THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS LA NAILERY BNAI BRITH GET RICH QUICK! European Pedicures $20.00 SPRING & SUMMER SPECIAL! • GOLD • DIAMONDS • SILVER 2 FOR 1 WE BUY ANYTHING OF VALUE! LOUIS D. BRANDEIS CHAPTER will hold its annual installation at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday at Knob- in-the-Woods Apts. club house. Luncheon will be served. The chairman of the day is Gerry Feldman, and Beatrice Fealk will install the following officers: Ruth Fisher, Mollie Sayles and Esther Sherr, presidium; Evelyn Berger, Ella Balamut and Ms. Feldman, vice presidents; Betty Ste-wart, treasurer; Jean Katz, Fay Schwartz, Ethel Klavons and Lillian Sprague, secretaries. Board of directors in- cludes: Renee Bennett, Rose Goldberg, Celia Liederman, Sylvia Gottlieb, Isabelle Levitt, Sara Littman, Ruth Olen, Rose Pogats, Henny Salomon, Dorothy Silver- man and Pearl Smaller. A musical program will be presented. There is a charge and reservations must be made by Monday to Rose Pogats, 967-4068; Betty Stewart, 557-3117; or Jean Katz, 559-4174. * * * BARRISTERS UNIT will present Allan R. Miller, former general counsel to the National Football League Player's Associa- tion, to speak on managing and representing sports and entertainment figures, on Law Day, May 1, at 5:30 p.m. at Buddy's Pizza, 31646 Northwestern High- way, Farmington Hills. Cost includes pizza and spaghetti. Checks should be sent to Mark Gantz, Suite 1020, Parklane Towers West, One Parklane Boulevard, Dearborn 48126. For information, call Gordon Gold, 963-9625. * * * MAURICE C. ZEIGER LODGE will present a $500 gift to the Hillel Foun- dation at Wayne State Uni- versity and to the B'nai_ B'rith Youth Organization at the lodge's next meeting 8 p.m. May 10 at the Dubin Meeting Room in the B'nai B'rith Building. Spouses are invited. Refreshments will be served. Weinstein Jewelers of Bloomfield 6659 Orchard Lake at Maple 628-8808 Friday, April 20, 1984 57 good with coupon only, expires 5/15/84 29260 Franklin Rd. Claymoor Bldg., Suite 101 358-3530 Make it Yourself beads, jewels, nuts, shells & beading supplies 32751 Franklin J. South of 14 Mile Franklin 855-5230 BEAD; OAKS- , inc Consecration and Graduation Gifts HOURS: Tues.-Sat. 10-5, Classes Monday Brandeis U. prof to address Federation staff institute Prof. Jonathan Woocher, assistant professor in the Brandeis University Horns- tein Program in Jewish Communal Service, will speak before the Profes- sional Staff Institute of the Jewish Welfare Federation and its member agencies at 12:30 p.m. May 3 at the main Jewish Community Center. Dr. Gerald Teller, superintendent of the United Hebrew Schools and president of Midrasha Col- lege of Jewish Studies, is chairman of the Profes- sional Staff Institute. It is an educational forum for communal workers to dis- cuss issues in American and Jewish life and strengthen their understanding of the community they serve. The author of numerous articles on contemporary Jewish life, Dr. Woocher re- ceived his B.A. degree summa cum laude, in politi- cal science from Yale Uni- versity, and earned an M.A. degree and Ph.D. degree in religious studies at Temple University. He has worked with the Council of Jewish Federa- tions for a number of years on the design and im- plementation of leadership development programs. He serves on the execu- tive board of the Association for the Sociological Study of Jewry and on the Academic Advisory Committee of the National Foundation for Jewish Culture. Responding to Prof. Woocher's remarks will be George M. Zeltzer, director of the Jewish Welfare Fed- eration Endowment Fund, and Margaret Weiner, di- rector of professional serv- ices for Jewish Family Serv- ice. Workshop facilitators will be: Jonathan Fishbane, United Hebrew Schools; Marcia Fishman, Jewish Community Center; Sylvia Serwin, Fleischman Resi- dence; and Allan Gale, Jewish Community Coun- BERNICE GARON M A 1985 Professional Staff In- stitute Planning Commit- tee are: Fran Cook, Jewish Vocational Service; Pola Friedman, Sinai Hospital; Gale; Arlene Goldberg, Jewish Family Service; Connie Howard, Jewish Federation Apartments; Alan D. Kandel, Jewish Welfare Federation; Judy Plotnick, Jewish Commu- nity Center; Cheryl Riskin, Jewish Home for Aged; and Jeanette Tilchin, Fresh Air Society. Prof. Jonathan Woocher cil. - Members of the 1984- Federation Executive Vice President Wayne L. Feinstein will deliver con- cluding remarks. Diet Consultant • , , ., :c. ,: • : .;, - . Offers clients a unique approach to weight loss*. . . :. . For information regarding an appointment Call 353-0465 . * Clients must be sincerely committed to an intense individualized weight control program conducted in the most personal & confidential manner. , - Canadian school district charged with discrimination Moncton, New Brunswick (JTA) -- A Jewish mother in this Canadian town has charged that local school district 13 is forcing Jewish pupils to be targets of dis- crimination during school periods when the catechism is taught, according to the report in the Moncton Times-Transcript. Natiania Etienne, the mother, said the Jewish pupils must either go to the school library or wait in school hallways, a situation Mrs. Etienne said was the equivalent of forcing the Jewish pupils to "go to the back of the bus, the same way the Negroes were treated in the southern United States." She de- clared that non-Catholic children in the French speaking school districts should have alternate courses during periods of catechism teaching. She contended that the children of parents of Jewish, Moslem, Buddhist, Jehovah's Witnesses and other faiths were being de- nied "basic religious free- dom." Mrs. Etienne said chil- dren in grades one to six are now being given other courses during catechism periods in district schools but this "concession was permitted by school district officials only after a bitterly fought battle" a few years ago. During that time, she de- clared, she received tele- phone threats and some of the other pupils put pres- sure on her two children presently attending elementary schools in the district. She said that, after the sixth grade, non-Christian pupils have the "choice" of sitting in the catechism class or sitting or standing halls, a procedure she called "undemocratic and unfair." Donald Jubas, president of B'nai B'rith Canada, was reported by the newspaper as saying that not only was the absence of alternate classes for non-Catholic pupils wrong but also "anti-Jewish" in nature. He said the Catholic students are being taught that the Jews were guilty of deicide and that this created hostil- ity between the two groups of students. Dress Shop SALE t. 50% OFF on selected items sportswear, dresses, suits leather & suede THURS., FRI., SAT. April 19, 20, 21 APPLEGATE STORE ONLY master VISA' 29839 Northwestern Applegate Center