36 Friday, March 9, 1919 rPASSPORIP PHOTOS IN COLOR WHILE YOU WAIT 00 $ Fo REGISTER NOW THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Bnai Brith Activities ALBERT EINSTEIN CHAPTER will hold its 24th annual installation dinner 6 p.m. Wednesday at Young Israel of Oak-Woods. There is a charge. past Ross, Sylvia FOP BEGINNERS PHOTOGRAPHY CLASSES ARRY FREEDMAN LENSIOPCNING VOW) 353.5330 CCIMGRAS VIE DISCOUNT Ed PRICES. NOT OUR SERVICE OPEN MOM TIES MO Ski S to6. TI1UiS tol APPLEDATE SQUARE • NORTINIT.STERN at OSIER to rchestra and Entertainment 647-2367 ewe ter SELL(:TEI) JEW . EtRY tompLETF, JEN\ E1,111 SLR% ICI 13720 W. 9 Mile Rd., Oak Park, Mich. Near Post Office LI 7-5068 president of the Bnai Brith Women's Council, will in- stall the following: Sally Biederman, president; Pola Wiener, president-elect; Helen Kozuch, Mania Lesh, Sylvia Ross, Eva Birenholt and Tola Gilbert, vice presidents; Shirley Rosen- berg, treasurer; Linda Ap- felblat, Sima Yarsike, Brenda Vinton and Pauline Kleinberg, secretaries. Members of the board are Helga Plonskier, Rachel Growe, Pauline Sztarkman, Dora Upfall, Betty Gelman, Rona Bakalar, Rose Neuman, Anna Fist, Sylvia Feld, Fay Adelsberg; Ida Wiener, Sara Cweigenberg, Shirley Tenenbaum and Fay Lachman. For informa- tion, call Hermine Hirsh, chairman of the dinner, 559-4385. * * * DETROIT BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL CHAPTER will hold - its annual installation lunch- eon at 12:30 p.m. March 25 at Kingsley Inn. A program N MONEY MATTER$ presented by: BACHE' Bache, Halsey, Stuart, Shields, Inc. For Today's . Woman Our money matters investment seminars are designed to help you: • Determine when you should consider investing. • Provide insights necessary to make informed invest- ment decisions. • Determine which types of investments best suit your needs. NORTHLAND INN Friday, March 23rd 10 A.M.-3 P.M. Reservations Required — $10 Registration Fee Luncheon Included For more information call Ellen Shell or Eleanor. Brainin. 569-3200 DIAMOND BAKERY Leob Weberman, who served as president of both Albert Einstein Lodge of Bnai Brith and of Shaarit Haplaytah, will ' be memorialized by a wood- land of 2,500 trees planted under the auspices of the Jewish National Fund, in the Albert Einstein Lodge and Chapter Forest, in the BB Martyrs Forest. Mr. Weberman was a survivor of the Holocaust. He was seized by the Nazis in Lodz, Poland, as a child and was in Auschwitz and Mauthausen concentration camps until liberated by American soldiers in April 1945. His parents and sister were killed. He and a DEBORAH CHAPTER will meet 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Northgate East Apts. club house. Joann Green- berg of The Hunger Project will speak. The film, "I Want to Live," will be shown. Guests are welcome. For reservations, call Ann Green, 661-0878. * * * Blood Bank Rally The Bnai Brith Men's and Women's Councils will sponsor a blood bank rally 5-10 p.m. Monday and Tuesday at the Eleanor Roosevelt Service Center, 24600- Greenfield, Oak Park. HAMANTAWIEN Yeast Dough Pareve BAKED FRESH DAILY ON PREMISES Rolls Bread Pritikin Whole Wheat Bread Assorted Cookies Cakes Danish & Assorted Pastries Seder for Soviet Jews Here As part of the interna- Brith is working in coop- tional Bnai Brith Project eration with the Jewish Outreach program, the local Welfare Federation in affiliates will_ conduct a reaching the prospective model Seder for more than guests. According to Lewis Al- 300 Soviet Jewish immig- rants 7 p.m. April 8 at Cong. pert, executive director of Bnai Brith locally, Project Shaarey Zedek. Held in cooperation with Outreach is a program of the synagogue, the Seder the international Bnai will utilize the Russian- Brith organizations. It deals Hebrew Haggada compiled specifically with the accul- by the Friends of Refugees turation of Soviet Jews in of Eastern Europe, nearly the U.S., Europe and Israel. 500 copies of which were Arnold Michlin, vice donated for the Seder by president of the Metropoli- pri nter Herb Gordon. tan Detroit Bnai Brith With the service will be a Council and program. slide show, narrated in Rus- chairman, said that dona- sian by Harry Saxe, and tions to the Seder will be produced by Al Karbal of welcomed. He added that the learning resources cen- volunteers are needed to ter of Cong. Shaarey Zedek. transport the immigrants to Posters have been the synagogue. Volunteers who wish to printed and a mailing list compiled to reach nearly assist with the Seder should 500 Soviet Jews in the call the Bnai Brith office, metropolitan area. Bnai 354-6100. Bnai Brith Brunch Sunday Reservations are still being taken for the 13th an- nual metropolitan Detroit Bnai Brith Presidents Brunch slated to take place 10 a.m. Sunday at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. The brunch will be held on behalf of the Jewish National Fund. Program participants in- clude newsman Robert Evans; Carmi Slomovitz, president of the Greater De- troit JNF Council; Percy Kaplan, executive director of the Greater Detroit and Michigan JNF; Lewis Al- pert, Bnai Brith executive director for Michigan; and Rabbi Alan B. Lucas, assis- tant rabbi at Cong. Shaarey Zedek, who will recite the invocation. Louis Segel, Harold Jaffa and Eadie Albion Peace May Pave Purchase of Kfir LEON WEBERMAN He 6262212 Large No Preservatives brother, Abram of West Bloomfield, are the only survivors. Mr. Weberman, who sur- vived five years in the Lodz Ghetto and the camps, was slain by an unknown as- sailant at his shop last De- cember. OPEN EVERY DAY Mon. thru Thurs. 8 to 8 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 8 to 9 p.m. Sunday 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. 6722 Orchard Lake Rd., South of Maple Miniature Cookie Dough of the American Musical Theatre in song with Helen Rowin and Claire Brown, entitled "King David's American Sons — The Music Makers of Broad- way," will- be featured. Guests are welcome. For reservations„ call Mollie Gershenzon, 357-5742; Betty Silverfarb, 545-1613; or Etta Wykoff, 557-9284. * * * Weberman.Woodland Be gun for Late Bnai Brith Leader A financial luncheon seminar West Bloomfield Plaza. \ BB Project Outreach Offers 1 came to Detroit in 1949, and married the former Freda Levin in 1951.• They have four sons: Marc, Edward, Aron and Bruce. He was a charter member of Einstein Lodge. Just prior to his death, he was fund-raising chairman of Einstein Lodge and had set a record in fund raising for the BB Youth Service' Appeal. He had also served as vice president. He was active in organizing Shaarit Haplaytah, serving as president. He was a member of Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses. Louis Kay, Bnai Martyrs Forest Committee Chair- man, and a friend of Mr. Weberman for 30 ,years, sparked the campaign to es- tablish the Weberman Woodland. In A768, at age 23. (ler- shom -Mendez Seixins be- cz Ime the first A meri ca n- born cantor. - VIENNA (JTA) — The conclusion of a peace be- tween Israel and Egypt might- remove Austria's reservations about buying Israel's Kfir jet fighters, government sources said last week. Austria has been interested in purchasing 18-24 Kfirs since 1977 to bolster its air defenses kit some critics feared that such a - deal would hurt Au- stria's trade relations with the Arab world. The Kfir, after extensive tests, was considered the best choice among offers which also included the French Mirage F-1, Swe-, den's Sviggen and the U.S. Northrop's F-5E.• But Au- stria must, modernize its ground control system be- ' fore it can utilize new lighter planes. Last. month, the govern- revea led..plans to pro,- duce Kfirs at an assembly plant in Wiener Neustadt, a few miles south of Vienna, to reduce costs of production and maintenance. Israeli or- licials were annoyed that Austria disclosed the plans at an early stage because this might jeopardize the deal. are brunch co-chairmen. Louis Kay is chairman of the Martyrs Forest Committee. Associate chairmen are Meyer .Littky, Harry Michelson and Charles Fink. The brunch will honor the presidents of the Bnai Brith Councils, and of the lodges chapters and units. Tree and tribute chairmen also will be cited. For reser,vations or in- formation, call the Bnai Brith office, 354-6100, or JNF, 557-6644. . Lebanese Group Hits Aid to Syria WASHINGTON (JTA) — The U.S. was urged by the largest American Lebanese organization to eliminate aid to Syria and- bring Lebanon into "an alliance of Egypt and Israel firmly in the U.S. camp." Syria "has wrecked" the Camp David initiative, Robert Basil, president of the American-Lebanese League, told. the House Foreign Affairs Committee last week which was consid- ering the new foreign aid program. The proposed $60 million in aid to Syria, he testified, "is unjustifiable in light of its destructive role to U.S. and Lebanese national interests and - goals." The $32 million in propoSed cre- dits to Lebanon, he said, "insufficient to rebuil strong central army essen- tial to restoring Lebanese sovereignty and control over its own territory." Holocau8t, Date Change Is Asked NEW YORK (JTA; — The President's -Commis- sion on the Holocaust., which has set the week of April 22-29 as "Days of Re- membn..,nce" for the victims I\14zism, has been urged by Workmen's Circle to change the date to April 19, the historic day when the Warsaw Ghetto uprising began in 1943. 4