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October 30, 2014 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2014-10-30

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

arts & entertainment >> book fair

Frankel Jewish Academy

The Bible's Cutting

Michigan's premier college preparatory
Jewish day high school

Room Floor

irs
Not
Impossible...

PAM JENOFF_

SIR NICHOLAS WINTON

OPEN HOUSE

H. ..n, 64,i1ildre,liwo Halemol,

1110 Ai,rovernd

Dr. Joel M. Hoffman

Special Events

An incredible collection of authors,
experts and entertainers are coming
to the Jewish Community Center's
63rd Annual Jewish Book Fair.
Here, some special programming:

Monday, November 3rd at 6:30 pm
Tuesday, December 9th at 6:30 pm

nd students are
Discover why parents and

making the FJA choice!

Note: All events at the 63rd Annual Jewish Book Fair are free and open
to the public, unless otherwise noted, and will be held at the Berman
Center for the Performing Arts or the Jewish Community Center in West
Bloomfield (WB), 6600 W. Maple Road, or the JCC in Oak Park (OP), 15110
W. 10 Mile Road.
Advance registration is recommended for all ticketed events. To purchase
tickets, go the www.theberman.org , or call (248) 661-1900, unless other-
wise noted.

BOOK CLUB NIGHT

6:45 p.m. Monday, Nov. 10 (WB)
Meet & Greet and Dessert
Reception
Ayelet Waldman: Love & Treasure

Keeping

tuition

affordable

with our
Flexible Tuition
Program

Call our admissions team for
Open House registration and shadow visits.

248.592.5263 ext 222

frankelja.org

Tickets are $18, or $36 including a
copy of the book. Reservations request-
ed by Oct. 31.

4

r c

BRUNCH AND
LEARN

Notice of Nondiscriminatory Policy as to Students:

Frankel Jewish Academy admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights,

privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school.

It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in the administration of

its educational policies, admission policies, scholarship programs, and athletic and other school

administered programs.

62

October 30 • 2014

A group of American soldiers
stationed outside Salzburg, Austria,
in 1945 capture a train filled with
contraband, from gold watches to fur
coats to Shabbat candlesticks. One
of the men — Jack Wiseman — is
charged with guarding the treasure.
Along the way, he meets the beautiful
Ilona, who has lost everything in the
Holocaust.
Seventy years later, Jack hands
a necklace to his granddaughter
and asks her to go in search of an
unknown woman.
Historical fiction at its finest, Love
er Treasure is compelling and unfor-
gettable, with a cast of characters
including a questionable art historian,
a family of singing circus dwarfs and
desperate lovers facing choices that
will tear them apart.

1955730

Noon Wednesday, Nov. 12 (WB)
Joel M. Hoffman: The Bible's
Cutting Room Floor: The Holy
Scriptures Missing from Your Bible

Not all stories of the Bible are
included in the text. Sometimes the
omission was due to political reasons;
sometimes it was because of the limits
of ancient bookmaking technology;
sometimes it was because it was sim-
ply forgotten.
Consider Abraham, for example.
How did the story of his early life
profoundly influence the person he
became?

The Bible's Cutting Room Floor

offers a fascinating account of the
stories and other material that didn't
make it into the Bible.

Tickets are $18 and include brunch,
held in Marion and David Handleman
Hall. Reservations requested by Oct.
31.

PATRON NIGHT

6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 12 (WB)
Barbara Winton: If It's Not
Impossible... The Life of Sir
Nicholas Winton

When Nicholas Winton's wife went
into a little-used attic in their home,
she never could have imagined what
she might find.
There, in an old box, she discov-
ered papers that told an incredible
story about her husband, Nicholas
Winton. Working with only a handful
of friends, Nicholas Winton had been
able to save the lives of more than 600
Jewish children during the Holocaust.

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