72
Friday, October 26, 1984
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
4
JEWISH SINGLES
SEARCHING FOR SOMEONE?
SINGLES
LET LO-LA yy
11.1 - 11J
HELP
THE CONFIDENTIAL
DIGNIFIED DATING
SERVICE.
e .
FOR FREE INTERVIEW
CALL: 356-0949
OR WRITE: LO-LA
P.O. BOX 254, LATHRUP VILLAGE, MI 480761
Claire Arm
Millie Rosenbaum
JEWISH SINGLES/PARENTS
SUPPORT NETWORK OF
ANN ARBOR will have a nature
walk at 10 a.m. Nov. 4 at Parker
Mill Park. The group will go out to
eat afterward. For details, call
Marilyn Friedman, 662-9352.
CONNECTIONS INC. presents
a "Halloween Happening" for
singles over 30 at Restaurant
Duglass on Wednesday at 8 p.m.
Masks or costumes are optional.
Hors d'oeuvres, dancing and a
cash bar will highlight the eve-
ning. There is an admisSion
charge.
B'NAI B'RITH YOUNG SING-
LES (18-30) will have a Hallo-
ween party at 8 p.m. Saturday in
the Dubin Meeting Room of the
B'nai B'rith Building. Prizes will
be awarded for the best costume.
There is an admission charge.
SOLO FLIGHT SINGLES of
Temple Beth El will have a Har-
vest Ball 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
temple. The evening will be high-
lighted by costume contests,
pumpkin carving, games and
dancing to the music of Bill
Gracey. Wine and seasonal re-
freshments will be served. An
audio-visual slide presentation on
Michigan Ballot Proposal C will
be part of the evening's program,
and a question and answer period
will follow. Jewish singles age 35
and up are invited. There is an
admission charge. A schedule of
November activities will be
available at the ball. For informa-
tion, call Henry Brand, 535-8041.
Thanksgiving singles weekend
ON NOVEMBER 6,
CAST THE VOTE THAT
COUNTS!
FOR A BETTER OAKLAND COUNTY
ELECT THE DEMOCRATIC TEAM
FOR GOOD GOVERNMENT
JOHANNES F. SPREEN
for COUNTY EXECUTIVE
• ROBERT GAGNIUK
for PROSECUTOR
LINDA D. LASH
for CLERK
LOUIS L. MILLER, Jr.
for TREASURER
• HENRY HANSEN
for SHERIFF
DARLENE BERENT
for DRAIN COMMISSIONER
VOTE THE DEMOCRATIC TEAM
Paid for by Oakland County Democratic Party, 1411 N. Woodward, Suite 3, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48013
Chicago — Amit Women of
Chicago, Tikvah Chapter, has
announced its second national
Jewish singles conference to be
held Thanksgiving weekend,
Nov. 22-25, at the Americana
Lake Geneva Resort in Lake
Geneva, Wis.
The weekend is designed for
Jewish singles throughout the
country age 21-35 seeking social,
recreational and educational ac-
tivities in a Jewish atmosphere.
The many weekend activities
include: an opening cocktail
party, Thanksgiving dinner,
group sports, a hayride, tradi-
tional Shabbat meals, guest
speakers and a Trivial Pursuit
competition.
Cost for the weekend is $185 be-
fore Nov. 1, $200 from Nov. 1-11
and $225 after Nov. 12. This price
includes all conference activities
and kosher meals under strict Or-
thodox rabbinical supervision.
JWV
SOL YETZ-MORRIS COHEN
LADIES AUXILIARY will serv-
ice a group of patients at the Allen
Park Veterans Medical Facility
on Nov. 2, at 7:30 p.m. There will
be games and canteen book prizes.
Refreshments will be served.
Anyone wishing to assist should
contact President Anne Weins-
tein, 559-4392.
CHARLES SHAPIRO POST
AND AUXILIARY will have a
mystery bus ride Saturday, meet-
ing at 8 p.m. at the Jewish War
Veterans Memorial Home. For in-
formation, call Margaret Mendel-
son, 547-2013; or Irving Keller,
357-0623.
Nonagenarian cited
by veterans group
Joseph Shapiro, a resident of
Borman Hall who this week cele-
brated his 94th birthday, was
honored by the Jewish War Vete-
rans as its oldest member.
Shapiro, whose poetry has ap-
peared in The Jewish News, re-
ceived the honor from the De-
partment of Michigan, JWV.
For information call. Mark
Tannenbaum, (312) 973-6925.
Singles Hatikvah
mission in December
New York — Jewish singles
will climb the heights of Masada,
diScover the Old City of
Jerusalem and explore pioneering
life in the settlements of the
mountainous Galilee when they
visit Israel with the Sixth Na-
tional United Jewish Appeal
Hatikvah Mission in December.
Geared for single men and
women between the ages of 22 and
40, the mission will visit Israel on
a specially planned encounter
with the country and its people
from Dec. 20 to 30, according to
Detroiter Lawrence S. Jackier,
chairman of UJA Overseas Pro-
grams.
Participants will be briefed by
representatives of UJA's bene-
ficiary agencies — th Jewish
Agency for Israel and the
Americn Jewish Joint Distribu-
tion Committee --- and will have
an opportunity to see firsthand
the social welfare programs and
facilities funded by UJA/
community campaigns.
Other highlights will include
visits to Project Renewal
neighborhoods, an overnight stay
on a kibbutz, and a visit with new
immigrants at an Israeli absorp-
tion center. A special feature of
the mission will be discussions
with Israelis prominent in poli-
tics, business and education, as
well as with single Israeli profes-
sionals.
Participants will visit Jericho,
the artists' colony of Safed, Old
Jaffa and the Dead Sea, and will
celebrate Shabbat at the Western
Wall. Special interest tours of the
Knesset, Israeli industry and ar-
cheological excavations will also
be offered.
Mission participants may ex-
tend their stay andor stop off in
Europe before their return to the
United States. Total cost of the
basic mission package is $1,650,
including airfare, land costs and
first-class hotels. For informa-
tion, contact the Jewish Welfare
Federation, 965-3939; or Geral-
dine Katz at the national UJA
office, (212) 757-1500, ext. 345.