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Youth. -171Tews

Great Lakes BBYO Installs Officers

The installation for the newly
restructured Great Lakes AZA and
BBG Councils took place at Cong.
Bnai Moshe with attendance of
some 200 BBYO members and
their parents.
Outgoing leadership passed the
responsibilities of office to the fol-
lowing incoming officers:
Aleph Godol, Jeff S h i f m a n;
aleph s'gan-program, Yale New-
man; aleph s'gan-outstate, Barry
Margoli s; aleph s'gan-in-city,
Chuck Kopel; aleph moreh, Dave
Green; aleph Gizbor, Dave Bern-
ard; aleph mazkir, Doug Kahn;
and aleph sopher, Bob Guttenberg.
For the Bnai Brith Girls, Nisiah,
Lisa Dorfman; program s'ganit,
Sherrill Kurland; MIT s'ganit, Sue
Alterman; in-city s'ganit, Lisa Lin;
out-state s'ganit, Rosanna Honig;
gizbor, Angela Jourden; katvanit,
Fran Markle; and orekhet, Judy
Walt.
Installation Chairmen Sue Klau
and Jerry Byer presented the win-

ning BBG scrapbook award to
Glazer BBG; the BBG Newspaper
award to Rappoport BBG; and
BBG best chapter awards to Free-
man BBG, Zangwill BBG, Szold
BBG and Glazer BBG.
Special awards in the category
of originality plus-handicraft was
given to Jean Dizik of Glazer
BBG; art category to Sue Fink,
Glazer BBG; and literature cat-
egory, Sue Sugarman of Freeman
BBG.
Special recognition in the form
of the Star of Deborah Award was
received by Laurel Schlesinger,
Sandra Markle and Cherie Gold-
berg, graduating seniors and out-
going officers of the Bnai Brith
Council. The award denotes high-
est individual achievement in Bnai
Brith Girls.
The invocation was delivered
by Julius Kahn, Chairman of the
BBYO board of directors.
The benediction was delivered
by Mrs. David Levine, vice-chair-
man of BBYO board of directors.

American Youth to Participate in Plan
for Freedom Forest for Soviet Jewry

NEW YORK — An American
Youth Woodland will be planted
within the Freedom Forest for
Soviet Jewry, now rising on a
Judean hilltop in the vicinity of
Shaar Hagai, Jerusalem, it was an-
nounced by Dr. I. M. Biderman,

Local Teens in Israel
as Advance Guard for
Families Planning Aliya

director of the youth and education
department of Jewish National
Fund of America.
The woodland, when completed,
will number 600,000 trees, repre-
senting each American Jewish
child attending Hebrew and reli-
igous schools in the United States.
This project will express the
solidarity of the young people of
this nation with the plight and the
struggle of Jews in the Soviet
Union who are yearning to be
liberated from oppression and the
denial of their religious and ethnic
freedom.

Fifty-three American teen-agers,
including two Detroiters, left for
Israel Tuesday to attend Youth
Aliya high schools, the first such
group of youngsters to go on
aliya as the advance guard Of par-
ents who have already decided on
or are considering going on aliya
as family groups. Melvin Freedman
and Marilyn Levi of Southfield are
ROCHELLE MARILYN G U T -
among the 53.
Though American youngsters MAN, daughter of the Karl Gut-
have previously attended Youth mans of Harvard Rd.,. Southfield,
Aliya schools, this group marks left July 10 for Israel, where she
the beginning of a new program will take her second year of study
originated by Joseph Klarman of at Hebrew University. Previously,
Jerusalem. He is head of Youth she attended Oakland University.
Aliya and a member of the execu-
-. 'five of the Jewish Agency for Is- Jerrold Leesqu Joins
•.:trael,. in which groups of young-
.:-stets will serve as bridgehead for Shaarey,..;„4dek . Staff
Julies going on aliya. An addi-.I 44A.Pha5.4
-:-has been ap-
group, bringing
tial14,13:r1 m ed :assistant director of educa-
4bcgit 100 for
-Activities at Cong.
aict
the United ...Atal
ar:
haarey Zedele:1-le'succeeds Larry
monthS.
teal who: ,;left - to live in Israel.
T
Leeson , c 0,m e s from Ahavath
the Aniefkifir.40Ungitet:
- Achini, Synagogue in A t 1 a n t a,
tend are in smaller-. COMMinitlei 'Where he was director of youth
and the children will live in COn=", cavities. He also held admin-
munal developments.
istrative responsibilities for the
congregational school and served
as assistant to the executive direc-
Little Theater Group
tor.
Plans 3 Summer Plays
A native of Minneapolis, Leeson
The Oak Park High School is a graduate of the University of
Satyrs, a recently formed group Minnesota.
of High School and college play-
ers, will present three plays this
u m m e r in the school's Little Youths Aid Afforestation
JERUSALEM —Twenty-five ac-
Theater.
The first, a children's musical, tive young JNF members from the
"The Fabulous Circus," is directed U.S. are spending six weeks in
, by - Sam Katz, with performances Israel as participants in a program
1 and 2:30 p.m. July 12, 14 and 16. which includes afforestation work.
"The Fantasticks," directed by The young people are divided into
'Mike. Klier, will be performed 8 two age groups, 14-18 and 18-23.
p.m. July 13, 14, 15, 20, 21 and 22.
Persons helped in 1970 by Trav-
"Night Must Fall," a psychological
thriller, under the direction of N. elers Aid Society of Detroit, a
Paul Silverman, is slated for 8 Torch Drive service, came from
p.m. July 27, 28 and 29 and Aug. all over the world. Of those
directly served, 10 per cent came
3, 4 and 5.
Tickets will be on sale at the from foreign countries; 10 per cent
door. For reservations, call the box from outstate Michigan; 41 per
office (544-9851 or 544-9846) after cent from states other than Mich-
igan; and 25 per cent from Detroit.
7 p.m. Monday-Friday.

They Made
The Grade

UlIS Enrolls St Indents for Fall

The United Hebrew Schools is
accepting registration for fall class-
es.
Elementary grades report to
school on Sept. 8; beginners on
Sept. 13; and 5-, 6-, and 7-year-olds
on Sept. 12.
The UHS provides Jewish educa-
tion from nursery through high
school. Teachers, certified by the
Detroit Board of License, stress
a creative approach to Jewish
values, ideas and observances, in-
cluding Hebrew language, Bible,
Jewish history, Jewish life, Israel,
Jewish current events and the
reading and understanding of pray-
ers.
To meet the five-year requisite
for graduation and Bar Mitzva,
children should be enrolled by
their 8th birthday or their en-
trance into the third grade of
public school. Branches of the
UHS are in Detroit, Farmington,
Oak Park, Southfield and Livonia,
and transportation is provided
from public schools to the respec-
tive branches.
Adas Shalom UHS is cooperative-
ly sponsored by the UHS and Cong.
Adas Shalom and meets in the Hil-
lel Day School Building, Farming-
ton.
Beth Achim. Branch, operated
jointly by the UHS and Cong. Beth'
Achim, will continue to meet in
the school building adjoining the
congregation.
Borman - Beth Moses Branch
serves families in the Detroit area.

In addition to the regular elemen-
tary grades, Adas Shalom-UHS,
Beth Achim and Borman conduct
Sunday classes for kindergarten,
first and second graders, preparing
them for the three-day-a-week pro-
gram which begins when the stu-
dent is 8.
Adas Shalom-UHS also conducts
confirmation classes.
To serve Oak Park and Hunting-
ton Woods residents, Bnai Moshe
branch operates a school in the
Bnai Moshe congregation building.
Young Israel of Oak-Woods branch
in Oak Park provides facilities for
families who wish to send their
children to an Orthodox-oriented
Hebrew school, and the Cohn
Branch serves families in Livonia.
For information, call the main of-
fice of the United Hebrew Schools,
354-1050.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, July 16, 1971-31

Colored Movies
400 ft.—$165 Comp.

Weddings, Bar Mitzvas
and other occasions

Frank's Studio 474-7768

NEW
ORLEANS
MALL

■--

• Dubb's Country Kitchen
• Sherri's
• Efros Prescriptions
• Fabulous Star Bakery
• Bud Rollins Shoes
• The Bootery
• Pickwick Shops
• Bab's Hair Fashions
• Rigsby Shoe Service
• Ala's Barber Shop
• Room At The Bottom
• Doug Hoffman, Ltd.

THE
EASY-TO-SHOP
MALL

r

-7

Iry Ashin
JEWELER

I

I

Selected

Beth Moses Mapping
Car Wash, 'Services

Beth Moses Senior United Syna-
gogue Youth will hold a car wash
11 a.m.-4 p.m. July 25 at Metro-
politan Federal Savings, Seven
Mile and Evergreen Rds.
The member who sells the most
tickets will receive a deduction on
membership dues. Volunteers may
call Linda Glantz, 534-5372, by
Tuesday.
Tisha b'Av will be observed by
the group at services 7:30-11 p.m.
Aug. 1. For information, call Jeff
Shiovitz, KE 5-0952.

Jewelry, Diamonds & Watches
Fine Watch & Jewelry Repair

32733 Franklin Rd., Franklin, Mich.

626-8259

THE NEW LOOK
IN PHOTOGRAPHY!

• Exciting • Creative • Dignified
• Elegant

You Must See It To Appreciate It!

,GoRtzt k i eic

Toronto's Top Student

TORONTO (JTA) — The top
scholar of metropolitan Toronto's
100 high schools this year is 18-
year-old Karl Skorecki, who scored
an average of 97.5 per cent in
seven of his 10 subjects. The
youngster is enrolled at the Com-
munity Hebrew Academy and is
a member of the Beth Radom
Synagogue.

studio of photographN

25211 TELEGRAPH ROAD

(across from Raleigh House)

354-1677

Closed Monday

.

.,

,

SUMMER SALE! All sale shoes $11.90. White and Bone.

THE BOOTERY

ew
Orleans
man
Gramm and Ten Mile

