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March 22, 1985 - Image 68

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-03-22

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

68

Friday, March 22, 1985

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

MAX THE HANDYMAN

Kosins

• Former Apt. Maintenance Chief •

YOU NAME IT - I'LL DO IT!!

Uptown
Southfield Rd. at
11 1/2 Mile • 559-3900

window washing, screen repair, gutter cleaning, electric switches replaced,
door and lock repair, curtain rod design, caulking, cement repair, garbage
disposal replacement, plumbing, ETC., ETC., ETC.

Call 968-1145

airport transportation service available

Big & Tall
Southfield at
10 1/2 Mile • 569-6930

THE NEW IDEA
FROM LEVOLOR®!

Open 7 Days Mon.-Sat. 8 am - 6 pm, Sunday 9 am - 5 pm

Now Taking Orders For Passover

Strictly Fresh:

TURKEYS, TURKEY BREASTS,
CAPONS & SOUP CHICKENS

U.S.D.A. Choice

BRISKETS, RIB ROASTS,
FILET ROASTS AND MORE!!

PLEASE ORDER EARLY!

FLOUNDER STUFFED WITH SHRIMP & CRAB

$ 2 69 each

Treat yourself right!

1/4

U.S.D.A. Choice

DELMONICO
ROAST
Whole or Half

RIVIERA"
'/2 Inch Blind

When you see it,
you'll never again think of
blinds as they once were.
The thin lines melt into an
overall design enhanced by
the color of your choice.

The

BLIND
SPOT

$ 4 591b-

Cut and freezer wrapped free

644-1001

Holiday Carryout Service

Complete

Passover and Dinners

a la carte entrees,
appetizers and desserts

will again be available for your convenience
and enjoyment this holiday season

Call:

Quality Kosher Catering

352-7758 • 559-4610

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LOCAL NEWS

"Where Fit Is Foremost"

Can do anything in or out of the house

Federation Agencies
Prepare For Passover

During Passover the agencies of
the Jewish Welfare Federation
provide services for the Jewish
community, from assistance to
those in need to instruction in how
to conduct a 'Seder.
(All of the agencies named
below are beneficiaries of Federa-
tion's Allied Jewish Campaign.)
United Hebrew Schools stu-
dents will again share Passover
with their parents as they lead
and participate in model Seders at
the UHS branches. There will also
be a Seder designed for special
education classes.
"Supplemental Haggadah
Readings" are available from the
Jewish Community Council
office, 962-1880.
In addition, Council, in con-
junction with Temple Emanu-El
and its sisterhood, hosted more
than 125 Christian clergy, reli-
gious educators and church lead-
ers at a Passover workshop and
model Seder at the temple, con-
ducted last week by Rabbi Lane
Steinger.
At the Jewish Home for Aged,
the rituals of changing dishes and
spring cleaning will precede tra-
ditional Seders for residents on
the first two nights, • led by reli-
gious director Ira Zaidman. Vol-
unteers will assist at both Bor-
man Hall and Prentis Manor.
Prior to the holidays, JHA staff
— Jews and non-Jews alike —
will participate in discussions
about Passover and its meaning to
residents.
The new Fleischman Residence
will hold its first Seder this year.
Students from Temple Beth El
will hold their annual model
Seder at the Oak Park Jewish
Federation Apartments on March
31. Hechtman Apartments resi-
dents will come from West Bloom-
field to join them.
At the Jewish Family Service,
as part of their casework role,
counselors are especially sensi-
tive to those living on their own
who may experience depression
during the holiday.
For those in financial need, JFS
is assisting Morris Dorn of the
Mo'os Chitim (Passover fund for
the needy) by referring individu-
als requiring matzot, wine and fi-
nancial aid for the holidays.
Resettlement Service, which
assists immigrants to the Detroit
area, also refers clients, 137
families (220 persons) to Mo'os
Chitim. The distribution will take
place at Cong. Beth Tefilo
Emanuel Tikvah.
Kosher-for-Passover meals will
be served to all patients at Sinai
Hospital.
At the Jimmy Prentis Morris
Branch of the Jewish Community
Center in Oak Park, a "third
Seder" will be held April 11 at
noon for about 150 senior adults.
Cantor Sidney Resnick of Cong.
Beth El in Windsor will lead the
service.
Adults interested in attending
a secular Seder can join the
Jewish Parents Institute's annual
Passover luncheon March 31 at
noon, at the Maple-Drake Jewish
Center. Reservations for the
Seder are being taken at 661-
1000, ext. 158.

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. .

The Jewish Vocational Service
is working with Rabbi and Mrs.
Solomon H. Gruskin to prepare a
special Seder for nearly 250
handicapped and elderly who live
in isolation from the Jewish com-
munity.
Many of those attending the
Seder on April 9 at the Lubavitch
Center on Middlebelt are assisted
by the JVS Project Outreach pro-
gram.

ON CAMPUS

1111111=111111111

■ 11

U-M Sets Israel
Conference Day

Experts on Israeli art, litera-
ture, archeology and economics
will be among the speakers for the
first annual Israel Conference
Day Sunday at the University of
Michigan in Ann Arbor.

The day-long series of pre-
sentations and -workshops begins
with registration at 9:30 a.m. and
features a keynote addresss by
Prof. Moshe Maoz, chairman of
the department of Islamic and
Middle Eastern Studies at He-
brew University in Jerusalem.

The event is open to the public
free of charge. For information,
call Joseph Kohane, 1-663-3336.
Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg, of
Cong. Bais Chabad of West
Bloomfield, will discuss the prac-
tical application of Halachah for
Passover 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
the Chabad House on the U-M
campus, 715 Hill Street.
For information, call Cong.
Bais Chabad, 855-6170.

Child Abuse Forum
Slated At WSU

A multi-disciplinary approach
in the prevention and treatment
of child abuse and neglect is the
subject of a one-day conference to
be held March 29, 9:15 a.m.-3:30
p.m. Sponsored by Wayne State
University's Merrill-Palmer In-
stitute and Parent and Children
Together (PACT) of the Depart-
ment of Family and Consumer
Resources, the conference will be
held in the Merrill-Palmer com-
plex, 71 E. Ferry between Wood-
ward and John R. There is a
charge.

For information, call the
Merrill-Palmer Institute, 577-
5244.

Former MK
Speaks At WSU

Former Knesset member
Moshe Meron will speak on the
Israeli economy noon Tuesday at
the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation
on the campus of Wayne State
University.
Admission to the lecture is free.
A kosher luncheon will be avail-
able for a nominal fee. For infor-
mation, call the WSU Hillel,

577-3459.

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