Frida May 11, 1919 40– BUSINESS CARDS Responsible family man will paint your home or garage in- side & out. No job too small, no Price to big. Call 541 2064 after 4 pm and ask for Mel Cohen. - PAPER HANGING. And Painting 28 yrs. experience. Reasonable prices & reli- able workmanship. 545.0522 ROOFING Hot Tar - Shingles THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40—BUSINESS CARDS EMERGENCY CALL THE FURNITURE DOCTOR •Any Furniture Repair •Reupholstering •Refinishing *Chair Caning * Our Specialty is repairing. reglueing & reu- pholstering dining room chairs. CALL MARV KAY 851-2550 24HOURS OSBORNE LOCAL MOVING Re-coat - Repair - Replace Residential & Office Licensed & Insured. Siding - Trim - Gutters 421-7774 354-1464 546-0050 \Licensed - Bonded - Insured PAINTING Interior, exterior, wall papering. Free estimates. References. Work guaranteed. Call anytime. 45—LOST & FOUND FOUND 11 Mile Rd. Gold man's ring. 356-7231, after 5. 50 — PERSONAL SENIOR CITIZENS OF 10 MILE - GREENFIELD! Bill Paschal Painting service Crime Prevention Program 535-2609 or 535-0178 Thurs. May 17th 1-3 p.m. No job too small, no price too big. Lincoln Towers Community Room "RODGERS DOES IT RIGHT" ALUMINUM GUTTERS BY L.J. RODGERS Home Improvements QUALITY WORK GUARANTEED 399-1233 MEYER MARGOLIS LANDSCAPING INC. 23 'Yrs. Experience FREE` ESTIMATES FREE PROBLEM ANALYSIS 51—MISCELLANEOUS All new electric motors. Special low prices. 5 HP, single phase, heavy duty - $195. All types of motors, compressors. & pumps at or below cost. Repairs. Open 7 days. 941-2261 53—ENTERTAINMENT SINGING guitarist/violinist. Small parties. 398-2462. BAND Residential. Commercial. Industrial. - Excellent Music For All Social Occasions ALL WORK FULLY INSURED ALL WORK GUARANTEED 731-6081 416-1191 ASK FOR MEYER 54—CEMETERY LOTS Member Michigan Assn. of Nurserymen ARE YOU MOVING? We will sell your furniture & contents. Ruth Weiss, 544-3744 or Helen Keeler, 549-8754. ALUMINUM SIDING 545-1110 Lowest Prices In Town EVERGREEN BLDG. CO . TED'S WALLPAPER REMOVING Free Estimates. Insured. Serving tri-county area. 531-7555 WALL WASHING (By Machine) -PAPER HANGING Satisfaction Guaranteed Insured 366-5322 - WELLS Call berm 9a.a. r after 1 p... FOR SALE - 5 cemetery plots at Northwest Hebrew Memorial Park. Excellent price. 661-4010 Jennie Singer Jennie Singer, an active member of Jewish women's and communal organiza- tions, died May 8 at age 74. Born in Russia, Mrs. Singer lived most of her life in Detroit. She was a member of Hadassah, Pioneer Women, Cong. Beth Achim and with her hus- band was active in efforts on behalf of Yeshivath Beth Yehudah. She leaves her husband, Joseph; three daughters, Mrs. Seymour (Lillian) Gal- lant, Mrs. Jack (Phyllis) Attis and Mrs. LaWrence (Marilyn) Guss; nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Youth News SHALOM ADAT Garinim (fifth and sixth grades) will have Shabat services 10 a.m. Saturday in the chapel. The group also will join Cong. Bnai David's youth groups for a Tiger baseball game 1 p.m. Sun- day at Tiger Stadium. For reservations, call Ruth In- denbaum, adviser, 626- 0813, or the youth depart- ment, 851-5100. There is a charge. Shoresh (seventh and eighth grades) and Migdal Tzion (ninth-12th grades) will conduct Shabat serv- ices 10 a.m. Saturday in the board room. For information about youth activities, call the youth department. * * * BETH SHALOM United Synagogue Youth will mark its annual installation weekend May 18-20 with activities at the synagogue. The weekend will begin 6 p.m. May 18 with a Shabat dinner in the synagogue. Services and the installa- tion will follow at 8. For reservations to the dinner, call the synagogue, 547- 7970. The USY will sponsor a disco dance, preceded by a Havdala service, 9:45 p.m. May 19. Everyone is in- vited, and there is a charge. The Shiraleers, Beth Shalom Youth Choir, will perform at the Men's Club Mother's Day brunch 10 a.m. Sunday in the synagogue. Participants include: Jonathan Aaron, Howard Appel, Gail Block, Steven Cooper, Ari Darsky, Leigh Dones, Elizabeth Fealk, Julie Finstein, Ronit Galazan, Alex Greenbaum, Shari Katz, Felice Katzman, Sheryl Katzman, Ellen Knoppow, Susan Knoppow, Larry Levine, Nancie Rakotz, Cheryl Rope, Gershon Ross, Julie Satz, Rachel Satz, Scott Shy, Mike Slovis, Barbra ick, Tun Kim Yellen, Amy Widenbaum, Elissa Ash, Sammy Zietz, Robert Fershtman and Jeff Block. * * * BNAI DAVID youth will attend a Detroit Tiger baseball game on Supday, meeting 1 p.m. in the youth lounge. Bus transportation will be provided. Special discounts will be given to junior congregation mem- bers who have attended weekly Shabat services, as well as for members of the Sunday morning Talit and Tefilin Club. Youth age 8 to 16 are invited. Tickets are limited and must be re- served in advance by calling youth directors Danny Kap- lan, 398-7422, or Hartley Harris, 967-0735. Ruach (grades three-four) will hold an oneg Shabat dinner May 18, meeting 7 p.m. in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hartley (Debi) Harris, 15270 Kenton, Oak Park. A program of games, stories and refreshments will fol- low. For reservations, con- tact adviser Mrs. Harris, 967-0735, evenings. Masada (grades seven- eight) is sponsoring a candy sale to raise funds for a group trip to Cedar Point and for a charity. Persons wishing to participate should contact adviser Kap- lan or candy sale chairman Jodi Starr, 543-0554. Junior congregation will meet 10 a.m. Satur- day for Shabat youth services. Groups are held for youth age 8 to 14. A Story Hour for children age 4 to 7 meets 10 a.m. Saturdays. A special youth kidush follows. All young people are invited. For information on youth porgram activities, contact the synagogue youth line, 557-8325. be installed at a dinner 6:30 May 27. For reservation call Mark Eichner, youth p.m. May 24 in the social hall. A slide presentation of adviser, 358-0065. Junior congregation will junior congregation activi- conduct services 10 a.m. ties from the past year will May 19 at Federation follow. For reservations to the Apartments. Parents are welcome, and a kidush will dinner, call Bruce David- son, 358-4283; or Howard follow. Talit and Tefilin Club Cooper at the synagogue, will hold a Mother's Day 357-5544. A total of 18 junior con- community breakfast 11 a.m. Sunday in the gregation me rs synagogue. Tickets are attended the spring nioutz available in the at Camp Tamarack, under synagogue office. The the supervi6in of Rabbi club _will begin its annual Gerald Teller and Cooper. bowling tournament May They were: Stuart Annis, David 20. Persons who wish to Mark Nathanson, run for election should Sandweiss, Jerry Glen, Eric Gould, Allan get a petition from ad- Oster, Sheryl Seiferheld, Risa viser Josh Leopold by Handler, Carl Manello, Michael May 20. Elections will be Silverstein, Daniel Cohen, Gayle Young, Marcie Conn, Renee Re- held June 3. For informa- ich, Bruce Davidson, Bobby tion on Talit and Tefilin Blum and Julie Weisberg. a * * Club, call President UNITED HEBREW Mark Cymerint, 547-1348, SCHOOLS will hold a car- or Leopold, 968-3594. For information on youth nival and Maccabia (sports activities, call Hanan contest) in celebration of Weizman, youth director, Lagb'Omer 4:30 p.m. Tues- 626-2355, or the synagogue day in the UHS building auditorium. office, 548-9000. The observance will in- SHAAREY ZEDEK clude volleyball, archery, junior congregation will baseball; relays and He- hold its annual election brew games. Prizes will be awarded, and refreshments meeting 1:15 p.m. May 20 in the synagogue. Officers will will be served. Healthy Baby Week Is Set Sen. and Mrs. Carl Levin have been named honorary chairmen for Healthy Baby Week, a joint project of the Midwest Region of Bnai Brith Women and the March of Dimes, which will be observed Sunday through May 20. - During the observance there will be continuing education classes in nutri- tion, prenatal care, parent- ing and genetics provided * 5 * free of charge by area com- BNAI MOSHE junior munity - education and pub- congregation will see a De- lic services programs. On troit Tiger baseball game Mother's Day, Sunday, Charles Angoff, Essayist, Poet Dead at 77, Was Mencken Peer NEW YORK (JTA) — Charles Angoff, a literary Mrs. Schnitzer, Yiddish Actress figure who achieved fame in both the general and Jewish fields, died May 3 at age 77. Beginning his career with H.L. Mencken, who had just launched the American Mercury, he joined Fair- leigh Dickinson University in Rutherford, N.J., in 1954 and became professor of English. After retirement in 1976, he taught summer NEW YORK — Henriette Schnitzer, a Yiddish actress who began her stage career at age 8 in her native Romania, died May 4 at age 84. When Mrs. Schnitzer came to the U.S., she re- M. Tabenkin, ceived a scholarship from the American Academy of Poet Educator TEL AVIV (JTA) — Dramatic Arts. She later appeared with Maurice Moshe Tabenkin, a poet and Schwartz, Jacob Ben Ami, educator and a leader in the Paul Muni and Rudolph Greater Israel Movement, Schildkraut, as well as star- died May 5 at age 62. Mr. Tabenkin, an active ring in her own company in kibutz member and promi- the U.S. and abroad. Among the plays in which . nent in the kibutz move- she performed were "Awake ment, was education officer and Sing," "Green Fields," of the northern front during the 1948 War of Indepen- "The Bronx Express," "Gab riel and His Women" and dence. He was the eldest son "Potash and Perlmutter." of Yitzhak Tabenkin, one of She also appeared on radio the founders of Kibutz Ein in "The Goldbergs" for 15 Harod as well as one of the years. She also had her own first leaders of Achdut radio program in New York. Haavoda. sessions at Vermont Uni- versity. Mr. Angoff published dur- ing his lifetime 30 books of essays, fiction, poetry and plays. He became widely known for a series of novels of Jewish American life cen- tered on a Polonsky family in Boston during World War I and the Great Depression. Among his Jewish ac- tivities, Mr. Angoff was advisory editor to the Jewish Book Guild and a faculty member of Bnai Brith Institutes. In 1969, he received a special award for major con- tributions to Jewish litera- ture from the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York. Not ilis Move JERUSALEM (ZINS) — During a visit to Israel, chess master Victor Kor- chnoi said he does not want to settle in the Jewish state because he does not believe himself qualified to be an Israeli citizen. SEN., MRS. LEVIN women delivering babies that day will be given a spe- cial honor and special prayers will be said by area religious groups. Free seminars will be offered as a public serv- ice by the Southfield Pub- lic Schools Community Education Program in cooperation with Provi- dence Hospital. The week of programs and activities will conclude with a special Day of the Child observance noon-5 p.m. May 20 at Northland Center. A free family fashion at show will be offered. /ill 3 p.m. Sen. Levi speak. There will be free exhibits, display booths and more. Barbara Zonder is gen- eral chairman of the project. She is assisted by Janet Gubkin, vice chairman, arrangements; Sheila Rose, vice chair- man, program; Sandy Cogan, vice chairman, public relations; Gloria Ellis, Bnai Brith Women's Midwest Region board chairman; Fran Kravitz, Midwest Region director; and Betty Pfister, direc- tor of program, March of Dimes. The public is invited. For schedule of seminars, call the Southfield Public Schools, 354-7456. .