42 I'J Friday, March` 23, 1984! * * * * * * * * * INVITATIONS? Hattie Schwartz '4C Of Course! FOR THE BEAUTIFUL INVITATIONS. PEOPLE TALK ABOUT 352-7387 * HEBREW ;;OPY AVAILABLE THE`-DETROIT-'JEWI'SH NtWS * * 4c * * * * * * ENTERTAINMENT? * * Seymour Schwartz – Of Course! * * 4C * * * !.. * 4( 4* • 356-8525 • GOLDA MEIR CHAP- TER, Pioneer Women/ Naamat, will have a Purim luncheon noon Monday in the Kristen Towers, 25900 Greenfield, Oak Park. Hos- tesses are Sylvia Koblin, Mrs. Max Goldstein and Clara Zager. Program Chairman Regina Weisman announces an Israeli movie will be shown. President Mrs. Jack Reitman invites prospective members and guests. for All Your Needs • The Finest Invitations and Stationery • The Finest Entertainment For Any Occasion • INVITATIONS • ENTERTAINMENT 352-7381 356-8525 Q-ZgClAit 4 ti{ Women's Clubs CII1SSIFIEDS THE FINEST IN MUSIC • comics • SPEAKERS • DANCERS • CLOWNS ESP • VENTRILOQUIST • CARICATURE ARTISTS ' • e• SWCS, * * * BUSINESS AND PRO- FESSIONAL GROUP, Hadassah, will meet 2 p.m. Sunday at the Northgate Apts. small club house. The Part-Time Parent Project will be highlighted. Rose Poskel will review "The Stone Flower" by Allan Scholefield. Chairman for the day is Helen Limond. BriLdd Come to Sherwood for wedding gifts they will always treasure! We carry a large selection of beautiful accessories always 20% off! And while you're here, please feel free to browse through our studio of fine furniture, also 20% L off all the time! Visit us soon ... worth it! * * * TEMPLE BETH EL SISTERHOOD will meet noon Monday in the temple. Color consultant Harriet Is- rael will speak on "Color Me Beautiful." Luncheon will be served at a charge. Guests are invited. Babysit- ter will be available upon request. For reservations, call Lily Gottfurcht, 557- 2175; Selma Goldstone, 546-7779; or Shirley Bur- nett, 626-8078. Complimentary gift wrapping. A special gift for every bride who registers. kerwood 8tudfo8 Tel-Twelve Mall, 12 Mile 8- Telegraph, Southfield Daily 10-9, Sunday 12-5 354-9060 * * * 4 Congregation Shaarey Zedek Presents The KLEZMER CONSERVATORY BAND Sunday, March 25th • 7 P.M. Although many of the songs the Klezmers play are familiar ones from Europe and Israel, the way they are played — the instruments, the orchestration and above all the soul and energy in each performance — is unique to klezmer music in America. Tickets may be purchased at the door. BE- PRIMROSE NEVOLENT CLUB will have a Purim cocktail party 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Zionist Cultural Center, announces Vice President Helen Greenberg. Robert Weinberg will provide entertainment. Traditional Purim refreshments will be served by hostesses Ruth Alter and Estelle Alter. * * * BETH ACHIM and BNAI MOSHE SISTER- HOODS will hold a corn- bined general meeting at 8 p.m. Monday in the Was- serman Hall at Beth Achim. The combined choral group, The Music Connection, will entertain in celebration of Jewish Music Season. Pianist Rose Morgan is the director. The public is in- vited. Refreshments will be served. * * * DETROIT AUXIL- IARY OF ALPHA OMEGA will have its an- nual elections meeting noon April 3 at Machus Red Fox. Tavy Stone of the Detroit News will be the guest speaker. There is a charge. For reservations, call Sue Lasser, 646-4418. * * * • RESERVED SEATING @ $25.00 • GENERAL ADMISSION, MEMBERS @ $7.50 • GENERAL ADMISSION, NON-MEMBERS @ $10.00 Congregation Shaarey Zedek 27375 Bell Road Southfield, Michigan TEMPLE ISRAEL SISTERHOOD'S AM Entertainment Series will sponsor a tour of the Detroit Institute of Arts at 10:30 a.m. April 3. There is a charge, and luncheon will be available at the DIA. Paid reservations are due today. For information, call Dianne Davis, 855-9160; or Sara Hoffman, 681-1107. The Sisterhood's PM Series will present a talk on "Jewish Ritual Art — Its Roots" at 8 p.m. April 3 in the temple. Esther Tarnoff Cooper of the speakers bureau of the DIA, will re- nder a slide presentation. All interested women are invited. Admission is free. * * * HANITA CHAPTER, Pioneer Women/Naamat, will meet 12:30 p.m. Tues- day in the home of Isabel Slutsky, 16168 Oxley, Apt. 202, Southfield. Habonim shaliakh Yitzhak Mintz will be the guest speaker. Ms. Slutsky and Faige Berke will be the hostesses. Guests are welcome. For in- formation, call Belle Glen- ner, 967-3891. * * * ARTISANS CHAP- TER, Women's American ORT, will host an exclusive preview of Gottex '84 swimwear at 1:30 p.m. March 31 at the Sheraton- Oaks Hotel, Novi. Dessert buffet will follow. Guests are welcome. There is a charge, and new members will be admitted free of charge. Proceeds will sup- port the Maintenance of ORT Training Project. For reservations or informa- tion, call Judy Ossipove, 661-2983. • * * * OAK PARK NSHEI CHABAD STUDY GROUP (10 Mile area) will meet at 3 p.m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Meir Av- tzon, 14261 Vernon. The Nine Mile area group will meet at 3 p.m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Shaul Margolis, 13601 Kenwood. • * * AVIVA CHAPTER, Pioneer Women/Naamat, will follow its March 31 bowling party with dinner at Sila Pizzeria. Bowling will begin at 9 p.m. at Hartfield Lanes. Reserva- tions are required. There is a charge. For reservations and information, call Linda Loberman, 352-0928; or Marsha Rosen, 967-0706. Flutist due at Adat Shalom Sisterhood dessert buffet Adat Shalom Sisterhood will have its "Double,Triple Chai" dessert buffet on April 5 at 12:30 p.m. in the home of Rissa Winkelman, 3029 Bloomfield Shore Dr., West Bloomfield, an- nounces President Betsy Winkelman. Donations in- clude reservations for Donor Day on May 7. The afternoon will fea- ture international flutist, Shaul Ben-Meir. Ben-Meir has studied both in his na- tive Israel and in England under such teachers as Uri Toeplitz and Jean-Pierre Rampal. At age 21, he was awarded the silver medal at the International Wind Competition in Helsinki, Finland. He was the princi- pal flutist of the Haifa Sym- phony under Sergiu Comis- siona for three years. Ben-Meir was then in- vited to the United States as visiting professor of music at Ithaca College, New York, and was later artist- in-residence at the Univer- sity of Buffalo, where he participated in modern NCJW to host • Cooking event Greater Detroit Section, National Council of Jewish Women, will host a cooking demonstration by Anita Sudakin at 12:30 p.m. Thursday at Kitchen Stuff, 330 Hamilton, Birming- ham. Directions on hors d'oeuvres, desserts will be given and dishes made from recipes in the organization's cookbook, "Fiddler in the Kitchen," will be served. Mary Schwartz and Phyl- lis Schwartz will chair the program. For information, call the NCJW office, 557- 9604. Shaul Ben-Meir music research under Lucas Foss. Ben-Meir is a member of the Detroit Symphony Or- chestra. He appears fre- quently in solo recitals, and is a member of the Renais- sance Woodwind Quintet. He has also recorded many solo albums. Co-chairmen for the day are Anne Helfman and Irma Katchke. For reservations, call Rissa Winkelman, 855-1611; or Charlotte Nussbaum, 661-1049. Planning the Donor Day are chairmen Roslyn Katzman and Ethel Gol- denberg; ticket chairman, Ms. Nussbaum; committee members, Sharon Hart and Terran Leemis; Southern Exposure chairman, Har- riet Dunsky; and the corn- mittee for Southern Expo- sure, Esther Allan, Sylvia Pollak, Jean Raznick, and Lenore Dunsky Weiss. Award winner Dr. Albert Siegel, a pro- fessor in the Wayne State University department of biological sciences and a specialist in research with viruses, has been named the recipient of the university's Distinguished Graduate Faculty Award for 1984.