ARE YOU HAVING TROUBLE FINDING TIME TO GET THINGS DONE?? ON CAMPUS Time is Money, Inc. Megillah Readings At U-11 Offers Services to Simplify Your Busy Life INDIVIDUAL PERSONALIZED SERVICES • Moving? Let us do the waiting for you! • Weekly Errands • Vacation House Maintenance SKLAR 661-5005 HILLEL DAY SCHOOL El El LT> NOW ACCEPTING KINDERGARTEN AND FIRST GRADE ENROLLMENTS FOR FALL 1987 Please do not assume that you cannot afford a Hillel Day School education for your child Come in and speak with us. Rabbi Robert Abramson, Marcia Fishman, Headmaster Executive Director For further information call Rochelle Itzkovitz, Assistant Principal. 851-2394 — 32200 Middlebelt — Farmington Hills, Ml 48018 Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit admits Jewish students of any race, color, national or ethnic origin. Its admission and scholarship programs are non-discriminatory. No child will be denied an education at Hillel because of parents inability to pay the full charges. Tuition allowances will continue to be granted based on individual needs. CALMAN SHEMI NEW ACQUISITIONS SOFT PAINTINGS exclusively in Michigan at Danielle Peleg Art Gallery Inc. 57755 W. Maple Rd., Suite 105, West Bloomfield (1 blk. W. of Orchard Lake Rd.) Open Mon.-Fri. 10-5 626 5810 And by Appt. - 76 Friday, March 13, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation at the University of Michigan will have two Megillah readings on Satur- day at 8 p.m. at Hillel, 1429 Hill St. One will be tradi- tional and one "not quite tra- ditional." Participants should dress appropriately. Following the reading will be Purim Bash '87, featuring two local music groups — Strangers on a Train and The Difference. Purim refresh- ments will be available. There is an admission fee. Prof. Tikva Frymer Kensky will continue Hillel's lecture series on Women in Judaism with a talk on "Women in Jewish Life" at 7 p.m. Mon- day at Hillel. Prof. Kensky is the instructor for Women and Religion at the University of Michigan. On Tuesday, at 8 p.m. at the University of Michigan Law School, the Jewish Law Students Union will present Amos Shapira, professor of Constitutional law and former dean of the law school of Tel Aviv University. He will speak on "Legally Com- batting Racism in Israel: The case of Meir Kahane." Prof. Ken Helphand, head of the school of landscape and architecture at the Univer- sity of Oregon, will present "The Landscape of Three Opinions," a slide-show lec- ture on the landscape of Is- rael at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Hillel. On Thursday, at 6 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium there will be a multi-media pre- sentation of "American Pi- ctures: Poverty and Racism in America." It will be pre- sented by Jacob Holdt. Except for the Purim Bash '87, all events are free and open to the public. For infor- mation, call Hillel, 1-663- 3336. Holocaust Conference Begins March 22 At U-IVI The eighth annual Confer- ence on the Holocaust at the University of Michigan will take place March 22-25. This year's theme "Realms of Re- membrance," will explore the various ways in which people seek to preserve the memory of the Holocaust. Jewish and Christian views on the mat- ter will be explored as well. All events are free and open to the public. On March 22, Beate Klarsfeld will present the keynote address, entitled "Wherever They May Be! One Woman's Moral Crusade Against Nazism" at 7 p.m. in Hale Auditorium at the U-M Business School. Mrs. Klarsfeld is a German-born Christian who has dedicated her life to the moral rehabilitation of Ger- many and the support of the State of Israel. She is one of the foremost Nazi-hunters in Europe and was responsible for the location and exposure of former SS Captain Klaus Barbie, "The Butcher of Lyon." Mrs. Klarsfeld lives in Paris with her husband, Serge, and two children. In 1977, Israel nominated her for the Nobel Peace Prize. Her dedication and tireless efforts were recently po- rtrayed in a film on her life, presented by ABC-TV. Prof. James E. Young will present "The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memo- rials and Meaning in Europe, Israel and America" at 7:30 p.m. March 23 at Hillel Au- ditorium. Young is a professor of English at New York Univer- sity. He is the author of sev- eral scholarly works in the field of Holocaust literature, with two books soon to be published. Prof. Young is an associate editor of The Jewish Quarterly, and has lectured at Yad Vashem and the He- brew University in Jerusalem. Prof. Young will examine and discuss the manner in which countries around the world choose to commemorate and communicate the mes- sage of the Holocaust through monuments and memorials. His talk will be accompanied by a slide presentation. Artist and sculptor Henry Friedman will present "Art of the Holocaust " on March 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Hillel large social hall. Holocaust survivor and sculptor, Friedman will dis- play his sculptures, all of which deal with the Holocaust or Biblical events. His works have been ex- hibited throughout the Metro Detroit area, including Mercy College, the U-M Dearborn campus, several secondary schools and museums. A Memorial service for the martyrs of the Holocaust will be at 7:30 p.m. March 25, fol- lowed by a special showing of the film Kaddish at 8 p.m. in the Hillel Auditorium. Kaddish is the true story of a young Jew in America com- N