THE -DETRET1EWISH NEWS
October
1s1
69
Youth News
ADAT SHALOM'S
Youth Department holds
Shabat services every
Saturday. Garinim meet in
the chapel at 10 a.m. Nit-
zanim and Makor meet out-
side the adult service. Ser-
vices are conducted by
members of Migdal Tzion
and Shoresh in the board
room at 10 a.m.
The synagogue's annual
Shabat Sukka Dinner will
be held today. All youth
group members are invited
to participate with their
families. For reservations,
contact the synagogue of-
fice, 851-5100. There is a
charge.
At 10 a.m. Sunday, the
youth department and Adat
Shalom Branch of the Un-
r
BBYO
Activities)
BBYO chapters will par-
ticipate in the BBYO Shul-
In for Simhat Torah on
Tuesday. Each participat-
ing AZA and BBG chapter
will go as a group to the
local synagogue or temple of
their choice and join the
Simhat Torah Service.
Overall coordinators for the
program are AZA and BBG
Council Vice Presidents,
Marc Landau and Andrea
Berk, respectively.
The BBYO Leadership
Training Institute will take
place Oct. 23-25 at Camp
Tamarack. The program
will focus on leadership
training and will feature a
leadership round-robin. A
Maccabiad will be held and
a special "Come as a Mup-
pet" dance will be featured,
with Firehouse Productions
providing the music. A spe-
cial feature of the program
will be Eve Jacobs, an Is-
raeli song leader from De-
nver, Colo. Corodinators for
the program are Ailene
Katz of Machar BBG and
Jeff Roth of Rose AZA.
The next meeting of the
BBYO board of directors
will take place 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 28 at the BBYO office.
The next BBYO adviser
group meeting will take
place 7:30 p.m. Oct. 28 at
the BBYO office. Special
focus at the meeting will
be on adviser prepara-
tion for the regional con-
vention in December.
BBYO will present a spe-
cial Judaic programming
seminar for all chapter vice
presidents, religious-
cultural chairmen and
Jewish heritage chairmen 4
p.m. Oct. 29 in the Dubin
Meeting Room of the Bnai
Brith Building. Other in-,
terested chapter program-
mers are also invited to at-
tend. The seminar will focus
on creative approaches to
Jewish programming in the
chapter. .
BBYO announces the ap-
pointment of Mark Adel as
adviser to Goode AZA. Vol-
unteer advisers are still
needed for AZA chapters in
the Southfield and
Birmingham-Bloomfield
Hills' area. To volunteer,
call Brian Ackerson at the
BBYO office, 552-8260.
ited Hebrew Schools will
have the first of its monthly
Sunday -morning programs
of the year. Shaharit will be
followed by breakfast and a
program given by Rabbi
Efry Spectre called, "Fol-
lowed By the KGB." Boys
and girls age 12-18 are in-
vited.
Simhat Torah services
will begin with Minha and
Maariv at 6 p.m. Tuesday.
The hakafot will start at
6:30. Flags and apples will
be given to every child to
carry in the processions.
Adat Shalom's youth and
education department, in
cooperation with Shaarey
Zedek's youth department,
will host a course, for mem-
bers of any United
Synagogue Youth group, in
"Conversational Hebrew."
Classes will begin the first
week of December and run
for 20 sessions. For informa-
tion, contact Cantor Earl
Berris, 851-5100.
The confirmation class is
still accepting new stu-
dents. Persons in grades
10-12 are eligible. For in-
formation on the confirma-
tion class, call the youth de-
partment, 851-5100.
• • •
BETH ABRAHAM
HILLEL MOSES youth
department will go horse-
back riding at Roy 's Ranch
Sunday, meeting 1 p.m. at
the synagogue. Participants
should bring a dairy lunch.
There is a nominal charge.
For persons who do not
want to go horseback riding,
the youth department has
planned a bowling outing.
Participants should meet at
West Bloomfield Lanes at 1
p.m. Kosher hot dogs will be
served, and there is a
charge.
At 6:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Simhat Torah services will
be held. Israeli singing and
dancing will follow.
Junior congregation
holds services 10 a.m.
Saturdays for youth age
7-13.
The youth lounge is open
6:15 p.m. Tuesdays for
games, music and more.
For details, call Mike
Klein, 851-6880; or Mike
Sabes, 355-0891.
• • •
BETH ACHIM Lahav
United Synagogue Youth
will go sukka hopping with
the Shaarey Zedek USY
Saturday; meeting 10 a.m.
at Shaarey Zedek for ser-
vices.
Kadima USY will go on a
hayride Oct. 25, meeting
1:30 p.m. at the synagogue.
There is a charge. For de-
tails, call adviser Gail
Nachman, 353-3336.
Youth -services are held
every Shabat morning for
persons age 3-18.
• • •
BETH SHALOM United
Synagogue Youth will have
its "super sukka supper so-
cial" Sunday, meeting 6
p.m. at the synagogue.
There is a rharge. For re-
serrations, call Amy Gold,
356-5402 or 354-3422.
BSUSY will have an oneg
Shabat 8:30 p.m. Oct. 23 at
the Franklin Club Apts. For
reservations, call Beth
Korby, 355-3049.
Registration deadline for
the Center Area Kinnus is
today. Applications and fees ,
are due. The kinnus will
take place Nov. 19-22 at
Cong. Bnai Jeshurun in
Cleveland, Ohio. For de-
tails, call Ron Leff, presi-
dent, 552-8165.
• • •
BNAI DAVID youth
Shabat services are held 10
a.m. Saturdays for persons
age 3-17. Story Hour will
have a luncheon in the
sukka following services
Saturday. Youth age 8-12
will meet in the small din-
ing room. Youth age 13-17
will meet in the chapel.
Talit and Tefilin will
meet 9 a.m. Sunday for ser-
vices, breakfast and bowl-
ing. T and T and Atid are
conducting a paper drive.
Persons who wish to donate
paper should call adviser
Zolman Rube, 968-2654.
Haor will meet 1:15 p.m.
Sunday in the youth lounge
for elections followed by a
pizza party in the youth
lounge. Bowling will follow.
For details, call Ruth Moss,
adviser, 356-8412.
Simhat Torah services
will be held 6:30 p.m. Tues-
day. Flags will be distri-
buted. Refreshments, songs
and dancing will follow.
adviser Betty Elster, 398-
3284.
Talit and Tefilin Club
will meet 8:30 a.m. Sun-
day in the chapel for ser-
vices and discuSsions,
followed by breakfast
and bowling at Hartfield
Lanes. The group will
discuss "The Jewish
Calendar, " and the
speaker will be Paul
Levine. Membership
dues are requested now.
Everyone is welcome,
and there is a nominal
weekly charge. Drivers
are needed. Steve Hirsch
is the group's assistant to
the adviser. For informa-
tion, call Walter
Rosenblum, 352-2307.
Junior congregation will
have nominations of officers
Saturday and will hold elec-
tions Oct. 24. Anyone in-
terested in running for of-
fice should call adviser
Mark Eichner, 358-0065.
USY Services, Junior
congregation, Story Hour
and the Shabat nursery will
meet 10 a.m. Saturday. Re-
freshments will be served in
the sukka, and everyone is
welcome.
The youth department
will celebrate Simhat Torah
7 p.m. Tuesday. There will
be flags and candy for all the
youth, and refreshments
and apples for everyone. Is-
raeli dancing will be taught
by Gila Rayburg. All are
welcome.
BNAI MOSHE Senior
"Moshe Mouse" United
Synagogue Youth will host
a city-wide 1960s peace
BNEI AKIVA will meet
dance 8:30 p.m. Saturday in at Young Israel of Green-
the synagogue social hall. field for snif Saturday af-
Bnai Moshe USY members ternoon, two hours before
will be admitted free of Minha. Grades four-seven
charge, and there is a nomi- are invited for games,
nal charge for everyone
stories and refreshments.
else. A band and disc jockey
Chavrayeh Aleph mem-
will provide the music. bers will go five-pin bowling
Everyone is welcome, and Sunday. Buses will leave
should dress in '60s attire.
9:45 a.m. Sunday from
For information, call Trea-
Young Israel of Oak-Woods.
surer Sara Weisman, 661-
There is a charge.
9332; President S.J. Cher-
Grades eight-12 will go
rin, 855-9371; adviser roller-skating at Bonaven-
Marianne Jelinek, 968-
ture Saturday night. There
2083; or youth director Sha- is a charge. For details, call
ron Levine, 548-3123 or Nathan Bigman, 968-1499.
547-3369.
Bnei Akiva will soon
Moshe Mouse USY will
begin the publication of a
have a Shabat dinner and
series of information
oneg Shabat 6:30 p.m. today sheets reviewing Jewish
in the home of Rabbi and tradition surrounding
Mrs. Stanley Rosenbaum,
Israel. It will be called
25450 Gardner, Oak Park.
"Eretz Chemda — The
The dinner will be eaten in
Beloved Land."
the sukka. The topic for the
Only those regularly re-
oneg Shabat will be ceiving Bnei Akiva infor-
"Inter-Religious Dating and
mation in the mail will re-
Marriage." There is a nomi-
ceive Eretz Chemda. Others
nal charge for the dinner.
interested in the publica-
Everyone is welcome to the
tion can add their names to
oneg, which will begin at the Bnei Akiva mailing list
about 8:30 p.m. Reserva- by calling Sheila Kresch,
tions are required for the
968-7025.
dinner. For reservations or
• • •
information, call Cultural
YOUNG ISRAEL OF
Vice President Nancy
GREENFIELD will have a
Jacobs, 557-9464; Cherrin,
minyan for youth age 6-11
or Mrs. Jelinek.
at 10 a.m. Saturday.
Kadima USY will have
Kvutzat Shabat will have
elections and go bowling
a Sukkot party 5:30 p.m.
Oct. 25, meeting in the
Saturday in the Young Is-
youth lounge at 1:30 p.m.
rael of Greenfield sukka.
Anyone interested in run-
Youth groups for boys in
ning for office or voting in
grades
four-six will be held
the election must be a
6 p.m. Saturday.
paid-up member. Drivers
Young Israel Teens will
are needed. Everyone is
go sukka hopping Saturday,
welcome, and there is a
meeting 4:30 p.m. at Young
nominal charge. For reser-
Israel of Southfield. YI-
vations or information call
Teens will have their an-
nual Simhat Torah dinner
Tuesday at Young Israel of
Greenfield, following 6:30
p.m. Minha services and
hakafot. There is a charge.
For reservations, call Phil-
licia Lantz, 647-6262; or
Stephanie Selesney, 354-
3496.
Hospital's Bonds Reception
to Hear Israel TV Producer
Dr. and Mrs. William M.
Leuchter will host a Sinai
Hospital leadership recep-
tion on behalf of State of Is-
rael Bonds in their South-
field home at 8 p.m. Thurs-
day.
The event is in advance of
the Sinai Hospital dinner-
dance honoring Dr. Maurice
Tatelman, recipient-elect of
the Maimonides Award, to
be held Nov. 4 at Cong.
Shaarey Zedek.
Guest speaker at the
leadership reception will be
Israel Amitai, Israel televi-
sion producer, director and
writer of television and
radio public affairs prog-
rams and former editor of
the Dever newspaper.
Amitai, a native-born
Israeli, served in the
Hagana. In World War
H, he served in the regi-
ments organized by the
Jewish Agency in coop-
eration with the British
government. In 1948, he
fought in Israel's War of
ISRAEL AMITAI
Independence, achieving
the rank of captain in Is-
rael's Defense Forces.
Presently in television
production, he has pro-
duced and directed 1,000
television programs in the
areas of public affairs, the
arts, culture and education,
as well as many programs
for ethnic groups in the na-
tive tongues. He was among
the press corps covering the
Camp David talks in 1978.
Milliken Cites Anne Silver
Attorney Anne Gonte
Silver of Birmingham has
been appointed by Gov. Wil-
liam G. Milliken to the
State Board of Examiners of
Social Workers for a term of
four years, as the public
member of that board.
- Probate Court Judge
Barry M. Grant officiated at
the swearing in ceremony
Oct. 6.
Mrs. Silver has just com-
pleted a four-year term as
the public member of the
Michigan State Board of
Podiatric Medicine and
Surgery on which she
served as vice chairman.
Mrs. Silver is the vice
president of the Zionist Or-
ganization of America-
Detroit District; former
president of the Women's
Auxiliary to the
Maimonides Medical Soci-
ety; a board member of the
Jewish National Fund;
ANNE SILVER
member of Hadassah, Wo-
men's American ORT, Oak-
land County Bar Associa-
tion, Women Lawyers As-
sociation of Michigan, Wo-
men's Division of Israel
Bonds.
On Oct. 23, the Women
Lawyers Association of
Michigan will honor Mrs.
Silver at its fall 1981 con-
ference to be held in Lans-
ing on the occasion of her
30th anniversary in the
legal profession.
Student Interfaith Forum
on Holocaust Slated at WSU
The third interfaith high
school symposium on the
Holocaust. will be held Nov.
9 at Wayne State Univer-
sity Student Center Build-
ing.
Nov. 9 is the anniversary
of the event known as Kris-
tallnacht.
The symposium seeks to
expose high school students
to the lessons of the
Holocaust. It will feature a
film from the CBS program
"60 Minutes," "Star Power"
(a simulation where the
young adults become
squares, triangles or circles
and the rules are changed to
benefit one at the expense of
the others), small group ses-
sions with survivors and a
human rights presentation.
The symposium is spon-
sored by the Center for
Peace and Conflict Studies
(Wayne State University),
the Greater Detroit Round
Table of the National Con-
ference of Christians and
Jews, the Jewish Commun-
ity Council, the Jewish
Educators Council, Ar-
chidocese of Detroit Schools
Office, with cooperation in
planning by the Detroit
Public Schools, the Detroit
Federation of Teachers and
Bishop Foley High School. I.