Arts Life CONGRATULATE YOUR STUDENT'S SUCCESS Digest with an ad in The Jewish News featuring our 2005 graduates! ISSUE DATE: May 19, 2005 AD DEADLINE: May 13, 2005 • sample ad (4.75" x 3" size) - Congratulations, Temple Beth El congregants will remember the Holocaust Thursday, May 5, with a 7 p.m. Yom HaShoah service. Sam Offen, a Holocaust survivor, will be the guest speaker. The temple's evening of remembrance will include cantorial music and a candlelighting cer- emony with participation by the tem- ple's high school students. In addition to the Yom HaShoah can- dles mailed to temple families to be lit on May 5 in memory of the victims of the Holocaust, each family also received a post card with the name of a Holocaust victim. They have been asked to bring their cards to temple that evening so that the name may be read prior to the mourner's Kaddish. The community is invited to join temple members in this observance. For information, call Barbara Grant, (248) 851-1100, ext. 3149. _• Maddy Zingle We are very proud of you and all your accomplishments! May your future be filled with health, happiness and success. Border #1 J Love always, Mom, Dad & Max SIZES/PRICES 4.75" x 2" — '45 _4.75" x 3" — S65 4.75" x 4" — S85 4.75" x 5" — WO Additional sizes available upon request. Border #2 0 Holocaust Recalled Border #3 U Yom HaShoah Marked Border #4 a Shaar Hashomayim Synagogue in Windsor will sponsor a Yom HaShoah program 7 p.m. Thursday, May 5. Speakers will include children of Holocaust survivors, David Abraham, Miriam Finkelstein and Dr. Morrie Kleinplatz. The Windsor Community Choir will perform. A Yom HaShoah cemetery service will be held Thursday, May 5, 11 a.m. at Shaar Hashomayim Cemetery. Border #5 U L For more information, call 248.351.5100 Interfaith Leaders Honored Please write your congratulatory message legibly. Be sure to enclose photo if you'd like. If you would like your photo back, please include a self addressed stamped envelope - Border Choice #: Check Enclosed for $ Acct. # ❑ Visa PI MasterCard Ei AmEx Signature Exp. Date WE CANNOT PRINT YOUR AD WITHOUT THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION, WHICH WILL BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL. Name Telephone Address City State Zip E-mail 4/28 2005 68 Attn: Meg — The Detroit Jewish News 29200 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 110 Southfield, MI 48034 Phone: 248.351.5100 • Fax: 248.304.0049 .80. Dr. William Hall Harter, pastor of the 1,000 member Falling Spring Presbyterian Church in Chambersberg, Pa., will be honored at the Ecumenical Institute for Jewish-Christian Studies' annual Dove Dinner Thursday, May 12, at Congregation Shanrey Zedek in Southfield. The fund-raising event salutes individ- uals who represent the institute's mis- sion to bring Christians and Jews together for dialogue, study and fellow- ship, while promoting understanding and respect. The Dove Dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. Business attire is suggested. Kosher dietary laws will be observed. Tickets to the benefit are $175 per person. The Rev. Dr. Harter will be the recipi- ent of the James R. Lyons Award in Christian-Jewish Relations. He has worked for many years to further inter- faith relations and is co-founder of the National Christian Leadership Council for Israel and of Presbyterians Concerned for Jewish-Christian Relations. He has also been a member of numerous organizations such as the National Council of Churches commit- tee on Christian-Jewish relations and the National Middle East Task Force of the Presbyterian Church (USA). Local residents Gerson I. Cooper of Bloomfield Hills, president and CEO of the Farmington Hills-based Zieger Health Care Corporation-the Botsford Health Care Continuum; Tarik Daoud of Bloomfield Hills, owner and chair- man of Al Long Ford and Shamrock Ford-Lincoln Mercury; and the Rev. Edward Mullins of Bloomfield Hills, rector of Christ Church Cranbrook will receive Ecumenical Institute Legacy Awards. For Dove Dinner tickets and sponsor- ship or underwriting opportunities, call (248) 557-4522. Judaic Studies Program The Michigan Jewish Institute will launch the area's first bachelor degree program in Judaic studies. Local students will now have the chance to learn Hebrew language, Jewish history and Jewish philosophy while pursuing a degree. Students may elect one of three curricular concentrations: general Jewish studies, Jewish organiza-- tional leadership or Jewish education. Classes will begin in the fall semester and enrollment for classes has begun. The Michigan Jewish Institute is a pri- vate senior college with locations in West Bloomfield and Oak Park. The college opened in 1994 and has offered programs in business and technology. For more information about this and other programs at the Michigan Jewish Institute, call the school, (248) 414- 6900, visit online at www.mji.edu , or e- mail at info@mji.edu . Survivor Gives Talk The M.C. Zeiger Sports & Entertainment Unit of B'nai B'rith, B'nai B'rith Great Lakes Region, Anti- Defamation League (ADL), Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) and Holocaust Education Coalition will present Dr. John G. Stoessinger, profes- sor, author and political analyst. He will speak on "United States, Iraq and the Middle East ... Reflections of a Holocaust Survivor" at 7 p.m. Sunday, May 22, at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. Light refreshments will be served at this free program. Call B'nai B'rith, (248) 646-3100, or the ADL, (248) 646-2440.