Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 18 THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE March 14, 1986
Synagogue Directory
Candle Lighting Time: 6:27 p.m.
Ahavath Achim (Conservative), 600 Peachtree Battle Ave., N.W., 355-
5222, Arnold Goodman, Rabbi; Dr. Harry H. Epstein, Rabbi Emeritus;
Marvin Richardson, Asst. Rabbi; Issac Goodfriend, Cantor. Daily
services, 7:15 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Friday, 5:30 p.m. and 8:15 p.m.; Saturday
morning 8:35 a.m., followed by kiddush; Sunday, 8:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Anshe S’Fard (Orthodox), 1324 North Highland Ave., N.E., 874-4513
Label Merlin, President; Nathan Katz Rabbi; Saturday, 9 a.m. (followed
by kiddush).
Atlanta Hiilel (Non-denominational), Drawer A, Emory Universitv,
Atlanta 30322, 727-6490. Zvi Shapiro, Rabbi. Dr. Aaron Shatzman,
Program Director, Friday, 6 p.m. (followed by dinner, Oneg Shabbat).
Beth David (Reform), Meeting at 869 Cole Dr., Lilburn, Button
Gwinnett United Church of Christ. Mailing address, P.O. Box 865,
Snellville 30278. 979-2773.. Rabbi Allred Goodman, Student Rabbi Joe
Black. Friday, 8 p.m.; C all for Sunday/ Hebrew school hours; Bar/ Bat
Mitzva classes available.
Beth Jacob (Orthodox), 1855 LaVista Rd.. N.E., 633-0551. Emanuel
Feldman, Rabbi; llan Daniel Feldman, Asst. Rabbi-Educational Director.
Daily morning Minyan, Monday and Thursday, 6:50 a.m.; Tuesday,
Wednesday and Friday, 7 a.m.; Daily evening Minyan 6:25 p.m. (Ciass in
Halacha nightly between Mincha and Ma’ariv); Friday evening 6:25
p.m.: Shabbat morning, 8:30 a.m. (followed by kiddush); Shabbat
evenings, 6:10 p.m. (Talmud group one hour prior to Mincha, followed
by Shalosh Seudot); Sunday 8 a.m. (followed by breakfast).
Beth Shalom (Conservative), 3147 Chamblee-Tucker Rd., 458-0489.
Leonard H. Lifshen, Rabbi, 451-9414 (h). Friday, 8 p.m., followed by
Oneg; Saturday, 10 a.m., followed by kiddush; Shabbat family Mincha,
Shalosh Seudot, Havdalah, 5 p.m., Saturday, 10 a.m.
Beth Tefillah 5065 High Point Rd., 843-2464. Rabbi Yossi New. Friday,
6:15 p.m.; Saturday, Torah discussion, 9a.m., service 9:30a.m., followed
by Kiddush.
B’nai Israel (Reform), P.O. Box 383, Riverdale, 30274, 471-3586.
Meeting at Christ our Hope Lutheran Church, 2165 Hwy. 138, Riverdale.
Margaret Meyer, student Rabbi. Friday, 8 p.m.; Religious school
Saturday, 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Hebrew school, Wednesday.
B nai Torah (Traditional), 700 Mt. Vernon Hwy., P.O. Box 76564,
Atlanta, 30328, 257-0537. Juda H. Mintz, Rabbi. Morning service,
Monday and Thursday, 6:50 a.m.; Tues., Wed. and Friday, 7 a.m.;
Sunday, 9:30 a.m.; evening service, Sunday-Thursday, 6 p.m.; Friday, 8
p.m.; Saturday morning, 8:45 a.m. Kiddush follows Friday and Saturday
services. Shabbat evening Mincha, Shalosh Seudot, Havdalah begins at
the candlelighting time of the week.
Emanu-EI (Reform), 1580 Spalding Dr., Dunwoody 30338. 395-1340.
Donald lam. Rabbi. Friday, 8 p.m., Saturday, 10 a.m.
Etz Chaim (Conservative), 1190 Indian Hills Pky„ Marietta, 30067,
973-0137. Shalom l.ewis. Rabbi. Friday, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, 9:30 a.m.;
Torah study, 10:1 5 a.m.; Monday and Thursday, 7 a.m.
Jewish Home 3150 Howell Mill Rd„ N.W., 351-8410. Nathan Becker
chairman. Religious Committee. Friday, 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, 9:30 a.m’
Relatives and friends of residents are welcome.
Kehillat Chaim (Reform), Office: 141 W. Wieuca Rd., N.W., Suite
202-A- Atlanta, 30342, 252-4441. Harvey .1. Winokur, Rabbi. Friday,
Northwest Unitarian Congregation, 1025 Mt. Vernon Hwy., 8:15 p.m’
Kol Emeth (Reform), P.O. Box 71031, Marietta. 30007-1301, 382i
Roswell Rd., Suite 6, Marietta, 30062. Services with student Rabb
Andrew Straus every other Friday, 8:15 p.m.; For information cal
Debbi Adelman, 973-3533.
Or VeShalom (Sephardic), 1681 North Druid Hills Rd., N.E., 633-1737.
Robert Ichay, Rabbi. Friday, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, 8:45 a.m.; Sunday
8:30 a.m.
Reform Jewish Students Committee, Emory University Student Center,
727-6496, Beth Fleet, director, Friday, April 18,6 p.m.
Shearith Israel (Traditional), 1 180 University Dr., N.E., Atlanta, 30306
873-1743, Judah Kogen, Rabbi. Arnold Samian, Asst. Rabbi/Director
of Youth Education. Weekday Mincha, Sunday-Thursday, 6:35 p. m
Weekday morning, Monday, Thursday, 6:50 a.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday
Friday, 7 a.m.; Friday 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m., 5:30 p.m.;
(followed by Shalosh Seudot and Havdalah) Sunday, 9 a.m.
Temple Sinai (Reform), 5645 Dupree Dr., N.W., 252-3073. Philip N
Kranz, Rabbi. Friday, 8:15 p.m., Saturday, 10:30 a.m.
The Temple (Reform), 1589 Peachtree Rd., 873-1731. Alvin Sugarman,
Rabbi; Samuel Weinstein, Assoc. Rabbi. Friday, 8 15 p m Saturdav
10:30 a.m. " y ’
Yeshiva High (Orthodox), 1745 Peachtree Rd., N.W., 873-1492. Rabbi
Herbert Cohen. Dean. Weekday services at 8a.m. at the AJCC: Mincha,
2:10 p.m. Community Beit Midrash meets at Beth Jacob Synagogue
Sunday-Thursday, 8 p.m.
Organizations
Models Carole Birnbaum, Marsha Chassner, Iris Liszt and Judy Miller
(left to right) will be sporting some of the fashions at Etz Chaim’s Razzle
Dazzle Fashion Show.
Etz Chaim Sisterhood plans event
Temple Emanu-EI plans
Purim carnival March 23
The Temple Emanu-EI Purim
carnival will be held from noon-
2:30 p.m. Sunday, March 23, at the
temple. There will be lunch, games
and prizes.
Hebrew Academy plans
open house March 20
The Hebrew Academy invites all
parents of new and prospective
students to an open house at the
school from 9:30-11 a.m. Thurs
day, March 20. There will be a dis
cussion with Dr. Ephraim Frankel,
headmaster and the staff, a school
tour; and a preview of the new'
school.
Spirit of Life chapter
to meet on March 20
Spirit of Life Chapter of the City
of Hope will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 20, at the home
of Janet Galanti, 4800 Village
North Court in Dunwoody.
Chuck Bernstein of Bernstein
and Associates will speak on
investments and estate planning.
For reservations and further
information, contact Sheila Adel
man, 396-4544.
OVS Sisterhood to hear
Citizens Against Crime
The Or VeShalom Sisterhood
will meet Thursday, March 20, at
the synagogue. Citizens Against
Crime, a national public service
organization, will discuss crime
prevention and self-defense tech
niques for men and women. The
public is invited, including teen
agers accompanied by a parent.
The 7:45 p.m. presentation will
be preceded at 7 p.m. by a fried
chicken buffet. Cost is $4.50 a
person.
For reservations and more
information, call the synagogue,
633-1737, Sandy Diamond, 939-
1879, or Arline Perez, 396-0340, by
March 17.
The Sisterhood of Congregation
Etz Chaim will hold its fourth
annual Razzle Dazzle Fashion
Show at 6:30 p.m. Monday, March
17. The show will feature spring
and summer designer fashions for
women and children. Razzle
Dazzle will begin with a light
buffet and items will be modeled
and auctioned at 8 p.m.
Linda Zuk is chairman of the
Paideia School informs
students on Holocaust
Alex Gross, a survivor of Nazi
concentration camps, will speak at
the Paideia School at 10 a.m.
Tuesday, March 18. Born in
Mukachevo, Czechoslovakia, he
was incarcerated by the Nazis at
age 14 in a concentration camp. He
spent time at Buchenwald,
Auschwitz, and Birkenau, re
maining in the camps until
liberation. He will talk of his
experiences during this period.
Students will also see the film
“Night and Fog.”
A course on the Holocaust is
being taught at Paideia by social
studies teacher Carl Rosenbaum.
event and Joyce Teitelman is
chairman of the raffle, where first
prize will be a pair of 14 karat gold
earring jackets set in rubies valued
at $300. Raffle tickets are $1 each
or $5 for a book of six.
Tickets are $6 in advance and $7
the night of the show. For more
information, or reservations, call
973-0137.
NCJW forum will host
‘Counterpoint’ cohorts
National Council of Jewish
Women, Atlanta Section and the
Evening Branch will meet at 8 p.m.
Tuesday, March 18, at Congre
gation B’nai Torah. The program,
“Counterpoint,” will feature Tom
Houck, political commentator for
WGST radio, and Dick Williams,
editorial columnist for The
Atlanta Journal. It is free and open
to the public.
Chairman Michael Lomax, re
presenting the Fulton County
Board of Commissioners, will
receive special recognition for the
appropriation granted to the
NCJW Family Outreach Center.
For more information, call
NCJW, 262-7199.
AJCommittee to scrutinize controversial issues
At noon Wednesday, March 19,
at the Terrace Garden Inn,
Jonathan Levine, American Jew
ish Committee’s Midwest regional
director, will speak about hisexpe-
riences with law enforcement,
farmers and civic leaders in the
rural Midwest. He has made sev
eral fact-finding trips to the
troubled Midwestern regions to
investigate the growth and activi
ties of anti-Semitic extremist
groups.
Bill Padgett, squad commander
of the GBI’s and anti-terrorist
movement, will discuss terrorist
activities in Georgia, the groups
involved and their impact on the
distressed farm community.
This meeting is open to members
of the AJC. Reservations are re
quired.
On Thursday, March 20, at 8
p.m., at the home of Joan and Bill
Bernstein, American Jewish
Committee members and pro
spective members will participate
in a debate and dialogue on pay
equity for women, a controversial
issue on the ’80s.
Among questions to be dis
cussed are: are current laws
adequate to meet the problem of
wage discrimination against
women? Will comparable worth
regulations harm the very pop
ulation they seek to assist?
Speakers are Ruth Gershon,
partner, Alston & Bird law firm,
chairperson of AJC’s Atlanta
Chapter Women's Committee and
of the financial issues committee of
the State Health Policy Council,
and Lynn Hecht Schafran, at
torney, member of AJC’s National
Pay Equity Task Force, director;
National Judicial Education
Program to Promote Equality for
Women and Men in the Courts,
and chairperson of the Committee
on Sex and Law of the Association
of the Bar of the City of New York.
Comparable worth is not a
“women’s issue.” Congressional
decisions now being debated will
affect labor and management,
employer and employee, state and
local governments and all of
us...the taxpayers.
For more information and
reservations, call the AJC office,
233-5501.