40 Friday, August 15, 1980

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

FOR THE FINEST

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BAR IVIITZVAS

BERNIE

WINER

and ASSOCIATES

357-1010

Marlene Handler Librarian
for Orchards-NCJW Library

Women's Clubs

NEBGAH CHAPTER,
its Ofir_Women, will hold
Wednesday luncheon noon
Towers, 25900 GreiCristen
Suite 205E, Oak Park. 'Mil:
and Mrs. Harry Kaplan are
sponsoring the luncheon in
memory of the children they
lost in the Holocaust. Pro-

MOVING SALE
50-75% OFF

Of furniture, accessories & fixtures etc.

Bazell Interiors

Moving Sept. 1st. 735 Forest, Birmingham

ceeds will benefit the
Spiritual Adoption Fund.
Friends and guests are wel-
come. For reservations, call
Etta Kaplan, 968-6675.
* * *
Dt.f _
LEAGUE,
CARIH, w-
open meeting of the''-§t. first
noon Wednesday in tin
Knob-in-the-Woods Apts.
club house. Bill Leitner, Ac-
tion Line editor, will speak
on "Behind the Scenes of
Action Line." For reserva-
tions, call Mildred Blau,
557-0623. Guests are wel-
come. Members are
requested to bring items
for the Oct. 8 and 9 rum-
mage sale. For pickup of
rummage items, call Lucia
Robiner, 535-5247.

* * *

INFANTS SERVICE
GROUP will meet noon
Monday in the Sutton Place
Apts. club house. Light
luncheon will be served.
Norman Samson and Ken-
neth Brandt will discuss
"Money Management."

646-6034

* * *

DON'T MISS THAT IMPORTANT CALL!

Portable cordless
telephone. Attractive
functional design. Ideal
for homes and offices.
Take it to your garden,
swimming pool or
tennis court. Operates
300 feet from main
phone.

CLUB ONE, Pioneer
Women, will hold a special
cultural meeting 11:30 a.m.
Tuesday in the Kristen To-
wers, 25900 Greenfield,
Suite 205E, Oak Park.
Brunch will be served. The
October donor will be dis-
cussed. Members are re-
quested to bring bulletin
ads. Adele Mondry will
speak on her book,
"Wyszkowo — A Shtetl on
the River Bug." Friends are
invited. For information,
call Chana Michlin, 968-
5351.

* * *

SHARONA CHAP-
TER, Pioneer Women, will
have an open board meeting
8 p.m. Thursday in the
home of Esther Kaber,

14161 Ludlow P1., Oak
Park. Everyone is welcome.

* * *

DAVID HORODOKER
WOMEN'S ORGANIZA-
TION will have a luncheon
noon Tuesday in the North-
gate Apts. club house. Hos-
tesses are: Mesdames Mor-
ris Berk, Bernard Chase,
Joseph Davidson, Alex Dor-
chen, Joseph Guterman,
Ben Komisar, Ralph Rimar
kid Abe Weinstein. For tic-
Mits and information, call
Komisar, 557-9425.
* * *
Si
GROUP,
HadaALOM
nual 'sah, will hold its an-
7:30 p membership event
home f.m. Tuesday in the
Shadyd 1 Mona Dembs, 3217
field.Folle Ct., West Bloom-
Silver, 55- details, call Bari
817.
HANITA .
Pioneer Women, w- M3 TER,
hold a
membership lunch
Aug. 26 at the Kri nnoon
wers, 25900 Gree -tten To-
Suite 205E, Oak Park_l field '
Miller, president
Greater Detroit Pio1L2r
Women Council, will be
guest speaker. There is a
nominal charge, and gr,lests
and friends are welcome.
For reservations, call Isabel
Slutsky, 557-0755; or Rose
- - _
Gruskin, 553-3208.

'

17

* * *

SHOSHANIM CHAP-
TER, Pioneer Women, will
meet 7:30 p.m. Monday in
the lobby of the main
Jewish Community Center.
Instructor Debbie Abram-
son will give a mini slim-
nastic lesson. For details,
call Marsha Cohen, 968-
2298.

* * *

BETH ACHIM SIS-
TERHOOD will hold a
rummage sale 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Aug. 26 and 27 at the
synagogue. Among the
items to be offered are
clothes, toys, shoes, hand-
bags, household goods and
bric-a-brac. To volunteer or
for information, call Fredell
Whiteman, chairman,
356-1864.

Golf Tourney
to Benefit Kids

DRESS SHOP

Entries are still being ac-
cepted for the 10th annual
Mike Lucci Celebrity Golf
Tournament for the benefit
of Spaulding for Children to
be held Monday at Red Run
Golf Club in Royal Oak.
Proceeds from the tour-
nament are the major
source of funding for
Spaulding for Children. The
tax deductible entry fee in-
cludes a lunch at noon, a
scramble start at 1:30 p.m.,
refreshments served on the
course, and cocktails and
dinner afterward.
Numerous sports and
media stars are already
entered in this year's tour-
nament. Contestants play
in fivesomes made up of four
amateurs and a celebrity.
Prizes will be awarded.
For information, call
Nora Payne, 561-1700.

OFF
75%
OAK PARK

STORE ONLY

25603 COOLIDGE
OAK PARK, MICH.

BETWEEN 10-121/2 MILE RD.

HOURS: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. MON.-SAT.

VISA & MasterCharge

Psalm 117 is the shortest
chapter in the Bible. It has
only two sentences.

Marlene Handler has
been appointed librarian of
the Orchards Children's
Services' newest addition,
the Suzanne S. Hopp Memo-
rial Library.
In organizing the li-
brary, Mrs. Handler will be
in charge of the acquisition
and cataloguing of all
printed and audio-visual
material. The library will
be devoted to the study of
developmental, psychologi-
cal and learning problems er
young children.
The Orchards is a mu ng
function agency provida' nd
residential, out-patient- ams
clinical camping pros and
for troubled childrfagency
their families. The1962 b y
s established ition Na-
the DRtroit SP of Jewish
tional
rIcensed
by the
y
Women agneE. gan
as a child
d
elV
of
swteaities
cal librarian,
Handler received a
M
.
degree from the Uni-
versity of Michigan and a
master's degree from
Wayne State University.
In addition to organizing
several libraries in the
city, she has been libra-
rian for the Michigan
Psychoanalytic Institute
for six years.
Thei logp

A.

-

MARLENE HANDLER

available to professionals in
the mental health field, as
well as to parents of
youngsters experiencing
problems covered by the
scope of the Library.
"How to" books and video
tapes will be included. The
collection of the Hopp Li-
brary will be non-
circulating. Parents of Or-
chards Day Camp children
will meet there to discuss
mutual problems.
The library will also be
used for staff in-service
meetings of teachers in pro-
grams involving pre-school
disturbed children. Stu-
dents writing dissertations
in areas of mental health
ITI_Ty also use its facilities.

Washington Star Israel
Correspondent Under Fire

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Legal
proceedings have begun
against the Israeli corre-
spondent for the Washing-
ton Star, David Halevy, in
connection with the story he
wrote last week claiming
that Israel's chief of security
services (Shin Bet) had
handed in his resignation
because Premier Menahem
Begin had obstructed an in-
vestigation by the Shin Bet
into the bombing incidents
last June on the West Bank
in which two mayors were
maimed and an Israeli
police sapper was injured.
Attorney General Yit-
zhak Zamir, who ordered
the legal proceedings, said
Halevy, who is now in
Washington, may have vio-
lated Israel's laws govern-
ing censorship and state
secrets by revealing the
name of the Shin Bet chief
in his Washington Star
story. Violation of the state
secrets law is punishable by
up to 15 years in prison.
Meanwhile, the Knesset
Security and Foreign Af-
fairs Committee unanim-
ously rejected allegations
by the Washington Star
that Begin obstructed the
investigation in the bomb-
ing attacks against the
three West Bank mayors.
The head of the secu-
rity service testified be-
fore the Knesset commit-
tee and said that Begin
had never interfered in
the investigation but had,
on the contrary, ordered
a comprehensive investi-
gation of the attacks,
which the premier had
described as "crimes of
the worst kind."
The Shin Bet chief said he

had told Begin that he
wished to retire from his
post after 30 years in the in-
telligence service, the last
six as its chief, long before
the attacks on the Arab
mayors. He reiterated that
his request for retirement
had nothing whatsoever to
do with the investigation
into the bombings.
Both government coali-
tion and Labor Alignment
opposition members in the
committee said they were
convinced by the Shin Bet
chiefs explanation.
The Shin Bet chief is
never identified in Israel
but the Star said he is Av-
raham Sachtiv, 54.
Dan Pattir, Begin's press
adviser, characterized the
Washington Sta • story,
written by Davi, Halevy,
the paper's correspondent in
Tel Aviv, as "a fabrication
from beginning to end .
requires an examinatiori -ui
motives." Halevy is acti ,7,..,
in Labor Party affairs.

Meadow Brook
Has Car Show

More than 100 classic and
antique cars will be dis-
played at Meadow Brook
Hall's second annual "Con-
cours d'Elegance" 10 a.m.-4
p.m. Sunday.
Among the six different
categories of automobiles
will be a 1937 Horch or-
dered by Adolph Hitler as a
gift for Heinrich Himmler
and the classic Packard
given to Clark Gable by
Carol Lombard.
There is a charge for the
event, which serves as a
benefit for Meadow Brook
Hall. For information, call
the hall, 377-3140.

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