WI Need tires? or We will best beat your est price on any major brands Catering For All Occasions "ODDER FOR PAMOVE12 NOW" 553-2927 661-8787 • FRONT DISC BRAKES $495°7: Reg. Price $59.95 Metallic extra. Includes new pads, turn rotors, pack wheel bearings where needed with this ad South of 10 Mile Open claik, 8 a m Mon Sat (/(7.71 -INSTANT 1COMMI/N/CAT/ONS Fe: BEEPERS • FAX • TELEX [313] 474-7777 CUSTOM TIRES GLASS WALL AUTO = AUTO TRIM = MIRRORS SERVICE ACCESSORIES . 24777 Telegraph Southfield YOUTH 6omething especial and 6unshine Treats PHONE 353-2500 WAYNE: CALL 721-3700 LINCOLN PARK: CALL 388-0600 SUBURBAN ANSWERING ,SERVICE WEDS GET REAM • Call The Jewish News 354-6060 These Three Students Previously Won The Harry '2-rand Sarah Laker Israel Youth Scholarship ... You too can Study a Full Year at a Leading University in Israel! NCSY Plans Shabbaton The Young Israel Teens chapter of the National Con- ference of Synagogue Youth will host the Spring Northern District Convention, March 27-29 at Young Israel of Oak-Woods. the to addition In NCSY'ers from the Detroit area, delegations will come from Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Akron, Toledo, and Windsor. More than 200 teenagers are expected. The theme of the weekend will be "Simcha — A Jewish Perspective on Happiness." Included in the educational staff are Rabbi Reuven Drucker, Young Israel of Greenfield; Rabbi Eliezer Co- hen, Young Israel of Oak- Woods; Rabbi David Seider- man, director of admissions- Touro College, New York; Rabbi Yehuda Cheplowitz, rosh hayeshiva of the Wis- consin Institute of Torah Study; Rabbi Yoseph Pols- The following profile by the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion is part of a series on the people who benefit from the Allied Jewish Cam- paign. Maxine Lipton, age 31. Harry T and Sarah Laker Israel Youth Scholarship Fund 21100 W. 12 Mile Road / Southfield, Michigan 48076 / (313) 352-8760 80 Friday, March 20, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Featured during the Satur- day night program will be the Kol Shalom band, a Jewish rock band from New York City. Further entertainment will be pro- vided by Jim Hoke, a profes- sional hypnotist. The entire program is open to any Jewish teenager in the eighth through 12th grade. The Shabbaton will be under the direction of Rabbi Mark Cohn, regional director of Central East NCSY. We Are One Maxine Lipton Co-Sponsored by Congregation Beth Achim tein, assistant dean of the Hebrew Theological College in Skokie, Ill.; and Rabbi Yoseph Abrams of the Mesivta High School in Cleveland. Also attending will be Judy Abrams, NCSY district coordinator; Yair Zinn, NCSY regional shaliach, and more than 20 advisers from various colleges and yeshivot in the United States. Now that she's working and earning money, Maxine Lipton has some plans . . . like treating herself to a new hairstyle. While that may not be unique, it's quite a step forward for someone who spent many years at home, watching television all day. A mentally retarded adult, Maxine's life has changed dramatically since she entered the Jewish Vocational Serv- ice's sheltered workshop program two years ago. In fact, Maxine has made so much progress that she's part of an innovative new program that places im- paired workers at jobs in the community. Supervised by JVS, which also provides trans- portation, Maxine works five days a week during lunchtime at Olga's res- taurant in Birmingham. She helps with salad prep- aration, warming food and clean-up. Her sense of ac- complishment with her Work is matched by her excitement at getting to know many of her regular customers. The feelings are mutual; customers have given Olga's positive feedback about Maxine and her work. A "graduate" of the JVS workshop and its adult remedial classes, there's no place Maxine would rather be than working at the restaurant. That's probably why she hasn't missed a day of work since she started. The Agency. The Jewish Vocational Serv- ice's new facility in South- field and its downtown De- troit workshop serve . more than 7,000 people each year. Offered are rehabili- tation services, job place- ment, career development, educational counseling, and specialized services to senior adults. The adult day program serves 220 developmentally disabled adults; one of its goals — currently being realized through the supervised work program — is to help clients lead more product- ive, independent lives be- yond the sheltered work- shop. JVS receives funding from the Allied Jewish Campaign of the Jewish Welare Federation. Beverly Wolkind