G
LUG L1i8 SEMI-ANNUAL
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JOCKEY PANTIE
Here's To
SUMMER GO
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'PAJAMAS • 30% OFF
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Roxanne and Gate
Selected
EVINE SLIPPERS
FF
Oy 15, 2000
GLuGLusGLingetie
Maple at Lahser (Next to Blockbuster Video) • Bloomfield Hills
Open 10 - 6 Daily • 248-644-4576
Rabbi Herbert A.
Yoskowitz of Adat
Shalom Synagogue
was elected presi-
dent of the
Rabbinical
Assembly of
Rabbi
Michigan Region.
Yoskowitz
His Rabbinical
Assembly address
on adult Jewish education was
published in the Proceedings of the
Rabbinical Assembly.
Leah Nurenberg of Bloomfield
Hills won a third-place prize of
$250 for her "Why I Love Music"
essay in the contest sponsored by
the Detroit Symphony Orchestra
Volunteer Council. Nurenberg is
an eighth-grade student at
Cranbrook Kingswood Middle
School.
Susan Seligson Jacobs, formerly of
Farmington Hills and a career
member of the Senior Foreign
Service; has been nominated by
President Clinton and confirmed
by the U.S. Senate to be the U.S.
ambassador extraordinary and
plenipotentiary to Papua, New
Guinea, to the Republic of the
Solomon Islands and the Republic
of the Island of Vanuatu. She
serves as deputy assistant secretary
of state in the State Department's
Bureau of Legislative Affairs.
Several corporate and civic leaders
have been elected to the board of
trustees of the Community
Foundation for Southeastern
Michigan. Three are David
Hecker, secretary-treasurer,
Michigan Federation of Teachers
and School Related Personnel;
Martin B. Zimmerman, vice pres-
ident of governmental affairs, Ford
Motor Company; and David
Hermelin, co-owner, Palace Sports
and Entertainment Centers.
Max David Weiss, former
Detroiter of Laguna Hills, Calif.,
has been accepted at graduate
school at Stanford University in
California. Max's father Dr. Allan
Weiss, also of Laguna Hills, went
to Hawaii to sponsor an 11-year-
old boy from California who has
leukemia; Dr. Weiss ran 5 1/2
hours to raise funds for leukemia.
Fran Weiss Delorme of Oak Park
participated in a five-mile walk to
prevent breast cancer.
Two local writers were among
those receiving writing competi-
tion awards from the Detroit
Women Writers and the Friends of
the Detroit Public Library. Sheila
Cohen of Detroit won for a fic-
tion piece titled "Playing Games
with Andy and Pat." Debra
Darvick of Birmingham won for a
non-fiction selection, "Life and
Death," from her book-in-
progress.
Eco Shabbat At Shir Tikvah
Bead
urniture 248-666-2880
.7350 Highland Rd. .(M-59), Waterford
just west of Oakland International Airport
7/7
2000
44
Patio F
Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10-9; Thurs., Wed., Sat 10.6; Sun. 11.4
Congregation Shir Tikvah, in con-
junction with the South Eastern
Michigan Coalition on the
Environment and Jewish Life (SEM-
COEJL) will host an Eco Shabbat
6:30 p.m. Friday, July 14, with a
potluck vegetarian dinner.
The two organizations will spend
Shabbat evening focusing on the
connection between the earth, the
environment and Judaism. The ser-
vice, to be conducted in Shir
Tikvah's new outdoor sanctuary with
the assistance of Rabbi Marla
Feldman, will begin at 7:45 p.m.
SEMCOEJL is the brainchild of
Shir Tikvah congregant Catherine
Greener. The local chapter is co-
chaired by Rachel Cohen of Ann
Arbor and is sponsored by
Congregation Shir Tikvah (Troy),
Temple Israel (West Bloomfield),
Temple Beth Emeth (Ann Arbor)
and the Jewish Community Council
of Metropolitan Detroit.
The evening of July 14 will con-
sist of songs and prayers focused on
the environment.
To attend the pot-luck dinner,
contact Ann Leavitt-Gruberger,
(734) 747-8851. For information
about the service or SEMCOEJL,
contact Catherine Greener, (248)
414-9388.