ErMay t !3ctoper 4 1, 198_5 jigi ptipli JpAnsii,Nws Amiiimm1=MI Wedding, Rehearsal and Ceremony Assistance "Where Flt Is Foremost" Sharon Padzensky Kosins 559-4757 I FOR WOMEN Uptown AL HARRISON LUGGAGE OUTLET Southfield Rd. at 11 1/2 Mile • 55R-3900 Luggage — Business Cases — Stnall Leather Goods — Handbagsi Southfield at 101/2 Mile • 569.6930 Big & Tall EVERYTHING EVERYDAY 20-50% OFF 3116 W. 12 Mile • Between Greenfield & Coolidge • 545 7393 DESIGNER SHOE OUTLET - For Men & women BRAND NAME SHOES & BOOTS AT DISCOUNT PRICES! SAVE UP TO 75%! HUNTERS SQUARE Next h Loeb/ors 651-4190 orchid Lk & 14, Faro. Hills 551-0062 SOUTHFIELD PLAZA •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • PEOPLE'S •• CHOICE • 855-6490 BILL MEYER • MUSIC SERVICES • 355-2721 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • w • • • • • • v. •0°-, • No matter how you turn the globe - The Jewish News keeps you posted on Jewish happenings everywhere! • Call 354-6060 TODAY and order your subscription. .0" 4 anwasti••••- v • • 1 ' Blanche Pollack, left, and Rhea Appleman, representing the Jewish Welfare Federation and League of Jewish Women's Organizations, respectively are helping to plant the 1986 volunteer award program for the Heart of Gold Council. JWF Institute Day Set "Looking Inside: Reaching Out- side" is the theme of the Jewish Welfare Federation Women's Di- vision 38th annual Institute Day, set for 9 a.m. October 24 at Adat Shalom Synagogue. Noted author and feminist Blu Greenberg will be keynote speaker. She will explore the role of Jewish values and activity as they apply to everyday social and political life. In addition, the program will feature four workshop sessions focusing on Jewish /black con- cerns; women's rights — the 1985 Nairobi Conference; family and children's issues; and health care law and medical ethics. Leon S. Cohan, president of the Jewish Community Council, and Arthur L. Johnson, vice president of community relations at Wayne State University and a board member of the NAACP, will offer insight into the topic of Jewish / black concerns. Women's rights — the 1985 Nairobi Conference will be dis- cussed by Edwina Davis, coor- dinator of the Jewish Educational Loan Service, and researcher / sociologist Shirley Nuss. Upon her return from Nairobi, Nuss re- ceived the Detroit City Council's award of recognition for her work during the United Nations' De- cade for Women. Both women par- ticipated in Nairobi, along with photographer Joan Roth, who will present a photo display of the 1985 conference. Family and children's issues will be explored by three spe- _ cialists in the fields of social work, psychotherapy and clinical psy- chology. Sharing insight and in- formation on current problems and solutions will be David Maiseloff, director of the Or- chards Children's Services; Elaine Zacks, supervisor of Jewish Eamily Service; and Penny Kennedy, a psychologist with Triad Mental Health Serv- ices. Sallyanne Payton, a professor of law at the University of Michi- Blu Greenberg gan, and Sonia Syme, a teacher and chairman of education for the sisterhood of Temple Israel, will discuss health care law and medi- cal ethics. Dulcie Rosenfeld is chairman of Institute Day. Barbara Eisenberg and Jan Hauser are associate chairmen; Nancy Jacobson is vice president and Sue Marwil is ad- viser for the event. Reservations are limited. Call the'Women's Division at Federa- tion, 965-3939, for information. Infants Service Group Donor Set Infants Service Group will hold its annual fund-raising donor luncheon at noon Oct. 23 at Knollwood Country Club. Proceeds from the luncheon will be used to provide furnish- ings for infants of indigent families in metropolitan Detroit. Infants Service Group .also supports Penrickton Nursery for the Blind, which provides diag- nosis, treatment and training for blind children age 3-12. For reservations and tickets, call Arlene Miller, 855-2246; Esta Weisberg, 352-0252; or Lor- raine Starr, 357-5526. Only per- sons who have made advance reservations will be admitted to the luncheon.