MAKING
INTERCULTURAL MARRIAGE WORK
pp-
DETRO I lls
a workshop for Jews and non-Jews
Addressing challenges of intercultural marriage
for couples who are tired of too many
questions and not enough answers.
At the end of the visit, the
couple prefers to leave by
themselves with the food,
though volunteers are there
to help. "Thank you, thank
you," the redhead keeps call-
ing. "Thank you so much."
This pair, in their early 30s,
are anything but the excep-
tion. "Our typical clients are
younger Americans who
have lost their jobs," Mrs.
Eizelman says. "What they
need is a little help to get
back on their feet."
"This is what I like," says
Sylvia Abramowitz, Yad
Ezra's assistant director. She
holds up two handfuls of sev-
eral hundred files, all former
clients. "It's a good feeling."
Though visitors to the food
bank comprise the vast ma-
jority of Yad Ezra's clients,
not everyone cares to ask so
directly for help. They are
not forgotten. Volunteers
from synagogues and tem-
ples throughout the city
make regular stops at Yad
Ezra. They pick up food and
deliver it not only to home-
bound families, but to those
f
y
The vast majority
of contributions
are small gifts.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 9:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.
at the
BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE
G EST
RATES
28611 W. 12 Mile, Farmington Hills
• Personal identity
• Developing a shared philosophy of life
• Celebrating two cultures
• Raising children
• Dealing with parents
• Dealing with the community
• Accepting your children's decision
Group Leaders:
Judith Schneider, M.S.W. Rabbi Sherwin T. Wine
And Others
Rev. Suzanne Paul
$15/per person (lunch included)
Call the Temple Office to Register: 477-1411
12 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
MINIMUM DEPOSIT $500
The Shaar Hashomayim
Town Hall Series
■
presents
4■ 06
a panel of professional
and laymen on the topic
-
HOW MUCH ABOUT THE HOLOCAUST
SHOULD WE TEACH OUR CHILDREN?
featuring
• Dr. Emanuel Tanay
• Dr. Rueben Schnayer
too embarrassed to walk
through the food bank's
doors. Yad Ezra workers call
them "our anonymous
group."
Sometimes, Mrs. Eizelman
is able to accommodate spe-
cial requests like the "anony-
mous group." Once, she and
Mrs. Abramowitz managed
to secure medicine for a
young man who couldn't pay
for his prescription. Another
time, they helped find a hot
plate for a family with no
oven.
All the food is paid for by
donations — and not of the
$10,000 in one shot variety.
The vast majority of contri-
butions are small gifts, in-
cluding those ubiquitious
white-and-blue Yad Ezra
tzedakah cans.
They're small donations,
but Yad Ezra welcomes them
with as much gratitude as
hosts of ambitious dinners di-
rect toward their sponsors.
"Eighteen and $25 contri-
butions add up," Mrs. Eizel-
man says. "Those donors are
our biggest supporters."
...,,......
• Dr. Bill McDermott
• Lynda Lev
Sunday, January 10th, 1993
7:00 p.m.
1
at
Congregation Shaar Hashomayim
115 Giles Blvd. East (corner Goyeau)
Windsor, Ontario
in the Charles Zalev Social Hall
3-SPEED
MONT BLANC PENS $89.00
INTERPLAK
40% OFF SUGG. LIST
TOOTHBRUSH A49 98
NOW ONLY $174.88
Cuisinart
PANASONIC FOOD PROCESSORS
BRAUN & NORELCO ELECTRIC SHAVERS
BREAD MAKERS $16998 TV's
SEIKO WATCHES 40%.50% OFF '2
WE CARRY BRAUN PLAQUE REMOVERS
ON SALE
SONY TOSHIBA
RCA ZENITH
PHONE ANSWERING MACHINES
Swiss Army Knives
OSCAR BRAUN'S
LINCOLN TOWERS SUITE 111 968-5858
15075 W. Lincoln (10 1/2. Mile) Mon. thru Fri. 10-4
Open Sat. 10-1
One Block East of Greenfield
This is a fixed rate account
that is insured to $100,000 by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC). Substan-
tial Interest Penalty for early
withdrawal from certificate
accounts. Rates subject to
change without notice.
*Effective Annual Yield When
Compounded Quarterly.
I
I
refreshments will be served
K-45 KITCHEN-AID MIXERS
I
%
PENS
LAMY
CROSS
PELIKAN
WATERMAN
FIRST
1
SECURITY
1 - SAVINGS BANK..
MAIN OFFICE
2600 Telegraph Rd.
(Just South of Square Lake Rd,)
BLOOMFIELD HILLS
i`
****
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*1
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...-V, .
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PHONE 338-7700
352-7700
EQUAL HOUSING
LENDER
HOURS:
MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30, FRI. 9:30-6:00
....... *