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September 17, 1999 - Image 98

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-09-17

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

Did You Know...

Mixed Media

When your stock portfolio is looking good, it makes
financial sense to increase your charitable giving.

interest as she hoists a cell phone. It's

50

4

That's right. And a philanthropic fund is a great way to do it.

Make a gift of securities, cash or property, and you can recommend where you'd like
charitable distributions from the fund to be placed. Join more than 1,000 others who have
created endowment funds totaling almost $300 million with distributions of approximately
$20 million per year to local and national charitable organizations. The charities that are
important to you and your family benefit, while you receive tax deductions — both at the
time of the donation and at any subsequent time that you contribute to the fund.

To find out more about philanthropic funds, the benefits to you and your community,
call a member of the endowment staff at (248) 642-4260.

The Jewish Community

Endowment Fund

to

-lercition
i--e,,.
T his isE

United Jewish
Foundation

of netropotiton Detrext

*********************************

-9(

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Advertise in our Arts & Entertainment Section!

?/17
999

a8 Detroit Jewish News

Lichtenstein's way of poking fun at
viewers' preconditioned responses to a
bare-skinned lovely.
Also on display are the artist's note-
books, showing how he drew inspira-
tion during his 40-year career from
print ads, the Yellow Pages and his
beloved comics. There also are 11
sculptures of objects — including a
chair, a mirror and a plant — inspired
by two-dimensional counterparts in
the paintings. Ironically, the pieces
hold their own as individual artworks •
outside their settings. .
The MCA is offering a 96-page cata-
log of the exhibit for $25. The museum
is at 220 E. Chicago Ave. Admission is
$71$4.50 for students and seniors/chil-
dren 12 and under free. Admission is
free on Tuesdays. For more information,
call (312) 280 2660.

-

— Molly Woulfe
Copley News Service

Closer to home, the David Klein
Gallery presents an exhibition
titled "The Prints of Roy
Lichtenstein," featuring about a
dozen of the artist's works,
through Oct. 2. The imagery
found in his prints closely paral-
lels the development in his paint-
ings. The earliest, 1965's The
Melody Haunts my Reverie, is a
classic Pop image that has become
an icon of 20th-century art. The
most recent print is the large-scale
Modern Room, from 1990. Also
included is Lichtenstein's Tel Aviv
Museum Print (1989), a litho-
graph painted in 15 colors. The
David Klein Gallery is located at
163 Townsend, Birmingham.
Gallery hours are 11 a.m.-5:30
p.m. Monday-Saturday. For more
information, call (248) 433 3700.

-

Between The Pages

"Teshuvah" is often translated as
repentance, although many would
agree that the complexity of the
Hebrew word is lost in translation.
Rabbi Dov Peretz Elkins uses instead
the word "transformation."
One of his two new books pub-
lished this season is Forty Days of
Transformation: Daily Reflections of
Teshuvah for Spiritual Growth from
Rosh Hodesh Elul to Yom Kippur
(Growth Associates).
The book draws its thoughtful read-
ings from diverse sources, including the

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