on early Jewish worship. hours are 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 7The Mountain of the Sundays, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Bethany Yarrow, daughter of Peter Lord," running Dec. 2-Jan. Mondays-Wednesdays and Yarrow of Peter, Paul & Mary folk 27, will feature architec- 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Thursdays. music renown, will join her father in a turally accurate scale models (248) 661-7641. Jewish Community Center-sponsored of the Tabernacle in the Chanukah concert 8 p.m. Saturday, wilderness, Solomon's Dec. 4, at Temple Emanu-El, 14450 W. HEAVENLY SEX Temple, Herod's Temple 10 Mile Road, Oak Park. and the Temple Mount in Known for her frank dis- Growing up in a musical family, Jerusalem, edifices counted cussion of what goes on Bethany Yarrow followed a different • GAIL ZININIERNIAN among the most beautiful behind bedroom doors, Dr. Arts v' Enter path from her famous dad, becoming a buildings of the ancient Ruth Westheimer is Editor documentary filmmaker. Her film about world. America's most famous women in the townships outside of All the models in this human sexuality expert. Cape Town, South Africa, aired on PBS exhibit were designed by Dr. Leen Born in Germany in 1928, she was and was shown at film festivals around Ritmeyer, an archaeologist and Temple sent at age 10 to a school in Switzerland, the world. scholar from Britain, and built by York which became an orphanage for most of After graduating from Yale Modelmaking of York, England. the German Jewish students who had University, she married a painter from At 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 2, there been sent there to escape the Holocaust. Chile, where she moved to make films, will be an opening night lecture by Dr. At 16 she went to Palestine, where she write for newspapers and sing. Ritmeyer and the organizer of the exhib- fought with the Haganah for Israeli Returning to New York, she discov- independence. She then moved to ered singing to be her natural Paris, where she studied at the forte, and began writing songs in Sorbonne and taught kindergarten. both English and Spanish. She She immigrated to the United States incorporates Middle Eastern, in 1956. African, African-American, Latin Dr. Ruth started her nationally and rock 'n' roll melodies into her syndicated radio show, Sexually works and currently performs in Speaking, in New York City in 1980, venues throughout the East and hit the lecture circuit. In addition Coast. to teaching at New York University Peter Yarrow, in addition to his and having her own private practice, innumerable contributions to the she leads seminars for residents and world of folk music, is noted for interns in pediatrics on adolescent his commitment to social change sexuality. She is the author of 15 and works with hospice, art and books, including Heavenly Sex, which Holocaust remembrance and describes sex in the Jewish tradition. education programs. Dr. Ruth comes to Ann Arbor's The Dec. 4 concert, part of Michigan Theater 8 p.m. Wednesday, the JCC's Julius Chajes/Encore Dec. 1, in a program tided 'An Concert Series and co-sponsored Evening with Dr. Ruth, sponsored by by Neighborhood Project and the University of Michigan Hillel and Temple Emanu-El, will feature U-M's University Activities Center. the 'song 'Light One Candle" and Tickets are $10/$5 students and are other melodies made famous by Peter and Bethany Yarrow per form a JCC available at the Michigan Union Peter, Paul & Mary. Chanukah concert on Dec. 4. Ticket office and all Ticketmaster Tickets are $10 for JCC mem- outlets. (248) 645-6666. bers/$15 for nonmembers and are available at both the D. Dan and Betty it, Benjamin Adelman, chairman of the Kahn Building in West Bloomfield and 'POI IERY PARADISE Friends of the Israel Exploration Society. the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building in The models will be displayed on the Oakland Community College's Royal Oak Park. For tickets, call (248) 661- first level of the gallery and educational Oak Campus potters, all advanced stu- 7649 or (248) 967-4030. materials for both children and adults dents or alumni of OCC's Ceramic will be available to view on the second Technology Program, celebrate their level. 24th annual Potters Market this year MASTERFUL MODELS The gallery is located in the D. Dan Dec. 2-5. The Janice Charach Epstein and Betty Kahn Building of the Jewish Featuring more than 130 potters Museum/Gallery's next exhibit will focus Community in West Bloomfield. Gallery exhibiting their work in a variety of DAUGHTER & DAD styles, forms and-techniques and with an expected 10,000 visitors, the potters market is the largest sale of its kind in the country. Hand-built, wheel-thrown, raku and pit-fired pottery as well as high- and medium-fired stoneware and porcelain will be featured. Pieces are continuously restocked throughout the weekend. Looking for a last-minute Chanuka gift? Check out the cooking and serving pieces, sculpture and wall art, garden items, tiles and jewelry that will fill the aisles of the market, located at the United Food and Commercial Worker's Union Hall in Madison Heights. The 12,000-square-foot hall is located at 876 Horace Brown Drive, two blocks south of 13 Mile Road between Stephenson Highway and John R The preview and advance sale, with an admission fee of $10, takes place 6-9 p.m. Thursday, Dec 2. Admission is free 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 3-5. For more information, call (248) 544-4974. "LIBERTY' FOR ALL At 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 30, the Detroit Film Theatre at the Detroit Institute of Arts will host a special, advance benefit premiere of Academy Award-winning director Barry Levinson's newest film, Liber t y Heights, a dramatic and richly comic look at the issues of race, class and religious distinction as seen through the eyes of a Jewish family in the 1950s. The film isn't due to open in area theaters until Dec. 25. Two of the film's stars, Ben Foster and Rebekah Johnson, will be on hand to introduce the film, which also fea- tures Joe Mategna, Bebe Neuwirth and Adrien Brody. Tickets are $10, and all proceeds ben- efit the DFT. As an added bonus, tickets to the Liberty Heights premiere also will include free admission to a special marathon screening of Levinson's other Baltimore-based films, Diner, Tin Men and Avalon, which will take place at the DIA on Dec 4. For more information and to reserve tickets for the Nov. 30 DFT fund-raiser, phone the DIA's department of film at (313) 833-4686. FYI: For Arts and Entertainment related events that you wish to have considered for Out & About, please send the item, with a detailed description of the event, times, dates, place, ticket prices and publishable phone number, to: Gail Zimmerman, JN Out & About, The Jewish News, 27676 Franklin Road, Southfield, Ml 48034; fax us at (248) 354-6069; or e-mail to gzimmerman@thejewishnews.com Notice must be received at least three weeks before the scheduled event. Photos are appreciated but cannot be returned. All events and dates listed in the Out & About column are subject to change.