impoimpummumw 48 Friday, April 3, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ▪ FRANK PAUL Women's Clubs and His ORCHESTRA DUO's — TRIO's SOLOISTS KINNERET CHAP- TER, Pioneer Women, will hold a special meeting noon 557-7986 Monday in the Kristen To- wers, 25900 Greenfield, Oak Park. President Lily "Ai Carr Wititzt4 97;riffes tiani * * * NORTHWEST DE- TROIT CHAPTER, NAC, will meet 8 p.m. Wednesday in the home of Alice Lubin, 23610 Coolidge, Oak Park. Guests and prospective members are invited. Re- freshments will be served. For details, call Serena Weiss, 557-2435; or Nettie Mandell, 548-1095. 1170 ni irt Dy .M1 -0 c oin tea entire community for ;min mil STadrfs Daveninr Ayr( 84 Itr3 '1 at 5:30 a.m, * * * S rintr TEMPLE BETH EL SISTERHOOD will pre- sent "Sight Serenade" at a luncheon meeting noon April 13 in the temple. For reservations, call Lily Gottfurcht, 477-6809; or Bea Strichartz, 626-0855. There is a charge. rti Vrt Congregation D cenWockum ad * * * tit goo ¬ W, Weens. April S, N51 men, women anddifiren are encouraged - to amnia-- ireakfast refreskments will6e served- Sionsorei 61-Council of Ortiodox tigif and" k yekih Shoff add Matlack %gam %feria *aro Counefil youni7rati Yeshiva' gliiva aniallarea synaioyurs Roubeck will present the program. Hostesses are Esther Nusbaum and Anne Goldstein. TEMPLE EMANU-EL SISTERHOOD will hold its second annual VIP luncheon 11:45 a.m. April 13 in the temple. Billed as "A Springtime Bouquet of Beautiful Music," the luncheon will feature a musical presentation by the New World Quartet. Tickets are available from Carol Coskey, 358- 3460; and at the temple, 967-4020. Free babysitting is available by advance reservation. Ms. Coskey and Bea Rothschild are committee chairmen. They are assisted RALPH NADER Is Coming To ADAT SHALOM Sisterhood May 4, 1981 ••• • • • • •••• • • •••• • •• •0 0 00• 0 000 00 0 00900 00•00 0 00 • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Let our broadcast-trained camera crews, directors and editors vIDEOTapE • BAR MITZVAH R • ANNIVERSARY EC • WEDDIN G OR EVENT! Fascinate your friends and family with a professionally produced videotape production complete with • • • • TITLES and EDITING SPECIAL EFFECTS SUPERIMPOSITIONS NARRATION BY POPULAR RADIO AND TV CELEBRITIES Relive the fun and good times of happy family occasions! Our broadcast quality 3/4 videotape equipment assures you of tapes you'll be proud to play again and again. Our production crews use the same talents and skills they use to produce many of Detroit's prize-winning TV programs. • • • • • • • * • *Se Call to see a sample videotape and view it in your own home on your own TV set. 1 0 Clhsonn@-II 3 1 1 PRODUCTIONS INCORPORATED _ sivE PAAUL Y TV P OR Let us put your S ® professionally family on record of your produce a television! We'll living videotape interviews with famlly history, including children all family members reflections on and grandparents including with for the future. their life experiences and hopes 21700 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Michigan 48075 313/557-1090 • • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • o • • • • • • • • • • • by Nena Dillick, Marcia Ferstenfeld, Adela Gold, Jane Finkelstein, Judy Greenwald, Lois Falk, Au- drey Lucow, Rhoda Scott and Carole Shaya. Laurice Parr is president. * * * TEMPLE ISRAEL SISTERHOOD will hold its annual election meeting noon April 13 in the temple. Dr. Vincent Cornellier, a stress specialist, will speak on An Introduction to Ef- fective Stress Manage- ment." Luncheon will pre- cede the meeting. There is a charge. For reservations, call the temple, 661-5700; or Rita Packard, 559-1647. PURITY CHAPTER, Order of the Eastern Star, will have a business meet- ing 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Oddfellows Temple, Berkley. * * * ZEDAKAH CLUB will have a regular meeting 10:30 a.m. Monday in the Knob-in-the-Woods Apts. club house. The donor and games will be discussed. Re- freshments will follow. Ad- mission is free. * * * ISRAEL CHAPTER, Pioneer Women, will have a fund-raising theater party 8:30 p.m. May 2 at the Hil- berry Theater on the Wayne State University campus. The play to be seen is "Bloody Jack." Dinner will follow at Carl's Chop House. There is a charge. Tickets are limited. For reserva- tions by Monday, call Made- lyn Sweet, 557-4314. Friends and guests are wel- come. * * * SHARONA CHAP- TER, Pioneer Women, will meet 8 p.m. Thursday in the home of Sarah Manson, 26276 Summerdale, South- field. Tamar Friedman of Russia will speak on "Make-Up and Facials." Guests are welcome. * * * BECH ACHIM SIS- TERHOOD will have a "Night at the Movies"•7:45 p.m. Monday in the syna- gogue. The film, "Oliver," will be presented. Tickets and refreshments will be sold at 7:15 . There is a charge. Everyone is wel- _ come. * * * CHANA CZENESH CHAPTER, Pioneer Women, will meet noon Monday in the Lincoln To- wers Apts. club room. Jac- kye Drapkin will speak on "Naamat in Action." Slides will be shown. Refresh- ments will be served, and guests are welcome. * * * BNAI DAVID SISTERHOOD will have a book review 10 a.m. Mon- day in the synagogue li- brary. Celia Wilson will re- view "Hand-Me-Downs" by Rhea Kohan. Refreshments will be served and there is a nominal charge. A board meeting will follow at noon. President Irene Light an- nounces that the April 29 donor luncheon will be dis- cussed. * * * WOMEN OF JEWISH NATIONAL FUND will hold their opening spring board meeting noon Tues- day at the Zionist Cultural Center. President Shirley Kraft asks that money and pledge cards from the recent donor be brought to the meeting. Hostesses for the day are chairman Esther Cooper, Frances Cutler, Sadye Forman, Edith Gladstone and Eve Her- man. Ex-Detroit Pianist Will Play at Music Study Club Concert Pianist Seymour Lipkin will be the guest artist 3 p.m. May 3 at the Sunday Annual Artist Concert at Orchestra Hall sponsored by the Music Study Club of Metropolitan Detroit. Lipkin, a former De- troiter, will play in memory of his mother, Leah Lipkin. Lipkin began studying at age four under the tutelage of Jessie B. Woolfenden and Mischa Kottler. He also studied under Rudolf Ser- kin and Mieczyslaw Horszowski under schol- arship at the Curtis Insti- tute of Music in Philadel- phia. He was apprentice conductor to George Szell in Cleveland and was a student of Serge Koussevitsky. He was piano soloist and assistant conductor for the New York Philharmonic, won the Rachmaninoff Piano Competition, and has appeared as soloist with nearly every major sym- phony in the U.S. c. SEYMOU•R LIPKIN Lipkin recently served as music director of the Long Island Symphony and the Joffrey Ballet. He is' on the faculty of the Curtis Insti- tute and the Manhattan School of Music. There is a charge for the concert. For tickets, call Joan Linden, 644-9080. Almost everything that is peat has been done by youth.