52
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, March 1, 1985
MAX THE HANDYMAN
Did You Remember
to send someone a
gift subscription to
Can do anything in or out of the house
Former Apt. Maintenance Chief
YOU NAME IT - I'LL DO IT!!
THE
JEWISH NEWS?
window washing, screen repair, gutter cleaning, electric switches replaced,
door and lock repair, curtain rod design, caulking, cement repair, garbage
disposal replacement, plumbing, ETC., ETC., ETC.
Call 968-1145
airport transportation service available
FOR WOMEN
ANN ARBOR CHAPTER,
eleganza
boutique
WINTER
CLEARANCE
SALE!
SAVINGS TO
70% OFF
On Selected Merchandise
Including Accessories!
We must make room for our
spring collections. Sale ends
soon. Some selections are
limited.
Hours:
10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. M,T,W,F,Sat.
Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Closed Sunday
PHONE: 354-3393
Claymoor Bldg., 29260 Franklin Rd., Suite 118,
Southfield, 354-3393
ANNIVERSARY
SALE
20%
4
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OFF
entire
spring & summer
shoe collection
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Hadassah, announces tickets are
still available for its two-day
chocolate extravaganza to be held
6-11 p.m. March 30 and noon-6
p.m. March 31 at the Ann Arbor
Inn. Proceeds will go to pediatric
research at Hadassah Hebrew
University Hospital.
DEGANIA CHAPTER, Pioneer
Women/Naamat will have a gen-
eral meeting at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday
in the home of Rena Goldsmith,
31500 Stonewood Ct., Far-
mington Hills. Dr. Diana War-
shay will speak on "Domestic Vio-
lence." Refreshments will be
served. For reservations, call Jac-
kye Drapkin, 646-7086; or Sonny
Lipenholtz, 355-5399.
CLUB 2, Pioneer Women/
Naamat, will hold a meeting on
Monday at 11:30 a.m. at the Kris-
ten Towers, 25900 Greenfield,
Oak Park. Philip Imber, poet and
humorist, will present a Purim
program. Brunch will be spon-
sored by Lillian Levine. Friends
are welcome. For information,
call Jeanette Serling, president,
968-8518.
ARTISANS
CHAPTER,
Women's American ORT, will
have a potluck supper at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday in the home of Steve and
Lauri Solomon, 7396 Camelot,
West Bloomfield. For reserva-
tions, call Ruth Organek, 661-
4358. Complimentary member-
ship is included with the $35 per
couple fee. Guests are welcome.
NEGBAH SHALOM CHAI
CHAPTER, Pioneer Women/
Naamat, will meet at noon Wed-
nesday at the Kristen Towers,
25600 Greenfield, Suite 205E,
Oak Park. The program will be
devoted to the holiday of Purim
and holiday refreshments will be
served. Guests are welcome. For
information, call President Iliene
Winkelman, 968-3972.
B'NAI DAVID SISTERHOOD
will hold a board meeting at noon
March 11 in the synagogue. Plans
for the Precious Legacy tour and
the donor luncheon will be dis-
cussed.
ADAT SHALOM SISTER-
HOOD will hold its pre-Purim
Project Outreach luncheon at
11:30 a.m. Monday at the
synagogue. The sisterhood will
host as its guests, the isolated
Jewish residents from Detroit's
inner city. There is a fee.
The sisterhood will have its pri-
vate viewing of The Precious Le-
gacy, Judaic Treasures from the
Czechoslovakian State Collec-
tion, at the Detroit Institute of
Arts, March 17. The exhibition
opens at 6 p.m. and will be fol-
lowed by an afterglow at 8 p.m.
There is a fee for both admission
and afterglow. Reservations can
be made at the synagogue, 851-
5100. Honorees at this event will
be our members and their spouses
of Czechoslovakian descent.
Rabbi Kushner To Speak
To Federation Women
". "Personal spiritual renewal" is
the theme of the Jewish Welfare
Federation Women's Division
Spring Forum, set for 9:15 a.m. -
2:15 p.m. March 21 at Adat
Shalom Synagogue.
The Spring Forum is a yearly
educational, non-fundraising
program geared towards young
women in the Jewish community.
Highlighting the program will
be a presentation by Rabbi Lawr-
ence Kushner, described by his
colleagues as "one of the most im-
portant interpreters of contem-
porary Judaism." Known as a
masterful storyteller, he uses his
talent to give new meaning to
Jewish tradition. An originator of
the concept of synagogue havurot
(small, family fellowship groups),
the Detroit-born Reform Rabbi
has seen the idea adopted with
enthusiasm throughout the coun-
try.
Kushner's congregation, Beth
El of Sudbury, Mass., has pub-
lished its own, non-sexist prayer-
book and founded its own
"Tzedaka Collective," whose
members anonymously contrib-
ute two percent of their gross in-
come to charity. His presentation
will focus on "tales of Jewish mys-
tery."
Rabbi Kushner's writings in-
clude The Book of Letters: a Mys-
terical Alef-Bait, Honey from the
Rock: Visions of Jewish Mystical
Renewal and River of Light:
V t
Rabbi Kushner
Spirituality, Judaism and the
Evolution of Consciousness.
Beverly Liss is chairman of
Spring Forum. She is assisted by
Nancy Glass, associate and pro-
gram chairman. Barbara Zack is
advisor. Pearlena Bodzin and
Linda Lutz , are decorations
chairmen, and Donna Brennan is
the secretary. Nancy Jacobson is
vice president of Spring Forum,
and Ellen Labes is the Women's
Division president.
There is a fee for registration
and luncheon. For details, call .
Ellen Shochet, Federation, 965-
3939 by Monday. . , „ , „ ,