THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40 Friday, March 2, 1984 • Vaudeville Show Presented Women's Clubs GREATER DETROIT CHAPTER, Brandeis Uni- versity National Women's Committee, will meet at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Kitchen Glamor at Some- rset Mall. There will be a cooking demonstration on preparing appetizers. There is 'an admission charge. West Bloomfield School drama department will present "A Genuine Turn-of-the-Century Vaudeville Show" 8 p.m. Thursday and March 9 and 10 in the high school auditorium. There is a nominal admission fee. Rehearsing for the program are, from left: Rob Leider, director; and Joanna Rubiner, Megan Rubiner and Rob Nosanchuk. movie listings Fornmwty IS•1 & "MI 2990 W. 12 Mile Rd. Berkley U 2-0330 ALL SEATS $1.00 AT ALL TIMES 27411 SOUTHFIELD (N. of 11 Mile) 559-1091 Held Over! Clint Eastwood in "SUDDEN IMPACT" (R) 7:15, 9:30 Fri., Sat. & Mon.-Thurs. Sun. 2:45, 5:00, 7:15 & 9:30 BREAKFAST SPECIAL 7 a.m. to $ 4 79 I • II 11 a.m. • 2 Eggs (any style) • 3 Strips of Bacon or 3 Links of Sausage • Potatoes, Toast & Jelly I OPEN 1 DAYS —1 a.m. 1O p...I - LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS 3■ 1 FROM $ INCLUOES: SOUP, POT., VEG. BREAD a BUTTER I 111111 Ilp 5 KEEGO TWIN Where Movies Cost Less Orchard Lake & Cass Lake Rds. 11/2 Miles West of Telegraph 682-1900 This ad will entitle bearer to ONE FREE ADMISSION when a second admission is purchased Sun.-Thurs. . FREE This coupon expires 3/8/84 I - Barbra Streisand in "YENTL" (PG) Weekdays 7:00 & 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 II - Gene Hackman in UNCOMMON VALOR" (R) Fri. 6:45, 8:50 & 10:55 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 8:50 & 10:55 Mon.-Thurs. 7:15 & 9:25 1 WASHINGTON THEATER Good Thru Mar. 31, 1984 I I I I 1 LI CHINA GATE PINE LAKE MALL 4343 ORCHARD LAKE RD. BET. LONG LAKE & LONE PINE 851-5540 wissiessimuswessei Film Classics Adults $2.50 Hitchcock Festival Fri.-Sun. "REBECCA" Fri. & Sat. 7:05 & 9:40 Sun. 4:30, 7:05, 9:30 Mon. & Tues. "NOTORIOUS" 7:20 & 9:30 Wed..& Thurs. "SPELLBOUND" 7:20 & 9:30 • • detroit's Original dinner theatre s • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • Alfred:6 Jimmy Launce PROductions, Inc. • • • • • "MARY, MARY" • • • • • •••••••• •• ••••••••• • ••••••••••• . • presents • A Comedy by Jean Kerr • • • • • • • Starring NANCY CLERVI Performances: Wed. Mat. noon • Group Rates & Performances Available Frl & Sat. Cocktails 7pm & Dinner 7:30pm Show 8:45pm Reservations: 643 - 8865 Somerset Mall - Troy DETROIT AUXIL- IARY OF ALPHA OMEGA will hold an open board meeting noon Tues- day in the home of Cheri Victor, 274 Chestnut Cir., Bloomfield Hills. Luncheon will be served. For reserva- tions, call Mrs. Victor, 644- 9232. Randy Sher: Model for Women Seeking Success in Workplace NEGBAH SHALOM CHAI CHAPTER, Pioneer Women/Naamat, will meet 10 a.m. Wednesday in the Kristen Towers, 25900 Greenfield, Suite 205E, Oak Park. A general meeting will follow at noon. Ruth Kimmel, program chair- man, will speak on current events in Israel. For infor- mation, call President Iliene Winkelman, 968- 3972. CLUB TWO, Pioneer Women/Naamat, will meet 11:30 a.m. Monday in the Kristen Towers, 25900 Greenfield, Oak Park. Philip Imber will present a program. Sarah Rothstein will sponsor the brunch. Guests are welcome. For in- formation, call Jeanette Serling, 968-8518. ORT Expands in Novi Vicinity ••••••••... • • '.....a 1° • 10111ERSET e.. • "" DIER THEATRE • AUTUMN HILLS Women's CHAPTER, American ORT, will have a meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the home of Cheryl Bloom, 4274 Pine Ln., West Bloomfield.Guest speaker Jeannie Weiner of the De- troit Soviet Jewry Commit- tee will speak on her recent trip to Russia, where she met Soviet Jewish refus- niks. Husbands and guests are welcome. For informa- tion, call Ms. Bloom, 682- 5355. SHAAREY ZEDEK SISTERHOOD announces that Thursday is the dead- line for registration for its two new classes to be held at the synagogue. Dr. Jonathan Fishbane will begin a class on "Let's Explore Eastern European Jewry Through Its Litera- ture" on March 13. Rabbi Irwin Groner, Rabbi Lee S. 541-0082 I MON.-THURS. 11 to 10 1 FRI. & SAT. 11 to 11 'SUN & HOLIDAYS 12 noon to 161 * * * EREV CHAPTER, Young Women of Jewish National Fund, will have a general meeting 8 p.m. Wednesday in the home of Micki Grosqman, 28812 Rockledge, Farmington Hills. Judy Schneider will speak on "Stress — Can We Talk?" For reservations, call Pam David, 855-9331; or Shelley Sturman, 355- 9420. The group will have an open board meeting 8 p.m. March 14 in the home of Gail Wiener, 32248 * * * 426 S. Washington, R.O. I I I 1 * * * * * * I GLASS OF HOUSE WINE I I WITH ALL COMPLETE DINNERS I 1 1 FROM 4 p.m. I 1 1 7 DAYS A WEEK I AND THIS COUPON I 1 1 * * * EVERGREEN GROUP, Hadassah, • will meet 7:45 p.m. Tuesday in the home of Marcia Kersch, 15810 Addison, Southfield. Aileen Trix of the South- field Public Library will re- view "A Private View" by Irene Selznick; "Heartburn" by Nora Ep- hron and "Bronx" by Kate Simon. For information, call Ms. Kersch, 559-8673. BNAI MOSHE SIS- TERHOOD will have the final program in its Lunch and Learn series following March 10 Shabat services in the synagogue. Topic for the afternoon will be "Coping With Aging Parents." Guest speaker will be Dr. Eva Kahana, professor of sociol- ogy at Wayne State Univer- sity and the director of the Elderly Care Research Cen- ter at WSU. For reserva- tions by Wednesday, call Marion Nueman, 967-4491. * * * Expanded lighted paved parking =p all MI Ell NB MI 1COU ON1 • Queensboro, Farmington Hills. OAK PARK NSHE1 CHABAD STUDY GROUP (10 Mile area) will meet 3 p.m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Reuven Meer, 15060 Burton. The Nine Mile area group will not meet. * * * •BERKLEY THEATRE Family Dining Paskind and Cantor Chaim Najman will conduct a class on "Pathways Through the Sabbath Service" on Thurs- days beginning March 15. There is a charge. For in- formation, call Phyllis Robinson, 355-0515; Mari- lyn Rollinger, 855-1141; or Suzanne Clark, 642-5133. Region, Michigan Women's American ORT, is expanding chapters in the Novi area. The organization sup- ports a worldwide system of vocational and technical schools which train Jewish youth for their future occu- pations. For information, call the ORT office, 355-9151; or Maxine Rotenberg, 559- 5846. By HEIDI PRESS Jewish women entering the working world or mov- ing their way up the so- called corporate ladder can take a few hints from Randy Sher. Mrs. Sher, founder of A Better Way, Inc., a career development and job place- ment service for women, is a successful businesswoman — but it wasn't always that way. A former teacher, Mrs. Sher said she was brought up with the same admoni- tion most of her co- religionist sisters hear from their mothers: be a teacher, marry a doctor, have two children and buy a house in the suburbs. She became a teacher, married a doctor, had the children and the' house, and then the ideal life wasn't so ideal anymore. Divorce. Following her own ad- vice, "go for it," Mrs. Sher went to employment agen- cies where she was told she was "horribly over- qualified." Frustrated, she began to research what kind of skills are needed by women to succeed in the workplace. In her efforts, she made con- tacts with major corpora- tions, who today are helpful to the job placement pro- gram in her agency. Eventually, she started A Better Way in order to teach women how to stop talking about going back to work and actually doing something about it. Mrs. Sher had experi- ence with outplacement for major corporations and governments, and as a former paralegal, she learned what she called "proper procedures for business." With that ex- pertise behind her, she helped women — most of her clients are already working — become more * * * * * * SHARONA CHAP- TER, Pioneer Women/ Naamat, will hold a board meeting 8 p.m. Thursday in the home of Ida Moss, 23641 Cloverlawn, Oak Park. . * * * MACHON L'TORAH Women's Study Group will meet 3 p.m. Saturday at the home of Sara Kahn, 24700 Sussex, Oak Park. some of whom are the reci- pients of Mrs. Sher's out- placement expertise, will have booths set up at the Cobo Hall site. On March 15, 4,000 students from all over the state will be treated to their own confer- ence, free of charge. Sher is quick to em- phasize that A Better Way is not a feminist organiza- tion. She provides career and job information "to a specific and well defined market — I just market to women." However, she is quick to RANDY SHER add, that men comprise marketable in the work- about 10 percent of the attendees at the conference. place. Her biggest triumph, out- She also said that men can side of the success of A Bet- avail themselves of the ter Way, is the annual Silver Card, a special dis- Strategies conference. This count card offered through year's gathering, the third A Better Way. The company also pub- annual career conference for women, will be held lishes a quarterly maga- March 16 and 17 at Cobo zine, Strategies, which fo- Hall. The two-day confer- cuses on working women in ence is geared for working Michigan. women — office workers Sher calls the career and volunteers — who need conference "probably to get information quickly the biggest show in the about what it takes to suc- Midwest," but she has ceed in the workplace. higher goals. Keynote speakers at this "I want to be the biggest year's conference are: and most prestigious career cosmetics executive Mary conference in the country. It Kay Ash, syndicated car- already is." She plans to ex- toonist Cathy Guisewite, pand to other cities, and is actress-feminist-producer shooting to be in six other Mario Thomas and Susan major markets in a year. Taylor, editor-in-chief of If she sticks with the "go Essence magazine. for it" advice that she im- Workshops to be con- parts to her clients, no doubt ducted during . the confer- she'll be in many more mar- ence concern handling kets than six. money, professional pres- sures, male-female rela- tionships at work, the single Protect Kids, life, children, the art of Meeting Theme negotiation, the image of The Cong. Shaarey Zedek women in television adver- tising and programming, Beth Hayeled (nursery managerial potential, fu- school and kindergarten) ture trends in the job mar- will sponsor a program on "Protecting Children from ket and more. There is a fee, and tic- Kidnapping, Abuse, Etc." at kets are available by cal- 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the ling A Better Way, 855- synagogue youth lounge. The public is invited free of 6000. Many big businesses ; . charge.