Israel's Sinai and Negev
deserts, Part I includes the story
of Abraham and his descendants,
the Flood story, the Exodus, the
giving of the Ten Commandments
and the wandering in the desert
for 40 years.
Filmed and researched for the
past four years in more than 18
nations on four continents, "Heri-
tage" uses art and artifacts, his-
torical sites and primary literary
sources to tell this story of West-
ern Civilization and the experi-
ence of the Jewish people within
it.
"Heritage" host is Abba Eban.
Eban served as minister of educa-
tion and culture under Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion, de-
puty prime minister under Levi
Eshkol, and finally minister of
foreign affairs.
Eban's various diplomatic posts
have ranged from serving as Is-
rael's representative to the
United Nations upon her inde-
pendence in May 1948; vice
president of the General Assem-
bly of the United Nations in 1953,
and dual role as both Israel's Am-
bassador to the Unied States and
chief Israel delegate to the United
Nations from 1950 to 1959.
During World War II, Eban
served as a major in the British
Army; served on the British
minister of state's staff in Cairo;
as intelligence officer in
Jerusalem training Jewish volun-
teers, and as chief instructor at
the Middle East Arab Center in
Jerusalem.
Eban, who was graduated from
Cambridge University, is a fellow
of the World Academy of Arts and

Sciences, the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences, and the only
living member of the Orator's
Hall of Fame.
Eban holds honorary doctorates
from such universities as New
York University, Boston Univer-
sity, the University of Maryland
and the University of Cincinnati:
He has been a visiting professor at
Columbia University's School of
International Relations (1974)
and has been a scholar-in-
residence- at the Institute for Ad-
vanced Study at Princeton.
"Heritage" originated with a VI
million grant from the Charles II))
Revson Foundation, and has been
financed since by additional funds'
from that foundation and other
private and public organizations
including the National Endow-
ment for the Humanities, the
Corporation for Public Broadcast-
ing, the Public Broadcasting
Service, as well as from individual
contributors.
Local education and outreach
efforts are being partially funded)
through a grant from the Unites?
Jewish Charities to the Jewisl_
Community Council of Metropoli--
tan Detroit.
Limited numbers of viewers)
guides are available from Chan-I
nel 56 for study or discussion)
group leaders. The Jewish Com-
munity Council will make pre-
view questions, historical back-
ground and suggested reading
lists available to the community]
upon request. The guides also are
available from the national
American Jewish Committee
office, 165 E. 56th St., New York
N.Y. 10022. Contact Phoebe
Mainster at Channel 56, 873-
7200, or Patty Liss at the Council,'
962-1880, for information.
Among local community efforts'
planned in conjunction with the )
series is Lunch and Learn: Heri-
tage Discussion, noon, Oct. 2,
16, 23, 30, Nov. 6, and 20 at the'
main Jewish Community Center)
Dr. Sid Bolkosky is the discussion

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