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Socialites Mark
34th Anniversary

The Rose Sherer Socialites
will celebrate their 34th an-
niversary at a dinner-dance
on July 23 at the Furniture
Club in Southfield.
This will be a full course
dinner and music for dancing
will be provided by Vic Bar-
rett and the "Cartells." There
is a charge.
For reservations, call-Mollie
Stern, 968-3643; or Betty
Brown, 546-6779. The dead-
line for making reservations
is Wednesday.

Peddlers Club
Goes Bicycling

Peddlers Bicycle Club will
go cycling on July 17,
meeting at 10:30 a.m. outside
the front lobby of the Jewish
Community Center (Maple/-
Drake Building). The route
location will be given at the
meeting site. The club re-
quires all members to wear
helmets. For information, call
the Center, 661-1000, ext.
343.

Schiff Leads
Workshop

up to

60% LESS

On a Stunning Array of
rings, pendants, necklaces,
earrings and chains

SALE 2 DAYS ONLY
OPEN SUNDAY 14-4

BRUCE
WEISS

88

FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1988

Bike Workshop
For Singles

Bill Barshun, owner of the
Birmingham Bike Shop, will
give a lecture on how to
prepare and repair a bike for
riding at 7:30 p.m. July 19 at
the Jewish Community Cen-
ter (Maple/Drake Building).
Wine and cheese will be serv-
ed. For reservations, call the
Center, 661-1000, ext. 347.
There is an admission fee.

CUSTOM JEWELRY

YOU HAVE IT MADE

26325 TWELVE MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN
IN THE MAYFAIR SHOPS AT NORTHWESTERN HIGHWAY
10:00-5:30 MONDAY-SATURDAY, 10:00-8:30 THURSDAY

VISA

Stacie Schiff will lead a
workshop on how to build
healthy relationships and a
powerful career at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Jewish
Community Center (Maple/-
Drake Building). Call the
Center, 661-1000, ext. 347, for
reservations by Tuesday.
Wine and cheese will be serv-
ed. There is a nominal charge.

(313) 353-1424

4111)

Life Balance
Focus Of Talk

"Single and Ibtal: Using
Leisure to Achieve a Life
Balance" will be the topic of
a talk to be held at 7:15 p.m.
Thursday at SPACE, 30233
Southfield, Suite 100,
Southfield.
Joan MacKniesh, president
of Life Balance Co., will be
the guest speaker.

SPACE is a service for
separated, widowed or divorc-
ed men and women and their
families, sponsored by the Na-
tional Council of Jewish
Women.
For reservations, call
SPACE, 258-6606.

Barbecue Due
For BB Group

B'nai B'rith Michigan
Singles will have a backyard
barbecue July 17 at 4:30 p.m.
at Eleanor Manella's home.
There is a charge. All singles
over age 50 are welcome. For
information, call Roz Kauf-
man, 548-0193; or Rose Gold,
541-7289; or Evelyn Keller,
968-8445.

NEWS

I

Pollard Sentence
Protested

New York — A crowd of
about 600 persons turned out
in Long Island to protest the
treatment by federal prison
officials of Jonathan Jay
Pollard and his wife Anne
Henderson-Pollard, and to
show support for efforts to
bring about reductions of
their sentences.
Pollard, a former civilian in-
telligence analyst for the U.S.
Navy, was sentenced to life
imprisonment with no eligi-
bility of parole for having sold
classified information to
Israel. His wife was sentenced
to five years in prison for be-
ing an accomplice after the
fact. Henderson-Pollard suf-
fers from a rare ailment of the
digestive tract, however, and
there have been fears voiced
by her family and others that
she will not live to complete
her five-year sentence.
Bernard Henderson, Hen-
derson-Pollard's father, spoke
at the rally last week. During
her first 90 days in prison,
Henderson said, his daughter
had lost 60 pounds. She was
taunted by fellow inmates
who screamed, "Hang the
Jew spy."
Henderson pleaded with
those gathered at Congrega-
tion Beth Sholom in Long
Island to help him get his
daughter the medical care
she needs and to eventually
overturn both her and her
husband's convictions.
Joining him at the rally
were Jonathan Pollard's
parents, Morris and Mollie,
and his sister, Carol. During
an interview before the rally,
they all said they believed
anti-Semitism had played a
large role in the "harsh"
treatment metted out in this
case.

