36 Friday, September 23, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Many persons have a wrong idea about what con- stitutes true happiness. It is not attained through self- gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy pur- pose.—Helen Keller LARRY FREEDMAN Orchestra and Entertainment 647-2367 Murray Goldenberg - Southfield Rd. at 13 Mile 646-8484 Herman Jaffee We Make Ou,r Own Glasses • HEADQUARTERS FOR LATtST DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED FRAME FASHIONS PRESCRIPTIONS FOR GLASSES ACCURATELY FILLED • DESIGNER FRAMES • • Reasonably Priced Immediate Repair ROSEN OPTICAL SERVICE 13720 W. 9 MILE nr. COOLIDGE LI 7-5068 OAK PARK, MICH. Sat. 'til 5 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-6 Closed Wednesday FOR QUICK SALE OF YOUR UNWANTED USED FURS El-Mars Suburban Shop Eleanor Heyman _ Marion Feuerman WE CAN SER. YOUR MINK COATS, JACKETS, STOLES, FUN FURS, PERSIANS, FUR HATS, BROADTAIL FURS, FUR TRIMMED SWEATERS,etc El-Mars Furs 13661 W. 1 1 Mile, just West of Coolidge Oak Park, Mich. ( Across from A & P) MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. No p one c Is please Youth News BNAI DAVID youth will begin Shabat programs Sat- urday. Groups will meet at 10 a.m. each week for serv- ices, with stories and games, followed by a spe- cial youth kidush prepared by members of the syna- gogue sisterhood. Awards for attendance will be pre- sented throughout the year by Rabbi Morton Yolkut. Junior congregation for youth age 8-10 will meet in the choir room, led by Steve Kideckel and Deni Warsaw. Youth age 11-14 will gather in the small chapel, led by Hartley Harris and Danny Kaplan as leaders. Member- ship cards will be presented to persons in each group who have attended services at least three times. They will be entitled to attend Detroit Lions and Detroit Pistons games. Story Hour will also be held for children age 4 to 7 in the Story Hour room. Linda Rosenbaum will lead the group in Shabat stories and games, assisted by Marci Grossman. Carrie Dickstein assisted during the High Holy Days. Atid senior group (grades 9-12) will begin its year with a sukka-decorating party 8:30 p.m. Saturday at the home of adviser Harris, 25611 Colleen, Oak Park. For information, call Harris, 968-3563, or Scott Winkelman, 557-7091. Atid will attend a Detroit Lions football game Sunday, meeting 11 a.m. at the syna- gogue. Bus • transportation will be provided, and mem- bership dues may be paid at the. door. Tickets are lim- ited, and must be reserved in advance by calling Barry Shulak, 557-3088 or adviser Harris. Masada (grades 7-8) will gather 4:30 p.m. today to FROM TIP TO TOE WATCH THEM GROW. THE JOE Unisex Nail Salon •• ■ ••• ■ •••710--- 626-6111 626-6111 Henry Ford Hospital staff members monitor Saul LeVine as he rides a stationary bicycle, part of a unit partially fun- ded by a gift he initiated to benefit heart attack victims. At Henry Ford Hospital heart attack victims are pe- daling their way to stronger hearts while a machine un- derwritten in part by a gift from the David M. and Frieda G. LeVine Founda- tion is monitoring their pedal power. The foundation's gift con- tributed to the purchase and installation of a four- channel monitoring unit for the hospital's new out- patient cardiac rehabilita- tion unit. The unit's rehabilitation program can effectively lower heart rate in many in- stances and enable patients to lead more active lives than may previously have been thought possible. Each year, according to Dr. Sidney Goldstein, divi- sion head of cardiovascular medicine at Henry Ford Hospital, heart attacks claim 500,000 lives. Dr. Goldstein is involved in the study of methods for the prevention and recurrence of heart attacks. The hospi- tal's newly opened cardiac City of Hope Dinner-Dance to Recall Hits of Al Jolson "An Evening With Al Jol- son" is the show title of this year's 65th annual dinner- dance by Detroit Business- men's Group, City of Hope, Oct. 16 at Michigan Inn. Clive Baldwin of England will talk and sing through all the hits associated with the super star. Hall Gordon will accompany him, and he and his orchestra will play for dancing. The dinner-dance will be a Engagements) Present s : COMPLETE NAIL SERVICES • Nail Wrapping • Specializing In European Extended Nails by Miss Debbie • Fine Manicures & Pedicures by Miss Teri 5640 W. Maple help decorate the synagogue sukka, followed by an oneg Shabat dinner and program in the sukka. Dues may be paid at the door. For infor- mation, contact adviser Kaplan, 398-7422, or the synagogue youth-line. Ha-Or (grades 5-6) deco- rated the sukka at the home of Cantor and Mrs. Hyman Adler Sunday. Future activ- ities include a hayride (Oct.2) and roller skating. For information, contact adviser Steve Kideckel, 968- 1765. Ruach (grades 3-4) will help to decorate the syna- gogue sukka, followed by a pizza party Sunday. The group will gather at 6:30 p.m. in the youth lounge. Friends are invited. For advance reservations, call advisor, Deni Warsaw, 352- 3632, or the synagogue youth-line. For information on the B'nai David youth program, contact the synagogue youth-line, 557-8325. * * * BETH ACHIM'S Lahav United Synagogue Youth group will have a sukka- building brunch social 12:30 p.m. Sunday at the syna- gogue. Youth Shabat serv- ices will begin 10:15 p.m. Oct. 1. The youth group will have a city-wide dance 8 p.m: Oct. 15 at the synagogue, Phoenix will entertain. There is a charge: For information. call Ilene Mitz, 548-0947. New advisers to the youth groups are Betty Kletter, Kadima, 626-2054; and Judy Goldis, grades 5 and 6, 626- 1181. Beth Norman meets 10 a.m. Saturdays with chil- dren age 3-7. Gift From LeVine Foundation Benefits Heart Attack Victims Mr. and Mrs. George Tur- kel of Oak Park announce the engagemenment of their daughter. Susan Ruth Tur- kel, to Michael L. Liebow- itz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Moe Liebowitz of New York. Miss Turkel was graduated from Wayne State Univer- sity, where she earned a BFA degree and BA and MA degrees in speech pathology. Her fiance earned a BS degree in engi- neering at the New York College of Engineering. A November wedding is planned. black-tie affair, with cock- tails at 5:30 p.m. and dinner at 7. Max Sosin is president of the Detroit Businessmen's Group, City of Hope, and Harry Brodsky is this year's dinner-dance chairman. Guests are invited by invitation only. Those who have not yet received invitations may call the City of Hope office, 569-4422 or 569-6262. Proceeds will benefit the City of Hope National Research Medical Center in Duarte. Calif. CLIVE BALDWIN rehabilitation unit is among the first such units in Mich- igan. Because of a patient's in- terest in Dr. Goldstein's ef- forts the cardiac rehabilita- tion unit is well on its way to a full service program. Saul LeVine recently com- pleted an exercise program in the unit. A typical patient, LeVine came into the unit because of angina pectoras and after following a home exercise program was tested on the familiar treadmill and then became a candidate for Dr. Gold- stein's rehabilitation unit. (Other patients enter the program six-eight weeks fol- lowing an acute heart ' at- tack.) Three times a week on a stationary bicycle beside other cyclists LeVine alter- nately pedaled and rested while his pulse rate and blood pressure were con- stantly monitored during two-hour sessions until the physician, clinician and therapist felt his heart muscle was sufficiently strengthened to effect a lower heart rate and sus- tain exercise over a long pe- riod of time. LeVine's interest and par- ticipation in Henry Ford Hospital's division of cardio- vascular medicine prompt- ed him to interest the Le- Vine Foundation trustees in supporting the rehabilita- tion program. (LeVine is a trustee of the foundation). The purchase of the console monitoring unit was sup- ported in part by the founda- tion gift and enables the unit team to measure pulse rate and blood pressure. The division of cardio- vascular medicine at Henry Ford Hospital includes a cardiovascular research unit. pediatric cardiology di- vision, thoracic and cardiac surgery division, coronary care unit, non-invasive labo- ratory and physiology labo- ratory and in addition to seeing patients at the Henry Ford Hospital West Grand Boulevard Center in Detroit cardiologists treat patients at the hospital's Fairlane Center in Dear- born and the West Bloomfield Center. The LeVine Foundation also has endowed the Le- Vine wing of the Jewish Home for the Aged. -