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March 11, 1988 - Image 70

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-03-11

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

I LOCAL NEWS I

Chef Boyardee® Pac-Man® Smurf:m ABC's
& 1, 2, 3's, and Tic Tac Toes pasta is
serious food kids love to eat. While we
make our pasta in shapes kids find fun to
eat, we also make sure they're filled with
good ingredients like: rich, ripe tomatoes,
aged cheese and enriched wheat flour. So
Chef Boyardee pasta is a source of protein
that's also 95% fat free, and contains com-
plex carbohydrates without any preserv-
atives. No wonder both kids and moms
thank goodness for Chef Boyardee.

ood Pro du cts. Inc

Kids find us fun,
but our pasta's no joke.

Play Features
Evelyn Orbach

Thank Goodness for Chef Boyardee

Pac-Man ° and c 1980,1982 Bally Midway Mfg Co All Rights Reserved Smurf TM c 1985 Peyo. licensed by Wallace Berrie Licensing



N\

,„

• `•



Evelyn Orbach
The adult education com-
mittee of Temple Israel in-
vites the community to a one-
act, one-woman play featur-
ing Evelyn Orbach at 8 p.m.
March 21 at the temple.
The play, entitled Mercy,
depicts the struggle of one
woman in colonial America
for the individual rights and
freedoms of all Americans.
The presentation is made
possible by a grant from the
Michigan Council for the
Humanities, and is entitled A
Night Different from All
Others.
Following the presentation
of the play, there will be a
dialogue on human rights
with Richard Lobenthal,
director of the Anti-
Defamation League; Dr. Fran-
cine Gingold, author of the
play and artist in residence
for the State Arts Council of
Oklahoma; and Paul Winter,
professor of humanities at
Wayne State University.
Tickets are available by
calling the Temple office.
There is no admission charge.

Cantor, Choir
Set To Perform

his choir directed by Eli Jaffe,
will appear in concert on
March 14 at the Michigan
Inn, at a dinner-concert
which will be hosted by
Yeshivath Beth Yehudah in
honor of Rabbi Norman
Kahn.
While pursuing religious
and secular studies at
yeshivot and at Haifa Univer-
sity, Naftali Herstik received
a wide and varied musical
education, at first with his
father, later from Heilman,
Ravitz, and Bick (Haifa
academy of Music), then as
protege of Moshe Kussevitzky
in New York, and more
recently with Benvenuto
Finelli and Mark Raphael, in
London.
Reservations may be made
by calling Yeshivath Beth
Yehudah, 557-6750.

Readers Theater
Program Set

The first performance of the
spring series of Readers
Theater will take place at 4
p.m. March 20 in the DeRoy
Studio Theater at the
Maple/Drake Jewish Com-
munity Center.

A complimentary pre-
theater wine bar will begin at
3:15 p.m. The theme of the
program is "Fathers" and
works by Mordecai Richler,
Jerome Weidman, Leo Rosten
and Irena Narell will be read.
Sonny Eliot will serve as host.
The next two performances
will be held on April 17 and
on May 15. Readers Theater
is sponsored by the Institute
for Retired Professionals at
the Jewish Community
Center and is endowed by the
Irwin and Sadie Cohn Fund.
For individual ticket or
series subscription informa-
tion, call The Community
Center, 967-4030.

\s `

m'ml

FOR MEN

Senior Men
Talk About Taxes



• '

Naftali Herstik

Chazzan Naftali Herstik,
chief cantor of the Great
Synagogue of Jerusalem, and

70

FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1988

The Southfield Senior
Men's Club will have CPA Eli
E. Robinson as its guest
speaker on Wednesday at 1
p.m.
He will speak on 1987 in-
dividual income tax returns
and the many changes
brought about by the Tax
Reform Act of 1986. The
meeting will be at the
McDonnell Towers Senior
Center. The public is invited.
Admission is free.
Refreshments will be served.

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