100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

September 14, 1990 - Image 126

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-09-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

I SINGLE LIFE I

Stephen Boodin, M.D.

Orthodox Singles Party
Set In New York City

Neurosurgeon

STAFF REPORT

announces the opening of his new office
at

Huron Valley
Medical and Surgical Specialties

6161 Orchard Lake Rd., Suite 103
West Bloomfield, MI 48322

Office hours
by appointment



(313) 737-3370

STRICKLY
SWIFT

qb

2 CI Ve oFF

NEW IN-STOCK
PRE-TEEN DRESSY DRESSES

669-1440

brakes mufflers shocks
macpherson struts & more

32661 Northwestern
Farmington Hills

FRONT OR
REAR BRAKES

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

• All Brake Work
Guaranteed
• Turn Drums and Rotors
• Semi metallic pads extra
• Check t 4795
Hydraulics #
• Test Drive
Car
MOST AMERICAN CARS

126

Ann Strickstein
Pam Swift

Alignment
Wheel Balancing
Brakes - Shocks
Suspension - Exhaust
Foreign & Domestic Cars
OPEN MON.-SAT.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1990

Starting at

$1995

most cars

Parts and
Other Service
Extra

.

Break-The-Fast Dance
Set For JCC Sept. 29

The Jewish Community new year.
Center Singles will sponsor
There will be a cash bar and
their annual Break-The-Fast
refreshments.
Dance at 9:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at
There is a charge. Tickets
the Maple-Drake building.
can be purchased at the
The dance brings together
dance.
singles age 21 and up in the
For information, call Leanie
first social gathering of the
Gunsberg, 661-1000, Ext. 347.

40,000 Jewish Emigres
May Get U.S. Aid In 1991

Monday-Friday
Call For Times Available

Joe Stamell's
Dynamic
WearMaster
851-3883

j

I NEWS I

Open To The Public

2065 W. Maple Rd., Ste. 306
Walled Lake, Ml

ewish singles ages
21-36 from the United
States and Canada are
being invited to a seven-hour
event Sept. 16 in New York
City which is being billed as
"the biggest modern Or-
thodox Jewish singles party
ever" by its promoter/
organizer, Jake Strauss.
Over 60 ticket outlets have
been established, including
Metz Cafe Katon in Oak
Park. There is a charge for
tickets. Group rates are
available.
The 5 p.m.-to-midnight
party will be held in the
Jacob K. Javits Convention
Center in New York, said
Mr. Strauss, who expects "a
few thousand Jewish sin-
gles.
"Although the emphasis in
the planning is on the

modern Orthodox Jew, there
will also be non-observant
Jews attending.
"This is something in-
novative. A big party like
this has never been tried
before," said Mr. Strauss,
who described himself as
Shabbat-observant. He has
hosted other Jewish singles
events in the past, but they
have been limited to the
New York-New Jersey area.
Non-stop entertainment
will feature singer Ira Heller
and "live rock-disco-pop
English-Hebrew-Yiddish
music" by the Neshoma Or-
chestra, which has been
Heller's back-up orchestra.
Other entertainment will
include a sound and light
show by a disc jockey and a
show by a comedian.
For additional informa-
tion, call Mr. Strauss at 718-
630-9600. ❑

1•■■ ..(Ro

DYNAMIC
WEARMASTER

EXHAUST
SYSTEM

Small & $7995
Compact

Mid Size

$ 89 95

Full Size

$ 99 95

MOST AMERICAN CARS

New York (JTA) — For the
second consecutive fiscal
year, the United States will
allow 40,000 Soviet Jews to
immigrate here as refugees
in 1991.
But unlike the current
fiscal year, which ends Sept.
30, next year all 40,000
refugees will qualify for an
array of federal assistance
programs, including
transportation loans,
Medicaid and food stamps.
That will take some of the
financial burden off the
American Jewish commun-
ity, which this year has had
to pay all of the transporta-
tion and initial absorption
costs for 8,000 of the Soviet
Jewish refugees who arrived
here.
Those expenses, which
may total as much as $40
million for 1990, are being
paid by Jewish federations

across the country, which, in
addition to their usual fi-
nancial commitments, are
trying to raise un-
precedented sums of money
for the United Jewish Ap-
peal's Operation Exodus
campaign for Soviet Jewish
resettlement in Israel.
The larger number of
"funded" refugees was
negotiated during a series of
talks between Bush ad-
ministration officials and
representatives of American
Jewish agencies involved in
the domestic resettlement
effort. The final decision was
made last week by officials
of the State Department and
the Office of Management
and Budget.
News of the 1991 refugee
figures was reported here
Sept. 5 by Mark Talisman,
director of the Washington
Action Office of the Council

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan