COMMUNITY Jewish Professionals Group Will Honor Isidore Sobeloff Couple To Entertain For Haar Foundation The Moishe Haar Memorial Foundation, under the auspices of the Sholem Aleichem Institute, will hold its 22nd annual memorial program Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the LaMed Auditorium at the United Hebrew Schools. Dorothy and Reuben Silver will present "Sholem Aleichem and Friends" an evening of dramatic readings in Yiddish and English. Moishe Haar directed the institute and school for many years, and many of his students have careers in the arts. Reuben Silver was a stu- dent of Mr. Haar. The Silvers are actors and directors in Cleveland at the Karamu Theater, Jewish Community Center and Cleveland State University Theater. Members of the planning committee are: Lillian and Paul Gold, Rose Kaye, Helen and Jack Mandiberg and Mildred and Morgan Young. Everyone is welcome. There is no charge Machon Dinner Speaker To Be Rabbi Bunim Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz, director and Gary Torgow, chairman of Machon L'Torah, The Jewish Learning Net- work of Michigan, announced that the keynote speaker for the annual Machon L'Torah dinner will be Rabbi Amos Bunim, author of A Fire In His Soul a biography about the life of his father, Irving Bunim. The dinner will be held June 27 at the Michigan Inn. Rabbi Bunim was graduated magna cum laude in 1950 from Yeshiva College of Yeshiva University. He received awards in Talmud, ethics, political science, Latin and service. In 1952, he received rabbinical ordina- tion from Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University. He was associate chairman of the board of Torah Umesorah (National Society for Hebrew Day Schools) from 1956 to 1982, and chairman of the board of "Ibrah Academy for Girls, Far Rockaway, N.Y., from 1963-1982. From 1965-1985, he was president of the Kennedy Foundation in Israel, and since 1972, has been national chairman of the Sh'or Yoshuv Institute, Far Rockaway, N.Y At present, he is national co-chairman of 'Ibrah Schols for Israel (Chinuch Atzmai); chairman of the board of governors of Beth Medrash Govoha, Lakewood, N.J.; and president of Garden Fabrics Corp. For information, call the Machon L'Torah office, 967-0888. Isidore Sobeloff Orthodox Rabbis Dinner. June 20 Will Honor Dr. Philip Friedman Dr. Phillip Friedman will be the honoree at the 59th an- niversary dinner of the Coun- cil of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit. Dr. Fried- man will be honored "for his exemplary service to the Jewish community," at the banquet, which will be held June 20 at the Westin Hotel. Dr. Friedman is chief of neurosurgery at Sinai Hospital and is a member of the American Board of Neurological Surgeons. He received his neurosurgical training at the University of Illinois Hospital. He is af- Ex-Refusenik To Speak Here Rabbi Amos Bunim Hospital of Denver and handl- ing public relations for the Welfare Council and the Travellers' Aid Society, Sobeloff moved to Detroit to serve as the Federation's ex- ecutive director for 27 years. In 1964, Sobeloff moved to Los Angeles to become ex- ecutive director of the newly- merged Los Angeles Jewish Federation Council. Before retiring in 1968, he par- ticipated in the organization of the School of Jewish Com- munal Service under the auspices of Hebrew Union College and joined the facul- ty as a lecturer in communi- ty organization. The Friends of the Soviet Jewry Education and Infor- mation Center and the Israel Aliyah Center are sponsoring a speech by former refusenik Evgeny Lein at .7:30 p.m. Monday at the Maple/Drake Jewish Community Center. Lein and his wife lost their jobs after applying to emigrate to Israel. The Soviet authorities expelled their daughter from a technical school, slandered him in an Izvestia article in 1982, draggged him-from his apart- ment and beat him in 1984, and disconnected the family's telephone. Lein's son in 1985 was forc- ed to stand in front of his class and vilify his father. Lein's daughter was allow- ed to emigrate to Israel in 1987. Lein, his wife and son were allowed to leave the Soviet Union this year. Dr. Phillip Friedman filiated with the Council of Orthodox Rabbis and Merkaz and has served as president of Yeshiva Beth Yehudah and Congregation Shomrey Emunah. The Council of Orthodox Rabbis represents all the Or- thodox rabbis of the metropolitan Detroit area. The Council also has members in Flint, Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids, Ibledo and Windsor. It grants kosher supervi- sion to the local butchers, bakeries, restaurants and senior citizens homes as well as to plants that produce and manufacture food products. The Council maintains an active Beth Din (Rabbinical Court) that presides over adoptions, conversions, divorces and serves as a legal reference center for in- dividual questions of Jewish law and practice. For information about the Council's dinner, call the Council office, 559-5005. Food, Entertainment At June 11 Kosher Fair The Neighborhood Project will host its second annual Kosher Food Fair June 11 at the main United Hebrew Schools building. In cooperation with The Jewish News and Jewish Ex- periences For Families (J.E.F.F.), the festivities will include free food samples from local merchants and caterers, pony rides, balloon sculptures and a Sinai Hospital dietitian who will give talks on healthy eating and keeping kosher. 4!..411111111101111116.- The fair will run from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., and additional parking will be available at Congregation Beth Achim, with a free shuttle to and from UHS. The Neighborhood Project, under the auspices of the Jewish Welfare Federation, offers financial incentives for Jewish families who want to buy homes in Southfield and Oak Park. lb date, 250 homes have been purchased through the program. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 37 XCriMMktIM Reuben and Dorothy Silver will present an evening of dramatic readings for the Sholem Aleichem Institute. New York — The Associa- tion of Jewish Community Organization Personnel (AJCOP) has selected former Detroiter Isidore Sobeloff of Los Angeles for its distinguished retiree award. He will be honored Tuesday at the AJCOP meetings in Baton Rouge. Sobeloff, who will be 90 in August, was for many years executive vice president of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit. He began his career at the New York federation, first as a publicist and later as director of public relations. After directing the New York office of the National Jewish--