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March 03, 1995 - Image 88

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-03-03

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

seen through the lens of Dr. Her-
schel Shulman.
David Margolis, 10, son of Dr.
Harold and Marlene Margolis,
downed a bowl of soup made by
his bubbie, Sally Margolis. Mrs.
Margolis reports that her late hus-
band, Arnold, advertised his busi-
ness, Margolis Household Shop, in

The Jewish News.

PHOTO BY NANCY HAND ELMAN

Nancy Handelman captured 11-
year-old daughter Amy reciting
her prayers with her special kip-
pah and Siddur.
The six days wind down with
another Adat Shalom Nursery
School day as Stephanie Shifman
helped her cousin, Lainey Rubin,
complete her challah.
Across Northwest-
ern Highway, the chil- Top: Stephanie
dren of the Beth
Shifman helps
Hayeled "Lion
her cousin,
Room" celebrated
Lainey Rubin,
Shabbat in prepara-
tion for Friday night.
complete her
Carli Zeman acted
challah.
in a Shabbat play at
Temple Israel's Fami- Bottom left:
ly Camp. The prior
Amy
week, Super Sunday
volunteers from Adat Handelman,
Shalom took over the 11, practicing
phone banks.
her prayers.
The Six Days end.
But the pulse, the
Bottom right:
continuation of Jew-
Preparing for
ish life remains un-
Shabbat at the
ending film. How we
ourselves act as Jews
Beth Hayeled
and how we teach our
Nursery
children will deter-
mine what that pic-
School.
ture will be for all of
us for generations to
come.
The central themes in this pho-
to essay focus in on several areas:
Shabbat, education and family.
They continue in all of our person-
al family albums.
This keepsake Six Days In Oc-
tober is the family album for all of
us.

PHOTO BY SHARON HART

"He promised that if he were
undersold, the customer would get
a 10-pound box of matzah for free.
During inflation, he had to cut it
back to 5 pounds of matzah."
It was a day when little Scott Ja-
cob Wasserman, with his brit mi-
lah, would become part of the
Jewish people.

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