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August 31, 1984 - Image 57

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-08-31

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 31, 1984 57

YOUR WEDDING—
BAR MIT4VA

HAPPY 50th ANNIVERSARY

SINGLES

ALBUM
FINER
WINER

JOSEPH &
DORIS OSTROW

JEWISH
OUNG
DULTS ASSOCIATION

'11 participate in the Mus-
lar Dystrophy benefit
r ival noon-6 p.m. Mon-
: y at the Sheraton South-
eld Hotel. Persons who
ish to assist should call
•ne Sklar, 552-0265; or
ail Nachman, 357-0241.
The group will have a
eneral meeting at 8:30
.m. Sept. 10 at the Jimmy
rentis Morris Branch of
• e Jewish Community
enter.

0 MMUNITY NET-
RK FOR JEWISH
I GLES will continue its

s ftball games through Sep-
ber, weather permit-
ng, according to organiz-
rs Al Rosen and Mary
'e tuck.
ames are played at

10:30 a.m. Sundays at
Brace-Lederle Field. Ad-
mission is free.
Bowling will begin at 8:30
p.m. Sept. 9 at Ark Lanes
West. For details, call the
CNJS, 661-1000, ext. 219.
Harlene Adiv, director of
family life education at
Cong. Shaarey Zedek,.' will
speak on "Moving to a
Higher Level," at 10:30 a.m.
Sept. 9 at the main Jewish
Community Center build-
ing. Admission is free. •
The Chai Singles Ski
Club of the CNJS will go to
Portage Lake and Klaves
Marina on Sept. 22, meeting
for carpools at 9 a.m. at the
front desk at the main
Jewish Center. There is a
fee. For details, call David
Steinberg, 646-9500.
Reservations deadline is
Sept. 15.

The CNJS hosts dances,
cookouts, workshops, con-
certs, a dinner club, ski ac-
tivities, canoe trips, holiday
programs, softball games
and more for Jewish singles
age 25-45. To get on the
'mailing list, call the CNJS
office.

MAYNARD, BARRY, LARRY, EILEEN
AND YOUR FAMILIES

cream at 9:15 p.m. Satur-
day, meeting at the Jewish
Community Council booth
at the Ann Arbor Ethnic
Fair.
A planning brunch will be
held at 11 a.m. Monday in
the home of Marilyn Fried-
man, 1405 Westfield, Ann
Arbor. The brunch is pot-
luck. For information and
reservations, call Ms.
Friedman, 662-9352.

LO-LA T

''"r",xvtaliklifiKs•sisam ■ ••••••••••••••••••m•wouKm..0 ",

"•TM.

s w,

.

.

' .;"`"'"."

Red Cross sets
extended hours
for blood donors

Special hours have been
scheduled at Red Cross
blood centers throughout
Labor Day weekend to help
offset low blood collections
that normally occur each
year during the holiday
weekend, reports the
American Red Cross Blood
Services, Southeastern
Michigan Region.
Save-A-Live Saturday
will be held at the Oak Park
Donor Center Sept. 1 from 9
a.m. through 3 p.m.. The
center will also be open for
collections on Sept. 2, from
10 a.m to 4 p.m. The center
is located at 25900 Green-
field in the Kristen Towers.
For an appointment, call
the Red Cross, 494-2258,
494-2851 or 494-2753 be-
tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.
and 8:30 p.m.

„a

;17-17

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Back to class

with rte'

There is a fee. Conference
sessions will be held at the
Chrysler Center on U-M's
North Campus. For infor-
mation, contact U-M Insti-
tute of Science and Technol-
ogy, Special Projects Di-
vision, 2200 Bonisteel
Blvd., Ann Arbor 48109,
(313) 763-9000.

U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Council, c*o Sr. Carol Ritt-
ner, R:S.M., Conference
Coordinator, 425 13th St.,
NW, Suite 832, Washing-
ton, D.C. 20004.

357-1010

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Detroiters issue appeal
for Holocaust gathering

Philip S. Minkin and
Maurice Chandler, mem-
bers of the Detroit- Commit-
tee for the U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Council, have is-
sued an appeal for funds for
the "International Confer-
ence on Faith in Human-
kind: Rescuers of Jews Dur-
ing the Holocaust."
This September, in Wash-
ington, D.C., the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Coun-
cil will convene this invita-
tional conference bringing
together rescuers and some
of the survivors they helped
to save. •
Purpose of the conference
is to record testimony from
these people which can be
transmitted to future gen-
erations, to honor the re-
scuers and survivors.
Sister Carol Rittner,
R.S.M. of Detroit's Mercy
College, is confernece coor-
dinator. A Sept. 7 deadline
has been set for reserva-
tions to the invitational con-,
ference. According to the
Detroit Committee, a few
reservations are still avail-
able.
Tax deductible donations
may be sent payable to the

AND ASSOCIATES

A DATING SERVICE FOR JEWISH SINGLES

JEWISH SINGLES/
PARENTS SUPPORT
NETWORK OF ANN
ARBOR will go for ice

.S.-Israel joint venture
pportunities are discussed

"Technology-Based Indus-
try — Michigan's Path to
Economic Diversity."
Agencies supporting the
conference include the
American Israel Chamber
of Commerce and Industry,
U.S. Department of Com-
merce and the Technology
International Council.

WHEN PHOTOGRAPHED BY

LOVE, YOUR CHILDREN

LOCAL NEWS

of
Executives
echnology-based firms will
ave a chance to learn about
'Cooperative Research and
evelopment for Business
ompetitiveness: Joint
enture Opportunities for
U.S. and Israeli Firms"
Sept. 13-14 at the Univer-
sity of Michigan.
The program, hosted by
U M's Institute of Science
and Technology, will fea-
ture Eric Mittelstadt,
president and chief execu-
tive officer of GMF Robotics,
as the keynote speaker
Sept. 13. Mittelstadt has
headed GMF Robotics, a
join venture of General
Motors Corp. and Fanuc
Ltd., Japan, since its forma-
tion in 1982. He will discuss
GMF cooperative research
and development (R and D)
with Japan arid Israel.
Highlighting the confer-
ence will be BIRD-F (Bina-
tional Industrial Resetuch
and Development Founda-
tion), a multi-million dollar
cost-sharing R and D pro-
gram between U.S. and Is-
raeli firms. BIRD-F has al-
ready funded more than 130
companies and is seeking
additional qualified par-
ticipants from the United
States. A.I. Mlaysky, execu-
tive director of BIRD-F, will
chair a panel of representa-
t ves of U.t. companies
being funded by ,BIRD-F.
Other speakers include
Arie Lavie, Israel's former
chief scientist, who will
provide an overview of
state-of-the-art technologi-
cal developments in Israel,
and Ralph Gerson, director
of the Michigan Depart-
ment of Commerce, on

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