1'. 32 'fridai;lamoary 21; 1977 VIE 'DEtitOIT JEWISII NEWS Women's Clubs 1110 NSHEI CHABAD STUDY GROUP, 10 Mile area, will meet 3 p.m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Jack Carmen, 15758 Fairfax, Southfield. Guest speaker will be Rabbi Zev Schostak. The Nine Mile area study group will meet 3 p.m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Moshe Zaklikofsky, 23181 Kipling, Oak Park. Guest speaker will be Rabbi Yitzchok M. Ka- * * * gan. ner 6 p.m. Tuesday in home of Betty Levine, Lincoln Towers Apts. 15311 Northgate Blvd., club room. Filled eye Oak Park. There will be a bank is admission. Enter- report on the Hanuka tainment will be pro- party. Refreshments will vided. be served. * * * * * * BNAI DAVID SISTER- KINNERET CHAPTER, HOOD will hold a lunc- Pioneer Women, will meet heon meeting noon Mon- noon Monday in Lincoln day at the synagogue. A Towers Apts. club room. film, "Children In Trou- Topic of the meeting is ble," will be shown. For Histadrut; Galdie information, contact Fleischer is Histadrut program chairman chairman. Also, a movie Esther Kalef, 968-5163. on Israel will be shown. * * * Refreshments will be EVERGREEN GROUP, SHOSHANIM, Pioneer served and guests are in- Hadassah will host a din- Women young women's vited. chapter, will meet 7:30 * * * Tuesday, in the home NORTHWEST CHILD LARRY FREEDMAN p.m. of Arlene Rubinstein., RESCUE WOMEN 2298 Golfview #204 Troy. and junior groups senior will Orchestra and Entertainment A representative from hold a combined meeting American Airlines will be noon Thursday in. Knob- 6160 CASS AVE. the featured speaker. In-The-Woods Apts. club TR 5-0300 Guests are welcome. For house. Guest speaker 1■1■ 0■ ■ ■ information, call Arlene, Rabbi Sherwin Wine will 352-9357, after 5 p.m. discuss "The Generation * * * Lunch will be MAIMONIDES MEDI- Gap." Guests are in- From COQ au VIN to VEAL TOSCA CAL AUXILIARY will , served. vited, and there is a hold a luncheon meeting charge. j GOURMET FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES noon Tuesday at Mama Zelda's Restaurant. IN HOME OR HALL BNAI MOSHE SIS- Charles Wolfe, executive TERHOOD will observe DANIEL WARTEL — SUPREME CATERING director of the. Jewish -the Women's League An- for the Aged, will niversary Shabat at serv- 869-0720 838-2233 I Homr speak on "The Bestls Yet ices 8 p.m. today in the ■■•■ to Come?" synagogue. Adult educa- * * * HELEN ROSENBERG tion chairman Pearlena CANCER FIGHTERS, Bodzin, vice chairman City of Hope, will meet Rena Tobes and Michigan noon Monday in the Branch President Shar- Raleigh House. Petite lene Ungar planned the luncheon will be served, evening's program. Par- ticipants include Sonia and games and prizes will follow. The nominating Klein, Esther Roth, committee consists of all Gloria Bookstein, Mari- past presidents and lyn Redmond, Sondra Dorothy Nisker, Flo Schader, Vivian Sales, Eleanor Shapiro Stollman, Ms. Tobes, Do- reen Raskin and Maggie and Gwen Silverstein. * * * Thirman. Sisterhood BETH ACHIM SIS- president Gitel Cross, TERHOOD will meet Rabbi Stanley Rosen- 12:30 p.m. Monday in the baum and Mesdames synagogue. President Ungar and Bodzin will T'Obi 'Fox will present a present sgreetings. A ser- convention report and a monette; "Legitimacy of Pluralism," will be deli- hair care demonstration will take place. Program vered by Ronna Rosen- chairman is Mildred baum. Cantor Louis Klein Rosenbaum. Refresh- will chant the liturgy, A ments will be served, and skit, "Reckonings," will be performed by Marion guests are welcome. * * * and Bert Stein and JEWISH WOMEN Rosalind and Michael Where the Unusual is the Usual EUROPEAN WELFARE Grand, under the direc- Big Beaver Road at Coolidge, Troy ORGANIZATION will tion of Kathy Kahn and Sandy Grossman. Lor- meet noon Monday in the raine Fisher will moder- ate a discussion. Kidush will follow. AL KLINE • - DALGLEISH CADILLAC 111MI•0411■4■11111. 111.111.44■41.1111.1 0•011•K 647-2367 t.I.MIINHEINI.1 43.1 41,111 Heavy Snowstorm Doesn't Hinder Federation Women's Institute More than 350 women ignored heavy snow and below-zero temperatures to attend the 30th annual insti- tute of the Jewish Welfare Federation Women's Divisio last week at the Jewish Community Center. Participants included, from left, standing: Carolyn Greenberg, pres- ident of Women's Division; Bernice Greenberg, vice president, program; Rita Hauser, guest speaker; and Dr. Milton Covensky, guest speaker; and seated: Sybil Jones, institute chairman; Dulcie Rosenfeld, chairman of the Women's Division of the Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund; , and Melba Winer, institute co-chairman. 4•14111mam CATERING SUPREME .111 Role in Aiding Blind Described The article in the Jan.. 7 issue of The Jewish News on Braille and services for the blind did not de- scribe the role of the Michigan Branch of the Women's League for Con- servative Judaism in coordinating the ac- tivities of the sisterhoods of the Conservative con- gregations. Michigan branch co- chairman for braille and related services are Mrs. Joseph Snider and Mrs. Morris Rowin. They keep the sisterhoods informed of national braille ac- tivities, the functions of the Jewish Braille Insti- tute, and local needs. They also assist in es- tablishing braille classes and committees and aid the sisterhoods in volun- teer service for the blind of all faiths. . SOMERSET MALL JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE IS NOW IN PRQGRESS ( • Engagements ) Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Gold of Oak Park an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, Judy Ann Gold, to Brian James Duncan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Duncan of Southgate. An August wedding is planned. Shepherd Elected to Public TV Post Designers of Fine Furs • HARVARD ROW MALL 21742 W. 11 Mile Road, Southfield . 358-0850 The board of_directors of Detroit's Educational Television Foundation (WTVS, Channel 56) has elected John H. Shepherd, president of the Detroit Jewish Com- munity Council, as a director-at-large. JNF Women Surpass Their Goal to Help Fund Israel Youth Camp Women of Jewish Na- tional Fund have sur- passed this year's objec- tive of $100,000 toward the establishment of a$250,000 youth camp in the American Bicenten- nial National Park in Is- rael. The announcement was made by Betty Sil- verman, fund-raising chairwoman for the 47th annual donor event held Tuesday at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. The youth camp will be used by American and Israeli high school and college youth. Diane Levine, presi- dent, called on Shirley Kraft, ,program chairwo- man, to introduce the prcigram, which was headed by. Esther Jun- greis. Mrs. Junereis, of New York, founder and presi- dent of Hineni, the inter- national movement de- signed to promote Jewish identity, said: "Three times God challenged us and three times he found us asleep. The first chal- lenge was the Holocaust. In all the world there was no place for the Jews to go. "The second challenge was the rebirth of Israel. We are the generation that has been given Jerusalem, but we prefer New York, Los Angeles or even De- troit." "The third challenge was the Six-Day War. On that day when Jerusalem was returned to us after 2,000 years — the Mes- siah could have come. But the moment came and the moment passed, and the Jewish people remained asleep. There was no one to wake them . . . "To be a Jew is the greatest privilege; to be unaware of it is our greatest tragedy. God gave us only one land — Israel; God gave 'us one Torah. One Torah, one land, one nation, one people. Blessed are- the Jewish people. of this gen- eration that have been witnesses to the greatest miracle in 2,000 years." Rissa Winkelman brought greetings and a pledge of $9,000_on behalf of the Young Women of JNF. Singing of the an- thems was led by Bess Axelrod, with Vivian Stollman as accompanist. The musical portion of the program was a mini- cantata performed by "Music Plus One;" featur- ing vocalists Gloria Bookstein, Freda Men- delson and- Marcia Tanzman, with Betty Fishman as narrator and Rochelle Lakin, accom- panist. Co-chairmen included Belle Levin, Belle Green baum, Beatrice Feigel- man and Rissa Winkel- man. Center Film Series Continues As part of its "Like the Good Old Days" film series, the. Cultural Arts Department of the Jewish Community Center will be screening "Our Man in Havana," 3:30 and 7 p.m. Jan. 30 in the Center's Aaron DeRoy Studio Theatre. There is a charge.