h Thompson &
Israel Table
At Orchard Ridge
Every Friday thru the month of October
The WILBERT PEAGLER TRIO
FEATURING VOCALIST PAMELA SMITH
from 8 p.m. - 12 p.m.
On Wednesday, Oct. 16, the Jew-
ish Students Association/Hillel at
Oakland Community College, Or-
chard Ridge Campus, will host an
Israel information table. A repre-
sentative from the Michigan Is-
rael Connection will answer
questions and provide informa-
tion about trips, programs, and
other Israel opportunities.
AZA, BBG Council
Presidents Named
Hours:
Tues., Wed., Thurs. 11-9
Fri.11-12 • Sat. 5-12
Sun. 12-9
warn.
Shari Katz and Neil Rosenbaum
have been elected presidents of
the B'nai B'rith Youth Organiza-
tion councils for 1996-97.
Shari Katz is serving as presi-
dent of the BBG Council. She is a
senior at North Farmington High
School and a member of Ahava
BBG. Other officers include Ali-
cia Blumenfeld, Zonder, Shera
BBG, Alana Zaks, Ahavah BBG,
and Jayme Cohen, Shira BBG,
tee>,
515-851-
UNIQUE AMONG
MICHIGAN'S
LARGEST AND MOST
Shari Katz and Neil Rosenbaum
SPECTACULAR
RESTAURANTS
& BANQUET
CENTERS
The perfect lakeside setting for
elegant bridal showers,
rehearsal dinners and wedding receptions.
Call (810) 463-9660
for complete assistance to make your
wedding a memorable occasion.
THE D ETRO
North River Rd., just east of 1-94 expressway.
10
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vice-presidents; Sara Zonder,
Shera BBG, treasurer; Rachel
Greenberg, Savage BBG, secre-
tary; Erika London, Ahava BBG,
reporter; and Allison Sweet,
Ahavah BBG, counselor.
The president of the AZA Coun-
cil is Neil Rosenbaum, a senior at
North Farmington High School
and a member of Jolson AZA.. Oth-
er AZA officers are Joel Snyder,
Kishon AZA, Mike Bagdade,
Funk AZA, and Steven Lezell, Jol-
son AZA, vice-presidents; David
Rosen, Kishon AZA, treasurer;
Jeff Grey, Greenberg AZA, secre-
tary; Ben Salba, Jolson AZA, re-
porter; David Goldenberg, Marx
AZA, counselor.
Michigan Region Executive
boards have selected the chairs of
the Senior Getaway Weekend to
be held in January, at Milan Con-
ference Center. The chairmen are
David Silverstein of Posen AZA
and Cydney Goldberg of Zahav
BBG.
On Sunday, Oct. 20, Metro De-
troit Teen Connection will hold a
fall hayride and haunted house
outing at Upland Hills Farms.
The bus will leave the Maple-
Drake Jewish Community Cen-
ter at 1 p.m. and stop at the JPM
JCC at 1:30 p.m. It will return to
the JPM JCC at 5 p.m. and make
the final drop off at Maple-Drake
at 5:30 p.m. Application deadline
for this event is Monday, Oct. 14,
at the BBYO Office. Admission is
$12 for members and $15 for first-
time guests. _
Teen Connection is planning a
trip to see the play Grease at the
Fox Theater on Sunday, Nov. 17.
It will have A Chanukah celebra-
tion at the Maple Drake JCC on
Saturday, Dec. 14. Jewish teens
in grades seven and eight are in-
vited.
BBYO is seeking volunteer ad-
visors for its BBG and AZA chap-
ters. For information call the
BBYO Chapter Service Center,
(810) 788-0700.
Jewish Hospital
Language Feud
Montreal (JTA) — A flare-up over
the use of the French language at
a local hospital has thrown into
sharp relief a bitter ongoing bat-
tle about the future of Quebec.
The battle was left unresolved
in October, when separatists nar-
rowly lost a referendum to deter-
mine whether Quebec would
remain a part of Canada.
Both before and after the ref-
erendum, the separatists, mostly
French speakers, have left Jews
and other ethnic groups in Que-
bec with the feeling that they are
unwelcome.
The latest flare-up was sparked
by an incident in July at the Sir
Mortimer B. Davis Jewish Gen-
eral Hospital here.
A patient, Normand Lester,
who is a television journalist for
the French-language component
of the CBC, Radio Canada, com-
plained that nurse Paula
Matthews refused to address him
in French, even though he had
previously been speaking with her
in English.
The nurse purportedly told him,
"You know how to speak English.
You spoke English before. This is
an English hospital."
The flap became front-page
news in the local French media,
editorialists on both the English
and French sides have written
profusely on the subject.
Eilat Opens
New Eatery
Jerusalem (JTA) -- Visitors to
Eilat will soon be able to see their
fish and eat them, too.
Israel's first underwater restau-
rant is under construction in the