/ z THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS JNF Women Plan 53rd Donor Youth News ADAT SHALOM'S youth and education de- partment sponsors Shabat services for youth 10 a.m. Saturdays. Shoresh will have an oneg Shabat 8 p.m. Dec. 3 in the home of Marty Kaye, 5644 Apple Ridge Tr., West Bloomfield. For directions, call Marty, 851-7010. The group will go bowling at West Bloomfield Lanes Dec. 5, meeting at the synagogue at 2 p.m. Reser- vation deadline is Wednes- day. Children should be picked up from the bowling alley. For reservations, call the youth office, 851-5100. Migdal Tzion will go to the Federation Apart- ments for their monthly social action project at 2 p.m. Dec. 5. Members should meet at the apartments. For details, call Audrey Lawson, 354-0745. Registration forms for in- ternational pre-convention are available in the youth office. For information on Adat Shalom youth activities, call Cantor Earl Berris at the synagogue, 851-5100. ** * BETH ACHIM'S Lahav United Synagogue Youth will send Stuart Sherman and Mike Weinraub as representatives to the USY fall boards this weekend in Canton, Ohio. Pre-convention forms are available in the synagogue office. The convention will run Dec. 22-25. Plans are under way for the first annual in- synagogue retreat to be held Jan. 28-30. All youth Hanuka parties will be held 1:30 p.m. Dec. 12 in the youth lounge. Youngsters interested in participating in Shabat Hanoar (Youth Shabat) should call Mark Hubert at 355-0626. Youth services for Shabat are held 10 a.m. each Satur- day. ** * BETH SHALOM Yachad-Yeladim will take reservations through Thursday for its Hanuka celebration to be held noon Dec. 5 in the synagogue. Children will be met at Avery School and walked across, the street to the synagogue where lunch will be provided. A magic show by "Magical Matt" Jacobson will highlight the after- noon. There is a charge. For reservations and informa- tion, call Heidi Press, ad- viser, 352-6858, evenings between 6 and 10 only. The Talit and Tefilin Club will not meet Sunday, but will resume 9 a.m. Dec. 5. Services and breakfast will be followed by a pro- gram, "Year of the Tigers, 1968." For information, call Chuck Pearlstein, 352-0482 or 352-0483. ** * BNAI DAVID youth and education department con- ducts services every Satur- day at 10 a.m. Youth age 4-14 are welcome. This Saturday there will be a special Shabat lunch- eon for youth in grades six, seven and eight. Rabbi Morton Yolkut will speak on "Hanuka Is Not a Jewish Christmas." For required reservations, call Burt Garber, 557-8325. The Sunday Morning Breakfast Club meets to daven every Sunday at 9 a.m. The service is followed by a continental breakfast and a bowling special. Atid, the senior-high group, will see the Detroit Pistons Dec. 4. For informa- tion, call Gary Herman, so- cial chairman, 557-4487. * * * HASHACHAR will celebrate the Bar Mitzva Year of its Camp Young Judea in summer. In preparation for the cel- ebration, Bini Silver, camp director will present a slide program about the camp 7:30 p.m. Dec. 5 at the main Jewish Community Center. He will show slides of last summer's camping program and talk about the forth- Technion Fete Honors Maas coming celebration. Past campers and coun- selors will be on hand to share their experiences. In- terested youth and their parents are invited. For in- formation, call Donna Rosenblatt, 661-1038. BBYO Activities ) The next meeting of the Great Lakes BBG Council will take place 7 p.m. Thursday in the Dubin Meeting Room of the Bnai Brith Building. Updated in- formation on regional con- vention will be presented by BBG coordinator Bonnie Borkin. The Council fund raising and the BBG Vol- leyball League will be dis- cussed. The Great Lakes AZA Council will meet 7 p.m. Dec. 6 in the Dubin Meeting Room. The AZA regional update will be presented by coordinator Brian Binder. Information will be pre- sented on the AZA Basket- ball League and the Council fund raising. Committee chairmen have been selected for the annual MiChigan Region convention, which will take place Dec. 26-30 at the main Jewish Community Center. Chairmen are: alter- nate programs, Silvia Kieer, Dalyah BBG; bake, Dan Plotnick, Ruach AZA, and Amy Guggenheim, Brice BBG; dance, Marla Peiss, Shoshanna BBG; film and photography, Alan Blatnikoff, Rose AZA; athletics, Harold Silver- man, Samson AZA; forensics, Ken Silver- man, Samson AZA, and Julie Callton, Shalom Aviv BBG; t-shirt and newspaper, Gail Zemmol, Shira BBG; opening pro- gram, Mark Levin, Akiba AZA; mixer, Larry Shul- man, Posen AZA; judges, Sheri Benkoff, Shoshanna BBG; Origi- nality Plus, Barry De- mak, Samson AZA; theme programs, Francie Lopa- tin, Rishonah BBG; song and cheer, Nicki Traute, Brice BBG; talent show, Jill Garvin, Brice BBG; transportation, Neal Zipser, Benny AZA; hous- ing, Julie Weil, Savage BBG, and Kevin Wolf, Kishon AZA; registra- tion, Jackie Raznik, Shalom Aviv BBG. AZA and BBG members will participate in the 4th annual Youth Symposium on the Holocaust, 8:30 a.m. Dec. 7 at Wayne State Uni- versity Student Center. Students will be excused from school for this pro- gram. The cost of the pro- gram is free, but BBYO will offer transportation from the BBYO office at 7:45 a.m. at a nominal charge. For in- formation, contact Julie Weil, 352-5080; or Kevin Wolf, 661-0035. The next meeting of the BBYO advisers will take place 7:30 p.m. Dec. 9 at the BBYO office. The meeting will feature an In-Service Training Seminar on work- ing with groups. BBYO announces the ap- pointment of Gary Goldin as adviser to Wallenberg AZA. Positions are still open for volunteer advisers to chap- ters in West Bloomfield and Southfield. To volunteer, contact Arnie Weiner or Brian Ackerson, 552-8260. Auditions will be held for the BBYO regional conven- tion talent, show 1 p.m. Dec. 12 in the Dubin Meeting Room. All chapters wishing to enter an act in the talent show must be present at that time. NEW YORK — Julius Berman, president of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Organizations of America and chairman of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, will address the union's 84th national convention over Thanksgiv- ing weekend in Vernon Val- ley, N.J. WASHINGTON — Avia- tion Week and Space Technology Magazine re- ported that Saudi Arabia is the largest customer in the U.S. security assistance program. The Saudis have a total of $39.4 billion in military sales agreements through June, including $12 billion in fiscal 1982. JNF Women Division Chairmen gathering to finalize plans for their 53rd annual donor event are, front row, from left: Sadye Forman, Belle Hordes, Dorothy iker, Pot Betty Silverman; middle row, Libbie Posen, Reba Bloom, Eve Herman, Pearl Nosan, Helen Rosenfeld; and back row, Sylvia Schneider, Fanny Rosenblat, Helen Ring, Bea Feigelman, Sari Green- field. The 53rd annual donor Fund raising co-chairmen event of the Women of the are Mrs. Feigelman and Jewish National Fund will Betty Silverman. For in- be held noon Dec. 14 at formation, contact the JNF, Cong. Beth Achim. 557-6644. The donor will mark the conclusion of the women's Conservative project to raise $250,000 Congregation toward rebuilding Kiryat JOHANNESBURG Shmona and will be the oc- (JTA) — South Africa's first casion to pay tribute to group's division chairmen, Conservative Jewish con- announced Shirley Kraft, gregation, Har El, has been established at Sandton, a president of JNF Women. The division chairmen suburb of Johannesburg, are: Selma Lifsitz, Belle with an initial membership Hordes, Helen Rosenfeld, of 60 families. The spiritual leader is Sari Greenfield, Reba Rabbi Ben Zion Isaacson, a Bloom, Dorothy Potiker, Sadye Foreman, Fannie native of South Africa who Rosenblat, Sylvia studied for the pulpit in.the Schneider, Helen Ring, United States. Jean Klafer, Bea Feigelman Mizrachi Member and Eve Herman. Guest speaker will be Drive Begins Rabbi Isaac Swift, author NEW YORK — Novem- and orator, and former ber has been designated of- vice president of JNF of ficial American Mizrachi Australia and New Zea- Women Membership land. Guest artist will be Month. A nationwide mem- Margelee Greene-Ruby, bership campaign for the accompanied by organization which main- Rochelle Barr. tains a network of 13 educa- Doris Markel is vice tional and social welfare president and program projects in -Israel is cur- chairman of JNF Women. rently under way. HANUKA Orthodox Union to Hear Berman Largest Buyer of U.S. Arms Benard L. Maas, left, receives a plaque of appre- ciation from Technion student Ehud Saly at the 34th annual dinner of the Detroit Chapter, American Technion Society, at Adat Shalom Synagogue. Maas was the major benefactor of the Michigan Dormitory which bears his name on the Technion campus. 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