DETROIT SOPHISTICATION BY CARLO PUCCI Temple Presents Holiday Workshop Temple Emanu-El presents its Holiday Workshop Series to teach adults about major and minor Jewish holidays. Beginning Oct. 18 and en- ding May 30, students learn the songs, blessings, recipes and crafts that accompany Shabbat, Chanukah, Passover, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Yom HaShoah, and more. Enrollment is open to the public. There is a fee. Nosh 'N Drash Program To Begin For business, Adat Shalom Synagogue plans an orientation meeting for its Nosh 'n Drash program for high school students at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 17. Nosh 'n Drash will meet Mondays beginning at 6:15 p.m. with dinner, followed by educational programs. Mekhinah for ninth graders focuses on community respon- sibility and Jewish tradition. Students study Jewish sources on community- oriented mitzvot and learn about Detroit Jewish com- munity agencies. The 10th grade Limud pro- gram is required for teens for special occasions, you'll appreciate the distinctive styling of this classic European- inspired suit. Designed by Carlo Pucci exclusively for Kosins and Kosins Big & Tall with an assortment of colors, single-breasted, styles to choose from. "Where Fit Is Foremost" 27881 Southfield Rd. at 11 1/2 Mile, Lathrup Village • 559-3900 - 10-9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 12-5 Mon Fri. 1(2111.r 26300 Southfield Rd. north of 10 1/2 Mile, Lathrup Village 569-6930 • Mon.-Fri. 10-9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 12-5 YOUR VINTAGE WRIST WATCH COULD BE WORTH $10,000 MOVADO CARTIER GUBELIN MOON PHASES CHRONOGRAPHS MANY OTHERS I , ABBOTT'S COINEX CORPORATION 1393 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRM., MI 48009 To Sell a Watch Phone: (313) 644-8565 Metro Dealer 30 Years 4, Jeanette Rubenstein of Detroit, girls 15-16 hurdles winner in the JCC-Maccabi Games, was incorrectly iden- tified in a photograph in the Sept. 7 Jewish News. Early Deadline The Jewish News will have an early deadline for local publicity to appear in the issue of Sept. 28. Because of the High Holidays, the deadline will be noon Wednesday, Sept. 19. Jewish Schools Open In East Europe, USSR 422 units PATEK PHILIPPE ROLEX AUDEMARS VACHERON LE COULTRE UNIVERSAL Correction I NEWS I and double-breasted K who wish to participate in the confirmation program. Con- firmation candidates will take a weekend trip to New York City. Gesher, for 11th and 12th graders, explores contem- porary ethical issues in- cluding abortion, suicide, euthanasia, capital punish- ment and war. Rabbis Efry Spectre and Elliot Pachter and Youth Director, Miriam Starkman, head the Nosh 'n Drash faculty. For information, call the synagogue, 851-5100. DISCOUNTS s,,vg $9999 INTERPLAK TOOTHBRUSH $6488 SEIKO WATCHES 40-50% OFF sL'isg. MONT BLANC PENS 40% OFF t99 RAY-BAN SUN GLASSES RCA-ZENITH TVs Oscar Braun's CROSS PENS 15075 W. Lincoln • Oak Park 968-5858 40% OFF . Jerusalem (JTA) — Five new Jewish schools opened in Eastern Europe this week, three of them in the Soviet Union and two in Hungary. The Soviet Union's new schools opened in Leningrad; Vilna (Vilnius), Lithuania; and Tallinn, Estonia. The Jewish Agency has provided curricula and teachers for the schools, including pro- grams for Hebrew, Zionist studies, Jewish history and Jewish culture. The agency opened its first Jewish school in the Soviet Union last year in Riga, Latvia. In addition to the schools, some 23 Israeli teachers are teaching Hebrew in 13 towns throughout the Soviet Union. The new schools in Budapest — two elementary schools and a kindergarten — enhance a Jewish com- munity whose educational infrastructure is thriving, due in part to the help given by Hungarian Jews living in the West and also through the substantive technical as- sistance of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. Many of the Soviet and Hungarian teachers recently returned from six-week courses in Israel. There are also four Jewish Agency emissaries, or "shlichim," now in Hungary, working in local schools and evening ulpanim. And in one state school in Budapest, a Jewish Agency shaliach will be teaching Hebrew. In Hungary, the new schools fill a void created by over 40 years of Communist rule and the destruction of the Holocaust. Prior to the war, there were 147 Jewish elementary schools in Hungary and numerous Jewish high schools. About two dozen Jewish elementary schools were reopened after the war and five Jewish high schools. But by 1948, the Communist government had restruc- tured the schools and began closing down Jewish publications.