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Hill Street Forum
Celebration of Jewish Arts presents
Amos Oz, Israel's most celebrated novelist and
journalist, is also considered Israel's sharpest
social and political critic. His recent book In
the Land of Israel was universally lauded for its
sensitive but unsparing expose of attitudes in
Israel to the Middle East conflict.
Prior to Amos Oz's address, New York actress
Tamir will perform her one-woman portrayal of
five characters from In the Land of Israel.
Sunday, Nov. 9 • 8:00 p.m.
Rackham Auditorium
M
el 1429 Hill Street • 663-3336
Tickets are available now atTicketworld outlets in
the Michigan Union and at Hudson's.
(Visa/MasterCard: 763-8587) $10, $8, $5
Detroit
AMERICAN
SOCIETY FOR
Chapter
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
ISRAEL INSTITUTE
LA
guest speaker .. .
ADRIAN KANTROWITZ, M.D.
❑
❑
❑
❑
Professor of Surgery, Wayne State University, College of Medicine
Chief, Section of Cardiovascular Surgery, Sinai Hospital, Detroit
Author or co-author of nearly 200 articles published in medical journals
Has been granted five U.S. patents on medical devices
topic . . .
Artificial Hearts and Heart Transplants
Michigan Results
Continued from preceding page
ners in the 17th and 18th
districts, as was Rep. Howard
Wolpe (D-Lansing) in the 3rd
District. Wolpe's re-election
bid, a repeat of his 1984
campaign against Republican
Jackie McGregor, included
charges and counter-charges
along religious lines. Wolpe
is Jewish and McGregor ap-
pealed for fundamentalist
Christian support.
In state senate races, in-
cumbents Jack Faxon (D-
Farmington Hills) and
Richard Fessler (R-West
Bloomfield) won re-election.
Two supporters of Lyndon
LaRouche, Bill Goff of Col-
dwater and James Green of
Metamora, were easily de-
feated in out-state races.
In the state House of
Representatives, the follow-
ing were elected: David Hon-
igman (R-West Bloomfield),
Willis Bullard Jr. (R-Milford),
Maxine Berman (D-
Southfield), Judith Miller
David
(R-Birmingham),
(D-Huntington
Gub ow
Woods), and Wilbur Brother-
ton (R-Farmington).
Judge Jessica Cooper was
elected to the Oakland
Congregations Change
To Meet New Needs
BEN GALLOB
Special To The Jewish News
D
uring the new Jewish
year, American
synagogues of all
kinds will continue to try to
meet the new needs of Jews
created by massive lifestyle
changes, according to a report
in the official publication of
B'nai B'rith International.
The rabbi of a leading
Manhattan congregation, the
Stephen Wise Free
Synagogue, reported on plans
to destroy the synagogue's old
civil defense emblem and to
declare the synagogue "a
nuclear-free zone," writes
Ruth Mason in the Jewish
Monthly.
moderator:
Bernard J. Cantor
•
•
•
•
Board Member, Detroit Technion Chapter
Trial attorney in patent, trademark and copyright cases in Federal Courts
Former Examiner in the United States Patent Office
Lectured on patent subjects at Wayne State University and at Bar Associa-
tion and engineering groups
7:45 p.m. Thursday
NOV. 20
4
30
Friday, November 7, 1986
, UNITED HEBREW SCHOOLS
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
21550 West 12 Mile Road/Southfield
Court.
Circuit
County
Stephen Cooper and Judge
Susan Moissev were elected
to the 46th District Court in
Southfield.
Statewide, former U.S.
Senator Robert Griffin , and
Judge Dennis Archer were
elected to the Supreme Court.
Area winners for Oakland
County Commissioner seats
included David Moffitt (R-
Birmingham), Dennis Aaron
(D-Oak Park), Lawrence Pen-
rick (D-Southfield), John
Olson (R-Huntington Woods),
Alexander Perinoff (D-
Southfield), Angus McPher-
son (D-Berkley), Don - en-
sen (R-Birmingh
McConnell (R
Hills), G. Willi
(R-Walled Le
Law (R-West
McD',
John
Farmington Hil&
West Bloomfield
proved two millage 3
purchase recreationa'
and build a new police
quarters, but defeated a roan
paving project. Oak Park vot-
ers approved a $24 million
bond issue for road improve-
ments.
Rabbi Balfour Brickner
agreed that it "sounds silly
for a synagogue to declare a
`nuclear-free zone,' " but, he
contended, it stirs up the
community. What "we are
really trying to say," the
rabbi declared, is that "there
is no defense against nuclear
attack."
Other congregations, plan-
ning less dramatic actions,
will nevertheless continue to
remain "on the ,cutting edge"
of social action, by continuing
to feed and shelter the home-
less; provide sanctuary for
Latin American refugees,
thus creating the threat of
legal penal action; and estab-
lishing support groups for
new parents and day-car cen-
ters with Jewish content.
"The most pressing prob-
lem synagogues now face is
the linked one of singleness
and divorce," a rabbi told
Mason.
"By the year 2000, 49 per-
cent of American children
will be sitting down :to dinner
with one parent," predicted
Rabbi Morris Friedman of
Temple Hillel in North
Woodmore, N.Y.
the -
said
Friedman
synagogue must counter the
"trend" away from Jewish
tradition, partly by helping to
strengthen existing families.
He reported that Temple
Hillel held a model Seder last
Passover for families and
that it holds partly subsidized
Friday night family dinners,
which are occasions for ._
blessings, group singing and
"a word of Torah." Temple
Hillel also has a paid, part-
time social worker who coun-
sels troubled families free of
charge.
Such adaptations for a
rapidly changing Jewish
society are not limited to
non-Orthodox synagogues.
Rabbi Joseph Grunblatt of
tho Orthodox Queens (N .Y .)
Jewish Center declared that
singleness and divorce are
two major problems "that are
beginning to hit us as well."
He noted that his synagogue
sponsors some programs for -
singles, but prefers to "inte-
grate single people by
encouraging families to invite
them for Shabbat."
Mason considers Lincoln
Square Synagogue, with a
wide ranging program of
courses and activities, a