Congratulations and Happy Birthday IN VOGUE 20%-40% off SHARI REVA ADELMAN all merchandise always Parsons School of Design Graduating Class of 1987 Doyweor • Eveningweor glamorous accessories VOGUE PLAZA 1919 S. Telegraph Bloomfield Hills, Ml 1 /2 Mile N. of Sq. Lake Rd. Revlon Design Arts Award 338-9400 FACTS TO THINK ABOUT .... "YOU NEVER GET A SECOND CHANCE TO MAKE A FIRST IMPRESSION." • OfIRENSTEIN JEWELERS has the perfect gift for MOTHER'S DAY An elegant classic. 14k gold circle pin with brilliant diamond and weight .07 ct. Reg. $25. Anniversary Special $175. See our collection of jewelry at affordable prices. "I Sell Appearance . . . Are You Unhappy With Yours? . . . Let the Old Pro Give You The new Look." Call George Ohrenstein Jewelers Ltd. 21716 W. 11 Mile Rd. Harvard Row • 353-3146 swot° Hair Replacement Center UIPILDJ APPOONTMENTS GET REAM • 649 • 3888 41. I • 3001 W Big Beaver Rd. at Coolidge Main Level, Suite 107, Troy, Michigan 48084 John W. MaNa Hair Technician Call The Jewish News 354-6060 Sinai Hospital and the LeVine Institute on Aging present WOMEN AND AGING: BE SMART ABOUT YOUR FUTURE BELLA ABZUG PEDDLERS BICYCLE CLUB: Improve your chances of enjoying your later years. Special skill-building presentations include: Francis Twiddy, Certified Financial Planner, "Financial Planning for Women" Camp Ruth, main Jewish Center, "A Bicycle Repair Workshop for the Mechanically Disinclined," 7:30 p.m. Monday, admission, reservations due today, 681-0527. ONE ON ONE ATHLETIC CLUB: 6343 Farmington, West Bloomfield, '50s and `60s sock hop, music by Replay, food, 8 p.m. Satur- day, admission, 626-9880. Rochelle Upfal, M.S.W., "Housing Options for Older Women" The Honorable Judge Susan M. Moiseev, "Suddenly Alone: Legal Issues of Divorce and Widowhood" Renee Mahler, Area Agency on Aging 1-B, "Services and Agencies Serving Older Women" Kay Hoffman, Ph.D., "Sexuality and Aging" To attend, please fill out the coupon below and mail with a check for $10 to: The LeVine Institute 19100 West Seven Mile Detroit, Michigan 48219 Daytime Phone Total Enclosed ($10/person) Please make your check payable to the LeVine Institute on Aging. Further information available by calling: 493-5895. Friday, May 8, 1987 Jerusalem — While there is a continued trend of strengthened Jewish and Zionist identification among Israeli high school youth, there is an accompanying -- and apparently contradictory — readiness on the part of at least a segment of that youth to consider emigration from Israel. The study was based on a 1986 survey of attitudes of 530 Israeli 11th grade stu- dents regarding the depth of their Jewish and Israeli iden- tifications. Similar studies were conducted in 1965 and 1974, initiated by Prof. Simon Herman, professor emeritus of psychology and contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University. In comparing results from the three surveys, Dr. Uri Farago of the Golan Research Institute, noted that despite the increase in Jewish and Israeli identification among religious, traditional and non-religious youth, the latest study showed an in- crease among non-religious youth who indicated a readi- ness to emigrate from Israel. Whereas in 1974, 85 percent of such youth said they would not consider leaving the country, the 1986 survey showed that only 67 percent said they were certain or relatively certain that they would not do so. Among reli- CALENDAR Sunday, May 17 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Sinai's Zuckerman Conference Center 96 Survey Polls Israeli Youth Keynote Speaker: Former Congresswoman State of New York Name Address Number Attending SINGLE THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS COMMUNITY NETWORK FOR JEWISH SINGLES (25-45): main Jewish Center, Scruples, begins five-week series of workshops, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, admission, 487-0125. COMMUNITY NETWORK FOR JEWISH SINGLES: Music Hall, Twyla Tharp Dance Company, 7:15 p.m. Wednes- day, meet at 6:30 p.m. for car- pools at New York Bagel, 12 and Evergreen, admission, reservations by today, 661-1000, ext. 347. gious youth, the number who said they would not emigrate actually rose from 94 percent in 1974 to 98 percent in 1986, while among youths regard- ing themselves as trditional, there was also a rise, from 83 percent in 1974 to 86 percent in 1986 who said they would not consider emigration. To the question of whether, given the choice, they would want to be born again as a Jew, 64 percent of the non- religious youth answered in the affirmative, as against 62 percent who answered yes in 1974 and only 54 percent in 1965. Among religious youth the percentage answering yes in the latest survey was 98 percent, a slight rise from the earlier surveys, and among traditinal youth there also was a rise, with 91 percent answering yes in 1986, as compared to 89 percent in 1974, and 76 percent in 1965. The last survey also showed that, in general, those children whose fathers were born in Israel scored weaker on questions of Jewish and Isreli identity than those whose fathers were born abroad, he said. Emigre Singles Get Meeting Place New York (JTA) — Israel Goldberg, 50 and single, seems pleasant enough, but he used to have trouble meet- ing single women. A hot dog vendor,. he notes that he can't readily tell whether his women customers are mar- ried. And he thinks his Rus- sian accent may turn off the women he meets at dances. Rema Khoklov, 50 and a widow, would like to meet "another Russian," the Jewish Journal reports. Goldberg, Khoklov and do- zens of fellow single Soviet Jewish emigres have solved their problem at the monthly gatherings for middle-age single immigrants sponsored by the Shorefront YM-YVVHA in Brighton Beach, N.Y., an enclave for Soviet Jewish emigres. The programs have in- cluded parties, discussion groups, a concert and lec- tures, and attract partici- pants from far-flung sections of the city and beyond. "I have friends in New Jer- sey," said Michael Berin, 55, superintendent of an apart- ment building in South Orange, N.J. "But I don't know any single women. Now that I've seen so many beau- tiful women here, I'm going to move to New York.