PRESEASON SALE Join us for a PREVIEW OF SUMMER and enjoy exceptional savings on all BROWN JORDAN COLLECTIONS. Our SPECIAL ORDER SALE is going on now. Serving our customers for 30 years. Open 7 days. 828 North Main Street I Downtown Rochester I 248.652 1080 casualconceptsinc.com migair l aiPMw if you are no t wearing it... sell it!... or BORROW on it! W You can't enjoy jewelry if it's sitting in your safe deposit box. Sell or borrow on it for immediate cash. We deal in jewelry, watches, diamonds and coins. A Service to Private Owners, Banks & Estates Contact Larry Allan 33700 Woodward Ave. • • Between 14 Mile & Lincoln Birmi Igham, 248-644-8565 i Keep your company top of mind with our readers. ADVERTISE WITH US! CALL 248.351.5107 16 March 31$ 2011 Visit theJEWISHNEWS.com JN Temple Emanu-El Scholar Is Israeli Rights Activist The executive director of the Israel Religious Action Center in Jerusalem will be Temple Emanu-El's scholar- in-residence April 1-3. Anat Hoffman served as a Jerusalem city councilwoman for 14 years, where she worked for the right of women to pray at the Western Wall Anat Hoffman and for adequate municipal ser- vices for the more than 200,000 Palestinian citizens of Jerusalem. She has also fought against Orthodox control of the city council, which she says would dictate lifestyle choices for the secular population of Jerusalem, and she has fought tire- lessly for religious pluralism. Hoffman says, "Progressive Jews are the biggest donors [taxpayers] to the State of Israel. Israelis pay some 48 percent in income taxes, yet do not have equal allocation or repre- sentation. "Ultra Orthodox rabbis get paid by the government. IRAC works against the encroachment of the ultra Orthodox influence, the most extreme, in public life for marriage rights, divorce rights, and religious rights." The weekend events with Hoffman are co-sponsored by the Metropolitan Federation of Reform Synagogues, Congregation Shir Tikvah, Emanu- El's Community of Learners and the Emanu-El Sisterhood. Friday, April 1: 6 p.m. wine and cheese pre-oneg, free; 6:30 p.m. Shabbat services; 7:30 p.m. Shabbat dinner and presentation "Call Us When You're Right: Working for Social Change in Israel." Dinner is $36 patron, $25 sponsor, reservations only. Saturday, April 2: 12:30 p.m. Lunch and Learn Shabbaton, "The Search for Cracks in the City of Stone: An Anatomy of the Struggles for Pluralism in Modern Jerusalem." Lunch is $12, reservations only. Sunday, April 3: 9:30 a.m. "Between the Stones and a Hard Place — The Struggle of Women of the Wall," free. For reservations, contact the temple, (248) 967-4020 or www. emanuel-mich.org . B'nai Moshe Men's Shabbat On Friday, April 8, the Congregation B'nai Moshe Men's Club will hold its annual Man of the Year dinner Sidney honoring Sidney Kraizman Kraizman. Dinner will be served at 7 p.m. following evening services at 6 p.m. Dinner reservations are manda- tory; contact (248) 788-0600 or web- moshe@cavtel.net. On Shabbat morning, April 9, the Men's Club annual Shabbat weekend will continue as members of the Men's Club lead services. Project Paperwork Holds Volunteer Training The Jewish Community Relations Council's Project Paperwork is seek- ing volunteers to assist low-income clients fill out the online applications required to obtain state benefits. A special training workshop will be held 5:30-7:30 p.m. Monday, April 4, at the Max M. Fisher Federation Building in Bloomfield Township. Conducted by the Food Bank Council of Michigan, the workshop will instruct volunteers how to assist clients with the online application for the Food Assistance Program or the Bridge Card program (previously called food stamps), which provide supplementary funds for low-income individuals and families to purchase food. A compli- mentary dinner will be provided for workshop participants. Space is lim- ited and reservations are required. For reservations or information, contact JCRC Community Relations Associate Sarah Crane, (248) 642-2649 or scrane@jfmd.org. Tzedakah Event On target to raise over $3,000 for char- ity in Tapper's watch battery replace- ment program's first quarter, the family-owned jewelry store's program will now benefit the John D. Dingell VA Medical Center in Detroit with money raised April 1 to June 30. "Making Time for a Good Cause," which launched in January, is Tapper's newest charitable program, which provides complimentary simple watch battery changes in exchange for a sug- gested minimum donation ($10) to charity. The program will benefit a dif- ferent charity every quarter. For information, contact www.tap- pers.com or (248) 932-7700.