THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

82' Ftiday_, April '6, 1984

Singles Events

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ROSE SHERER SO-
CIALITES will have a
paid-up membership dinner
on Sunday at 6 p.m. in the
Northgate Apts. West club
house. A mini buffet will be
served, followed by a pro-
gram, a film entitled "Is-
; rael, the Right to Be," nar-
rated by Jerry Rogers of the
Detroit Soviet Jewry Com-
mittee. There is no charge to
paid-up members. Prospec-
tive members are invited at
a nominal fee. Reservations
are a must. For reserva-
tions, call Pete Steffin,
557-2411; or Dorothy
Goldberg, 548-6850. Single
men and women age 55 and
up are invited.

* * *

Gifts

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Orchard Lake Rd., South of Maple

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Our Changing Community

A Symposium

SUNDAY, APRIL 8-7:30 P.M.
Congregation B'nai Moshe-14390 West Ten Mile Road

Sponsored By
Congregation Beth Shalom Congregation B'nai David
Congregation B'nai Moshe Temple Emanu-El

Topic
Aging

Education

Politics

Anti-Semitism

Speaker
Dr. Richard Adelman
Co-Director
Institute of Gerontology
University of Michigan
Dr. Gerald Teller
Superintendent
United Hebrew Schools
Charlotte M. Rothstein
Mayor
City of Oak Park
Richard Lobenthal
Executive Director
Anti-Defamation League

A question and answer period will follow the presentations.
Refreshments will be served.
Admission is free.

7p.

The Public Is Invited

JEWISH AND SINGLE
of Cong. Beth Shalom will
hold an Oneg Shabbat at
8:30 p.m. April 13 at the
synagogue. Featured topic
for the evening will be "The
Buck Never Stops: History
and Future of Hebrew Free
Loan." Admission is free.
Refreshments will follow
the program. Jewish singles
of all ages are invited.

* * *

B'NAI B'RITH SIN-
GLES will meet 7:30 p.m.
April 15 in the Laurel
Woods Apts. club house.
Prof. David Brosky will be
the guest speaker. Music,
dancing and refreshments
will highlight the evening.
Everyone is welcome. There
is an admission charge.

* * *

JEWISH SINGLES /
PARENTS NETWORK
OF ANN ARBOR will hear
a talk on "Is There Sex After
Divorce?" at 8 p.m. Satur-
day in the home of Milly Os-
trowsky, 2501 Meade Ct.,
Ann Arbor. There is an ad-
mission fee. Participants
should bring a snack or des-
sert to pass. For reserva-
tions, call Ms. Ostrowsky,
663-1035; or Adrienne Kap-
lan, 662-1817.
A steering committee
meeting will be held 11 a.m.
Sunday in the home of
Nancy Karp, 2718 Golfside,
Apt. 813, Anh Arbor. Mem-
bers should bring a dish to
pass. For reservations, call
Ms. Karp, 434-4952.
At 7:30 p.m. April 14,
there will be a dinner at the
Afghan Home Restaurant,
3250 Washtenaw, Ann Ar-
bor. For reservations, call
Debbie Furman, 971-2603;
or Ellie Krantz, 662-9814.

* * *

COMMUNITY NET-
WORK FOR JEWISH
SINGLES is looking for
volunteers to help plan a
singles weekend to be held
Sept. 7-9 at Camp
Tamarack. Lea Trager and
Robin Friedman will chair
the committee. Activities
will include horseback rid-
ing, campfires, swimming
and workshops. The
weekend is geared for sing-
les age 24-45. To volunteer,
call the CNJS, 661-1000,
ext. 219.
Brochures are still avail-
able for the CNJS trip to Is-
rael, slated for June 17-29.
For a brochure, call the
CNJS.

The CNJS dinner club is
still taking reservations for
its dinner meeting at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Gol-
den Bowl restaurant.
Reservation deadline is to-
day. Checks should be made
payable to the Jewish
Community Center.
At 8 p.m. Thursday, Ruth
Ann Ziegler, director of the
Center for Creative Change
and the Family Mediation
and Training Institute, will
speak on "Making Conflict
Work for You" at the main

Jewish Community Center.
There is a charge.
The CNJS will have its
anual trip to Toronto for
singles age 25-45 from May
25 to 27. Accommodations
will be at the downtown
Holiday Inn. Cost of the trip
includes round-trip trans-
portation from Windsor,
double-occupancy accom-
modations and a wine and
cheese party with Toronto
singles. Tips, transfers and
meals are extra. A $50 de-
posit is due by April 16.

* *

Singles hear sports writer

Irwin Cohen, syndicated
columnist for national
sports publications, will be
the guest speaker for the
Community Network for
Jewish Singles at 8 p.m.
April 26 at the main Jewish
Community Center.

A Detroit Tiger high-
lights film will be shown. A
live remote video hookup
with the Tigers will high-
light the evening. The
CNJS softball league will be
announced.

Refreshments will be
served. Admission is free.

Irwin Cohen

* * *

Meeting on singles mission

Single adults, age 22-40,
are invited to an orientation
meeting to discuss this
summer's fifth annual
United Jewish Appeal Sing-
les Mission to Israel. The
meeting will take place at 8
p.m. Tuesday in the home of
Lynn Tarnoff, 27900 Ber_,_
rywood, Farmington Hills.
Michael Feldman, chair-
man of Detroit's Young
Leadership Cabinet and a
veteran of numerous mis-
sions, will narrate a slide
presentation for the . gather-
ing.
The UJA mission, July
22-Aug. 1, will give more
than 400 single men and

women the opportunity to
meet with the people of Is-
rael and tour the state's
famous sites. Officials,
educators, social workers
and others involved in
building Israel's society will
provide first-hand informa-
tion about the challenges
and realities of life in Israel.
Informal social activities
also are planned.
Full details on the-cost of
the mission will be outlined
at the meeting. For infor-
mation, contact Judith
Swartz, director of the
Jewish Welfare Federation
Young Adult Division,
965-3939.

Detroiters to meet ZOA
high school program chief

Dr. Sydney Engelberg,
the newly appointed princi-
pal of the Zionist Organiza-
tion of America's high
school program in Israel,
will meet with ' area
educators, parents and
applicants Wednesday and
Thursday at the Zionist
Cultural Center. Interested
persons should call the
ZOA, 569-1515, for an ap-
pointment.
The American High
School Program in Israel of-
fers American 10th and
11th graders a year of study
in Israel. The program is
accredited by U.S. high
schools and its curriculum
conforms to American edu-
cational requirements au-
gmented by an intensive
study of Hebrew, Jewish
history and literature and
an in-depth study of con-
temporary Israel.
The school is under the
supervision of the Israel
Ministry of Education and

the World Zionist Organiza-
tion. Site of the program is
ZOA's Kfar Silver educa-
tional campus near Ashke-
lon, where 700 students now
study and work.

Dr. Engelberg holds a
Ph.D. degree from Buffalo
University and a master's
degree in clinical psychol-
ogy from the Hebrew Uni-
versity. He has served as
master of Shalom College at
the University of New
South Wales, the largest
university in Australia.

The Jewish Educational
Council, of which Dr.
Jonathan Fishbane is
president, will host a lunch-
eon for Dr. Engelberg at
noon Thursday at the
United Hebrew Schools
building in Southfield.

Dr. Elliot Burns is chair-
man for Israel Programs of
the Metro Detroit District
ZOA.

