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November 05, 1999 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-11-05

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

Every
Jewish home needs
the Jewish News.

If you have family or friends who are marrying, consider
giving them a subscription to the Detroit Jewish News.

It's the community's "book of why." With it, they'll keep in
touch with Jewish life. Interesting articles about their heritage,
the holidays, current events and politics. Plus art, literature,
dance, kosher cooking...who's having a baby, who's
having a bar mitzvah and who's passed away.

Give your newlyweds...or any family and friends who
want to stay in touch, a useful way to do it. Give them
the Detroit Jewish News by calling (248) 354 - 6620 today.

I'd like to send a 52-week Jewish News gift subscription
Plus 5 free issues of Style Magazine

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Mail to: The Detroit Jewish News
P.O. Box 2267, Southfield, MI 48037-2267
Phone: (248) 354-6620 • Fax: (248) 354-1210

Allow 2-3 weeks delivery of the Detroit Jewish News .

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1999

18 Detroit Jewish News

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DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

'TN

WHOME98

Above: Temple Emanu-El member Lynn Wolin of Southfield pauses with her plate of
spaghetti to chat with Rabbi Joseph Klein, a volunteer gardener and food-runner.

Below: Samantha Sinai, 9, of Huntington Woods, helps herself to a cookie.

Temple Emanu-El
gardeners complete their
first season by hosting
a spaghetti dinner
for the congregation.

DIANA LIEBERMAN
Staff Writer

M

embers of the Temple
Emanu-El Garden
Chavura put down their
pitchforks and watering
cans and turned their talents toward
the kitchen, hosting an end-of-harvest
spaghetti dinner.
For the Oct. 20 event, chief cook
Kathy Nelson of Berkley and her crew
cooked up a mess of spaghetti and
sauce — enough to serve more than
125 Temple members and their friends.
Other gardeners, including Rabbi
Joseph and Barbara Klein, volunteered
as servers and runners.
In addition to providing tomatoes
for the spaghetti sauce, the Temple gar-
den had yielded about 200 pounds of
produce by summer's end. Tomatoes,
zucchini and other vegetables were
delivered to Yad Ezra kosher food bank
and to the Anna & Meyer Prentis and
Harriet & Ben Teitel Jewish
Apartments, all in Oak Park.
None of this would have been possi-
ble without former Temple president
Bea Sacks, said Rabbi Klein. "She was
our guiding spirit."

Corrections

Benyamin Cohen's explanation of
who Nimrod was in the annals of
Jewish history in last week's
Judaism 101 installment (page 5)
should have noted that his sources
were the Midrash and the Torah.

A photo from Chabad's Children
of Chernobyl Sukkot concert,
seen on page 54 in the Oct. 15
issue, should have listed the fol-
lowing names: Phyllis Meer,
Esther Krohner, Dr. Arnold
Zuroff, Sheryl Krohner and
Naomi Krohner.

The name of Jeffrey Jenks, candi-
date for Huntington Woods City
Commission, was misspelled in
last week's story (page 26) about
the city commission candidates.

6

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