100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 18, 1987 - Image 49

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-09-18

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

r

TEELTpo

$1 oo

OFF

THE BEST BUILT POOLS
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE

ANY TOP 50 LP
OR CASSETTE

Quality Built by

VINCE ASSEMANY
and AL ASSEMANY

VALID ANYTIME

I GAYNORS

ORCHARD-14 SWIM MITER
ORCHARD LAKE RD. & 14 ME
HOTLINE:
'

ESTIMATES-NO OBLIGATION

626-6355

30505 W. 13 MILE ROAD
FARMINGTON, MICHIGAN

--1

J

STACY CUSTOM DRAPERIES

ONE OF MICHIGAN'S OLDEST DRAPERY COMPANIES

FREE

DESIGN
SERVICE

SHOP AT HOME

OVER 10,000 SAMPLES TO CHOOSE FROM
SWAGS — SALOONS — CORNICE BOARDS

Working on the HiIlel campaign are Nate Rubenstein, Dr. Conrad Giles,
Mandell Berman, David Handelman and David Bittker.

Hillel Ground-breaking
Set For October 4

Construction will begin in
October for the new home of
the University of Michigan
Hillel Foundation.
A
ground-breaking
ceremony is scheduled for 2
p.m. Oct. 4 at the Hillel site,
1429 Hill Street in Ann Ar-
bor. A reception will follow at
the home of University of
Michigan President and Mrs.
Harold T. Shapira
The new 27,000-square-foot
facility is expected to be ready
for occupancy in the fall of
1988 and will serve an
estimated 1,500 Jewish
students each week with its
film, lecture, religious and
classroom programs.
With the move to a larger
building, Hillel will accom-
modate a greater number of
students with a chapel, a
library, a larger dining hall
for kosher meals, and a
400-seat performance hall,
which will replace the anti-
quated auditorium in the old
facility.
The $4.65 million capital
and endowment campaign is
being coordinated through
the Jewish Welfare Federa-
tion and its United Jewish
Charities.
More than 50 local leaders,
and alumni throughout the
U.S. have already pledged
more than $2.3 million.
Mandell L. Berman, Dr.
William Haber and Alan E.
Schwartz are honorary
chairmen of the fundraising
drive. Samuel Frankel, Joel
D. Tauber and Herbert S.
Wander are chairmen.
The U-M Hillel program is
one of the three largest cam-
pus HiEels in North America.
Its activities in the arts,
religion and Jewish and com-
munity action issues reach
the university's 6,000 Jewish
students — 11/2 percent of the
total Jewish student popula-
tion in the U.S.

IRV KORENS
INVENTOR: CHROMEIGOLD
VERTICAL BLINDS

STACY

MEMBER BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU

SPECIAL SALE $ 1400 YD. FABRIC NOW $8 69

"IMAGINATION IN STYLING—SENSIBLE PRICES"

24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE

18444 W 10 MILE RD.
SOUTHFIELD, MI

557-8740

FREE
ESTIMATES

In addition to the building
fund, the endowment cam-
paign will enable Hillel to
underwrite important
speaker programs in the
future.

imm•••••1 NEWS frimm"""

5 Refuseniks To
_ Leave USSR

New York (JTA) — Five
more long-term Jewish
refuseniks and their families
have received permission to
emigrate from the Soviet
Union and will soon go to
Israel, the Long Island Com-
mittee Soviet Jewry (LICSJ)
reported last week.
The five — Lev Elbert of
Kiev; Lev Furman, Yosef
Radomyslsky and Abba
Taratuta, all of Leningrad;
and Anna Lichterova of Mos-
cow — were all first refused
permission to emigrate more
than 10 years ago.
Their permission follows
the announcement that four
other long-term refuseniks in-
cluding losif Begun and
Viktor Brailovsky also would
be allowed to emigrate. In ad-
dition, it was reported that
Australian Soviet Jewry ac-
tivist Isi Leibler had accepted
an official invitation to spend
Rosh Hashanah in Moscow as
a guest of the Jewish com-
munity center there. He is
believed to be the first non-
rabbi involved in interna-
tional Jewish affairs to
receive a formal invitation
from the USSR in the Gor-
bachev era.
More than 300 Jews who
became refuseniks at least 10
years ago remain in the
USSR, according to Lynn
Singer, LICSJ executive
director. She considered the
latest releases as a bid "to get
rid of the stars."

You are an individual, and a university
student, or a Young professional

And you're a Jew.

You have a thinking, sensitive,
questioning mind. You wonder about the
true Purpose of living.

You're tired of superficial humanistic
cliches, ambiguous sermons. diluted
Prayers, and meaningless rituals.

If YOU want authentic solutions to the
nagging, challenging questions .. .

UEFE '2riD110 1CAD NMMEM
W, g@r 9 -ffE6 'Etg a 1 , 07EW
Uga-giD6 ggabn [igMlgo
EMMNDAM PTW@T@,
hn@l]@@Mrk MUDINOW
6bg@MN@Ego ME6 (ID@T@.

G

For information and reservations please call:

(313) 968-4835 OR (.3 I 3 968-0339

Machon ('Torah

The Jewish Learning
Network of
Michigan

• ..On The High
Holidays

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

47

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan