I TEENS I
WE ARE NOW OPEN
"SHOE REVIEW"
(Formerly BAGS 'N THINGS)
Jack & Carol Cohen
WE ARE UP THE ROAD AT
"CROSSWINDS MALL"
(Orchard Lake & Lone Pine Rds.)
SHOE REVIEW
Crosswinds Mall
4301 Orchard Lake Rd.
W. Bloomfield, Mich. 48033
855-835 5
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For Passover
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We promise to be involved in your community.
STATE BANK OF FRASER
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122
FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989
Israel Essay
Contest Opens
New York — Round-trip air-
fare and 5 1/2 weeks of sun and
fun in Israel — all expenses
paid- — will be the prize
awarded to the winner of the
essay contest being sponsored
by the Jacob Goodman In-
stitute of the Zionist
Organization of America on
the topic "Why I Stand Up for
Israel." Students in grades
nine and 10 are eligible to
participate.
Essays — 1,000 words, typed
and double-spaced — must be
submitted to Edna Dyme,
director of educational
resources at ZOA, 4 E. 34th
St., New York, NY 10016 by
April 28.
•The winner, whose name
will be announced on May 21,
will receive a full scholarship
to the ZOA's 5 1/2-week Masada
Summer Program in Israel.
In addition, the school that
the winner attends will
receive a set of the En-
cyclopedia Judaica. High
school freshmen and
sophomores are eligible.
Teen Volunteer
Program Slated
The Oak Park Department
of Recreation is again offering
a teen volunteer program in
summer.
Volunteers may sign up at
the Oak Park Community
Center or call the depart-
ment, 545-6400 for
information.
Those eligible are boys and
girls ages 12-17, residing in
Oak Park. On May 17 an
organizational meeting will
be held at 4 p.m. at the Oak
Park Community Center.
L;Chaim/Achim Matzo
Balls; 11 a.m., Jolson
Athletics vs. Rose Rebels;
noon, Chalutzim/Strauss
vs. Herzl.
MICHIGAN REGION
BBYO ADVISER
MEETING — Sunday, 10
a.m. BBYO Chapter Ser-
vice Center in the
Maple/Drake Jewish
Center, open to all BBYO
advisers. To become an
adviser, contact Adele
Lewin for B'nai B'rith
Girls, 788-0700; or
Nathaniel Warshay, for
Aleph. Zadik Aleph (boys)
788-0700.
JOLSON'S AZA'S QUAD
CHAPTER MEMBER-
SHIP FIELD DAY —
Sunday, noon, Inglenook
Park, open to all Jewish
youth, grades eight-12.
Activities include softball
and touch football.
Refreshments will be
served. Participating
chapters are Chalutzim
AZA, Jolson AZA, King
AZA, Posen AZA and all
BBG chapters. For infor-
mation, contact Brett
Panter, 358-4342.
ADVISER GROUP
MEETING — Sunday, 10
a.m. at the BBYO
Chapter Service Center.
Open to all AZA, BBG
and BBYO chapter
advisers.
AZA COUNCIL EXECU-
TIVE MEETING —
Tuesday 4:15 p.m., BBYO
Chapter Service Center.
Installation coordinator
will be selected. For infor-
mation about the posi-
tion, contact Paul Niser,
vice president, 356-5024.
NEWS I
Teen Calendar
Jews Help
Elect Daley
SHIRA BBG MATZAH
BALLDANCE — Satur-
day, Adat Shalom Syna-
gogue, 9:30 p.m., open to
all members of AZA,
BBG and .the Jewish
youth community. There
is a charge for admission.
For information, contact
Deborah Waller, presi-
dent, 626-7321; or Rachel
Grey, 553-4999.
GREAT LAKES AZA
COUNCIL BASKET-
BALL — Sunday, AZA
Basketball League,
Oakland Community
College — Orchard Ridge
campus, open to all AZA
members registered with
the league. This week's
games are: 9 a.m.,
L'Chaim Jihad vs. Men-
doza; 10 a.m., Akiba vs.
Chicago (JTA) — With
strong support from the
Jewish community, Richard
Daley will follow in the
footsteps of his late father and
occupy the fifth floor of City
Hall as mayor of Chicago, the
nation's third-largest city.
Chicagoans again voted
mostly along racial lines,
with Daley taking 90 percent
of the white vote and Evans
92 percent of the black vote.
Daley's margin of victory
was due to a larger turnout
among whites than blacks
and strong support for him
among Chicago's Hispanic,
Asian and Jewish
communities.
He won 79 percent of the
Jewish vote, according to ex-
it polls conducted by the New
York Times.