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December 21, 2017 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2017-12-21

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

HAPPY
HOLIDAYS!

Continue your holiday tradition!
Have dinner and a movie at The Maple.

THE MAPLE AND THE RIVIERA
ARE OPEN LATE ON CHRISTMAS
EVE AND WILL BE OPEN
EARLY ON CHRISTMAS DAY!

7PJR\WHNPM[JHYKH[[OLIV_VMÄJL

We are also open on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day!

For showtime & tickets, please visit themapletheater.com!

$

0''
BQVSDIBTFPG PSNPSFJO5IF.BQMF,JUDIFO

$

(Does not include concession stand and coffee counter purchases)
Expires 1/3/18 - Not valid with other coupons

'PS$BSSZPVUQMFBTFDBMMtUIFNBQMFUIFBUFSDPN

Proudly Serving:

8.BQMF3PBEt#MPPNýFME)JMMTø

5IF"SUPG'JMNt5IF"SUPG'PPE

jews d

in
the

Shul Offers
Superbowl
Shabbat
Hospitality

Congregation Darchei Noam, a
Modern Orthodox, Orthodox Union
member synagogue, is offering
Shabbat hospitality to football fans
coming to the Twin Cities for Super
Bowl LII.
On Feb. 4, the most widely
watched sporting event in the
country will be played at US Bank
Stadium in Downtown Minneapolis.
Darchei Noam is offering Shabbat
meals and housing to observant
Jews traveling to the Twin Cities for
the big game who need such accom-
modations.

The Jewish Fund Announces
Grant To Address Teen
Mental Health Needs

2017 Robert Sosnick
Award presented
to the Hamtramck
School Based Health
Center: Karen Sosnick
Schoenberg and Margo
Pernick, the Jewish
Fund; Sarah Peslar
Wilson, Hamtramck
School-Based Health
Center; Therese
Quattrociocchi-Longe,
Children’s Hospital of
Michigan Foundation.

'PSUIF#&45-6963:NPWJFFYQFSJFODF

DIFDLPVU THE RIVIERA.
HOLIDAY FILMS
This

seat is
you!
r
o
f
g
n
i
t
i
wa

For showtimes and to purchase tickets, please visit therivieracinema.com

(SBOE3JWFS"WFOVF 'BSNJOHUPO)JMMT

(off of 9 mile, just West of Middlebelt)

Have a FREE*
POPCORN on us!

Valid at The Maple & The Riviera
Expires 1/3/18

*Small bag of popcorn

34

December 21 • 2017

jn

“Despite the expected cold tem-
peratures in our part of the country
that time of year, Darchei Noam is
one of the warmest places in town,”
said Rabbi Max Davis of Darchei
Noam. “If you’re lucky enough to
have tickets to the game, we’d like
to offer you an opportunity to spend
Shabbos with our shul family.”
Send an email to superbowlshul@
gmail.com with hospitality requests.
First-come, first-served. To learn
more about Jewish life in the Twin
Cities, visit darcheinoammn.org. •

At its November board meeting, the
Jewish Fund approved a three-year
grant to the Jewish Federation of
Metropolitan Detroit that will be
utilized throughout the Jewish com-
munity to address the growing teen
mental health crisis.
Youth-serving organizations will
be provided professional training
for staff in three curricula: SafeTalk
and ASIST, which focus on suicide
prevention, and Youth Mental
Health First Aid, designed to identify
and refer youth exhibiting mental
health concerns. Eight hundred
staff, including teachers, counselors
and advisers, are anticipated to be
trained.
A total of $1.269 million in grants
was awarded to support the health
and welfare needs of vulnerable
populations within the Metropolitan
Detroit Jewish and broader com-

munities. Additionally, the annual
Robert Sosnick Award of Excellence
was presented to the Hamtramck
School-Based Health Center, in part-
nership with Children’s Hospital of
Michigan Foundation. The Center
provides needed preventive and pri-
mary care to children and families
in Hamtramck, many of whom are
legal immigrants who are ineligible
for Medicaid for non-emergency
health needs. The award comes with
a $25,000 prize.
The Jewish Fund board of direc-
tors also elected the following new
officers: Nancy Grosfeld, board
chair; Michael Eizelman, board vice
chair; and new board members
Michael Berger, Sherri L. Ketai,
Rabbi Harold Loss and Lawrence A.
Wolfe.
A complete listing of all grants can
be found at thejewishfund.org. •

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