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December 31, 1993 - Image 42

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-12-31

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

Shabbat Services
for Singles

The Reform and Conservative Congregations of the Metropoli-

tan Detroit area are proud to announce the 1993-94 series of

monthly Shabbat Services for Jewish Singles. If you are a single

REFORM

Jew in the Detroit community, please join us for Shabbat Ser-

Congregation Shir Tikvah
Temple Beth El
Temple Emanu-El
Temple Israel
Temple Kol Ami
Temple Shir Shalom

vices. Services begin on Friday evenings at 8:30 p.m. and are

followed by an Oneg Shabbat, featuring a speaker and program.

The next Singles Shabbat Service will be
hosted by

Crime Fight
Is Joined

Participating Congregations:

Washington (JTA) — Spark-
ed by a series of violent in-
cidents and growing unease,
the issue of crime has soared
to the top of the American
agenda, and President Clin-
ton has been trying to in-
volve the religious commun-
ity in crime-fighting efforts.

CONSERVATIVE

Adat Shalom Synagogue
Beth Abraham Hillel-Moses
Congregation Beth Achim
Congregation Beth Shalom
B'nai Moshe
Shaarey Zedek
Shaarey Zedek - B'nai Israel
Center

Congregation Beth El
7400 Telegraph Road
Bloomfield Hills

Friday, January 7, 1994, 8:30 p.m.

featuring
George Cantor

Israel: A Strange Kind of Peace

George Cantor, a native Detroiter, is an award winning
journalist. With the Detroit News since 1979, Cantor has
recently returned from the Middle East where he covered the
development of the Israel-PLO peace accord. Prior to this
assignment, he had a two-year stint as a sports columnist.

David Saperstein:
Helped coordinate the letter.

His most recent book,"America's Historic Indian Landmarks,"
was published by Gale Research in May, 1993. Its prede-
cessor, "Black History Landmarks," was honored by the
National Library Association for distinguished achievement.
Cantor's three-volume travel series for the University of
Michigan Press, "The Great Lakes Guidebook," is now in its
second printing. He also has written "Where the Old Roads
Go," a two-volume set outlining the history along the back
roads of New England and the Southwest.

George Cantor

This program is sponsored by the Michigan Board of Rabbis, in
cooperation with The Jewish News and the Jewish Community
Center. These Shabbat Services have been made possible by a grant
from the Max M. Fisher Foundation of the Detroit Jewish Federation.

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"I am very, very worried
about the enormous amount
of crime and violence that is
engulfing our country and is
taking a terrible toll on chil-
dren in this country," the
president said in a round-
table discussion with nine
reporters from religious
news services including the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
"And I'm worried about
the fact that we have not
been able to fashion an ade-
quate response to it," he
said.
Last month, Mr. Clinton
delivered an address on
crime at the Memphis chur-
ch where the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. preached
his last sermon.
Crime is due to the
breakdown of the family and
the community and the dis-
appearance of jobs, Mr. Clin-
ton said.
The nation, he said, must
realize that the Fight against
crime "cannot be done by
government because we
have to reach deep inside to
the values, the spirit, the
soul and the truth of human
nature."
Mr. Clinton invoked the
Rev. King's name, asking
kvhat the slain civil rights
leader would have thought.
of the crime and violence
prevalent in today's society.
In response, a group of re-
ligious leaders xv-rote to the
president, praising him for
his speech and offering to

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