THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Profs Attend
Parley in D.C.
Youth News
ADAT SHALOM Nit-
zanim will hold Shabat
services 10:30 a.m. Satur-
day in room 104.
Makor will have services
10:30 a.m. Saturday in room
105.
Garinim, Shoresh and
Migdal Tizion will partici-
pate in the youth services
Saturday.
Participating are: Jon
Levy, Jeff Lupovitch, Sue
Sherman,
Mike
iachman,
Leslee
Diamond, Amy Freed-
land, Jonathan Green-
berg, Eric Siegal, How-
ard Lupovitch, Patti
Lieberman, Andy
Rocklin, Joy Guillerman,
Michael Rocklin, Barry
Frank, David Siegal,
Marcy Woronoff and
Allen Sherman. There
will be a youth luncheon
immediately following
services.
* * *
BETH ABRAHAM
HILLEL MOSES' Dor
Chadash group will have its
own special night in the
youth lounge 7 p.m. Tues-
day. Games, TV and light
refreshments will be avail-
able. Friends are invited.
Admission is free.
The group will have a
gym and swim night 7-9:-30
p.m. Thursday at the main
Jewish Community Center.
The group will meet at the
Center. Racquetball,
swimming, jogging, pinball
and more will be available
at a charge. For reserva-
tions and information, call
adviser Sima Abramovitz,
356-6282.
Junior congregation serv-
ices will not be held Satur-
day due to Passover.
* * *
BETH ACHIM'S youth
services will be held Satur-
day. The Lahav minyan will
meet in the Klein Chapel at
10 a.m. Members of
Kadimah are invited to join.
Junior congregation will
meet in the youth lounge.
Kochavim will meet in the
classroom across from the
synagogue office. Games,
songs and stories will be
available for the Nitzanim
in the board room. All youth
services begin at 10 a.m.
and end at about 11:30 to
join the senior congregation
in the main sanctuary.
Kadimah and Bnai Mazal
will share the weekend of
May 1-3 at Camp Tamarack
with Kadimah members
from Shaarey Zedek and
s everal synagogues from
)hio. Adviser Shelly
Kieran has arranged a
Shabat program, with dis-
cussion groups on "The
Modern Relevance of the
Ten Commandments." For
details, call Ms. Kieran,
399-3287. Bnai Mazal
members should call Robin
Friedman, 642-8041.
Orders are being taken
for the t-shirts featuring the
Israel Independence Day
logo. Members who want to
join the parade on May 10
are requested to order a
t-shirt. To order, call Ms.
Kieran, 399-3287
(Kadimah); Ms. Friedman,
642-8041 (Bnai Mazal), or
Judy Goldis, 626-1181
(Kochavim). There is a
charge. There also is a dis-
count for ordering in ad-
vance.
All members of
Kadimah, Bnai Mazal
and Kochavim will meet
at 11 a.m. at the
synagogue on May 10, to
work out the parade for-
mation. At about 11:30,
the group will carpool to
the Bendix Corp. parking
lot to find Beth Achim's
assigned position in the
Israeli Independence
Day parade. Parents
should plan to pick up
their children at the
Southfield Civic Center.
Joseph Silverstein,
chairman of the Talit and
Tefilin Club, sponsored by
the Beth Achim Men's Club,
announces that the next
meeting will be 11 a.m. May
3 in the Klein .Chapel. Hey
class students will put on
tefilin and have a Shaharit
service, followed by a bagel
brunch. Dr. Stanley
Kupinsky, principal of the
Hebrew high school, will be
a special guest that morn-
ing.
* * *
BNAI DAVID'S Shalom
group will meet 10 a.m.
Saturday in room 101.
Youth age 7-9 will meet 10
a.m. in room-103. Youth age
10-13 will meet in the small
chapel. Stuart Rogoff will
continue the special service,
"A Shabat Experience."
Junior congregation joins
the main congregation at
11:30 a.m.
BBYO Activities
L'Chaim AZA will hold
its third annual 12-hour
bowl-a-thon 6 p.m.-2 a.m.
May 2 and 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
May 3 at West Bloomfield
Lanes.
All funds collected during
the bowl-a-thon will be do-
nated to the BBYO Interna-
tional Service Fund. The In-
ternational Service Fund
provides scholarship help to
worthy Jewish teens for
attendance at BBYO sum-
mer leadership programs
and BBYO Israel Summer
Institute. ISF also allocates
funds to projects in Israel as
well as regional leadership
training. For information
on the bowl-a-thon, contact
Josh Lerner, 354-0724; or
Mark Bennett, 358-3465.
The next meeting of the
Great Lakes AZA Council
will take place 7 p.m. May 4
at the Bnai Brith Building.
The next meeting of the
BBG Council will take place
7 p.m. May 7 at the Bnai
Brith Building. Both meet-
ings will feature declara-
tions and nominations for
Council offices for the
1981-1982 programming
year. All AZA and BBG
members are invited.
BBYO announces the
election of the following
new chapter presidents
for the 1981-1982 pro-
gramming year: Bobby
Glen, Beber AZA; Steven
Gold, L'Chaim AZA; Jill
Garvin, Brice BBG; Jody
Haber, Erani BBG;
Marcy Woronoff, Shalom
Aviv BBG; Cheryl
Slutzky, Shoshanna
BBG.
New chapter advisers are:
Scott Freedman, L'Chaim
AZA; Gale Nosanchuk,
Aliyah BBG; Lynn Bressler,
Machar BBG; and Gayle
Bakst, Sabra BBG. Open-
ings still exist for advisers
for chapters in the met-
ropolitan Detroit area. For
details, contact Arnie
Weiner at the BBYO office,
552-8260.
May 1 is the registration
deadline for the upcoming
BBYO Elections Training
Conclave which will be held
May 15-17 at Camp
Tamarack. The theme for
the program is "BBYO:
Doorway To Your Future"
and the program will offer
leadership training for
newly-elected AZA and
BBG chapter officers as well
as the elections of new coun-
cil leaders. About 225
BBYOers from 35 separate
chapters are expected to
attend. For information,
contact chapter presidents
or the BBYO office.
Free Programs
Discuss Divorce
A series of six programs
on divorce, free and open to
the public, will be held from
May 4 to June 15, sponsored
by the Oakland County
Child Advocacy and Family
Service Project.
Sessions will be froth 7:15
to 9:30 p.m., Monday eve-
nings, at the First United
Methodist Church of Bir-
mingham, 1589 W. Maple.
Speakers will include a
psychiatrist, an attorney
and psychologists.
There will be three ses-
sions in June for youth.
The Oakland County
Child Advocacy and Family
Service Project is sponsored
by the Oakland County
Probate Court and the
Junior League of Birming-
ham. For information, call
the court, 858-0043.
Friday, April 24, 1981
Youth Shabat will be ob-
served May 9. Attendance
awards wil be presented. A
special kidush will follow.
The deadline is nearing
for entries for the "Vote for
Your Favorite Shaina
Punim" contest. Trips to
Bob-Lo or Cedar Point will
be awarded, depending on
the winners' ages.
A Tamarack weekend
is scheduled for May 1-3
for youth in grades six-
eight. They will be joined
by the Cong. Shaarey
Zedek and Cong. Beth
Achim youth groups.
Reservations are limited
to 25. For details, call ad-
viser Adam Gottlieb,
352-2356; or Denise Co-
hen, youth director, 352-
5438, after 5:30 p.m.
The Bnai David Bottle
Brigade is continuing.
Youth will participate in
another synagogue fund
raiser, "Bowl for Your
Shul," May 3. Youth age
7-17 will participate. Spon-
sor sheets are available in
the main office. Persons
with a minimum of 15 spon-
sors will bowl free. Proceeds
must be turned into the
office by June 1. For details,
call Ron Stearn, 967-4088;
or Mrs. Cohen.
The Bnai David Youth
Program will participate in
the Israel Independence
Parade May 10. To partici-
pate, call Nancy Korn, ad-
viser, 557-6481; or Gottlieb.
Cantor Hyman Adler
still is seeking members
for the choir. The choir
meets 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays
in the synagogue.
Talit and Tefilin Club
will meet 9 a.m. Sunday.
Caricatures
Drs. Jacob I. Hurwitz and
Leon Lucas, professors at
the Wayne State University
School of Social Work,
attended the invitational
Faculty-Rabbinic Cabinet
Critical Issues Conference
in Washington, D.C., last
month.
The conference was spon-
sored by the United Jewish
Appeal with the support of
the Detroit Jewish Welfare
Federation.
for your party
By
SAM FIELD
Call
399-1320
JUDAISM-ZIONISM . . . INSEPARABLE
Discover Your Roots .. .
Be equipped to challenge Israel's enemies
who seek to distort history and equate
Zionism with Racism.
You cannot afford to miss
the 2nd session of the ZOA Seminar on
"The History and Philosophy
of monism" (ten one-hour sessions.)
The theme:
HERZL AND THE RISE OF
POLITICAL ZIONISM.
The date: Wednesday, April 29, 1:45 p.m.
The place: Zionist Cultural Center,18451 W. 10 Mile
Seminar leader and lecturer:
EZEKIEL LEIKIN
Veteran Zionist leader,
Writer and lecturer
No Admission Charge . . Bring Your Friends .
Refreshments Following
ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA
18451 Ten Mile Rd. . . . Ph. 569-1515
Sidney Silverman, president
CULTURED PEARLS
FRESH WATER PEARLS
AND BEADS
NOW SAVE 33%
REGULZFRETAIL
to Conduct
Seder Sunday
WC
Workmen's Circle of
Michigan will celebrate its
annual third Seder 2:30
p.m. Sunday at the Work-
men's Circle Center, 26341
Coolidge, Oak Park.
The special Haggada was
written by the Shifrin fam-
ily and the Seder will be
conducted by Ed Shifrin.
There will be audience par-
ticipation in the reading of
the Haggada and Pesach
music.
The symbolism of tradi-
tional foods and practices
will be explained. Holiday
refreshments will be served.
There is a small charge. For
reservations and informa-
tion, call the Workmen's
Circle office, 545-0985.
*SALE INCLUDES IN STOCK MERCHANDISE ONLY. NO SPECIAL ORDERS
A stunning collection of pearls and beads in all
shapes, sizes and colors. Here's a chance to really save.
CASH REFUNDS,• NO DUE BILLS
100% Satisfaction Guaranteed
Mon.. Tues., Wed.. Fri., Sat., 10-8
Thurs.. 10-9
Tapper's the source
26400 West Twelve Mile Road
in Southfield's Racquetime Mall
Northeast corner 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy.
Phone:
. r
23
357-5578
•