THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 24 Friday, February 21, 1981 Director Discusses National Lampoon Project; Polanski Honored by L.A., Foreign Critics CG Productions Complete Sound & Light Show • Music • Lights • MC By HERBERT LUFT (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) HOLLYWOOD — Henry Jaglom, director of two of the sequences in the four- part feature, "National Lampoon Goes to the For Parties of all Kinds • Bar & Bat Mitzva • Sweet Sixteens, etc Craig Garsoff 557-5708 or 557-5707 The Farmington Hills Inn A new supervised residential care community in Farmington Hills For the elderly who need assistance, but don't want the environment or expense of a nursing home. Call 851-9640 for information Movies," discussed the plot for one of them during a lunch break at the Scottish Rites' Building in Hol- lywood where "The Bomb" was before the cameras in the huge auditorium there filled with spectators watching a youthful ballet company making its debut in the film. A spoof to end all disaster movies, "The Bomb" has its focus on four terrorists, Di- anne Abbott, Barry Diamond, Roger Bumpass and Alan Berger, who are seen wheeling a large bomb onto a bus. Meanwhile, in the make-believe ballet theater, impressario Ken- NEW YORK MERCHANDISE EXC. SAVE 28%-77% EVERYDAY NEW ITEMS ARRIVE DAILY Conditioner $2.50 Value 57 4 • • Mild •••1111111 /11/8• 18 'FREE • • : BreCk • • I planning to make a swashbuckling adventure yarn, "The Pirate," on loca- tions in Israel in the near future, received twice dual honors in Hollywood for his delicately phrased film, "Tess," in which Nastassia Kinski portrays the title role. The Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the Hollywood Foreign Press bestowed a couple of awards on the picture; LAFCA for Polanski as "Best directs and to the two camera mi for photography; HFPA for "Best Foreign" picture and New Star of the Year. Pro- ducer Claude Berri flew in from Paris to accept. ' Hebrew U. Awards Grants JERUSALEM = Seven Hebrew University stu- dents were recently given scholarships endowed in memory of Louis Horwitz, the late leader of the Ameri- can Jewish Joint Distribu- tion Committee. The schol- arship recipients are stu- dents at the university's Paul Baerwald School of So- cial Work. Jewish Agency Leadership Changes Operating Structure Revlon p m 12 oz. neth Mars and choreog- rapher Anthony Holland discuss the danger of a bomb scare. Two bumbling detec- tives, portrayed by Michael Emil and Zack Norman, come to the same conclusion that the new theater lacks exit doors. It is apparent that the contractor (Greg Lewis) and crooked mayor (Allen Goorwitz) used all the bomb squad's funds to build the impressive edifice. The terrorists go ahead with their plans to blow up the theater during the world premiere of the ballet production, which is a black-tie charity affair. The story takes a bizarre turn to satisfy everyone according to the proven cliche of a happy ending. Before tackling the story of "The Bomb," Jaglom completed for the National Lampoon epic the sequence, "The Municipalians," a hilarious take-off of a cops and killer expose with Richard Widmark and Bobby Benson as policemen and Elisha Cook and Chris- topher Lloyd as bad guys on the run. ROMAN POLANSKI, now in exile in Paris and Dishwashing Detergent 2 oz. 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They included limiting board members' tenure to two terms and changes that would give Diaspora mem- bers a greater voice in the executive's decision- making process. A summary of some of the items discussed at Caesarea was made public by Raymond Epstein of Chicago, a member of the board of governors and a former president of the Council of Jewish Federa- tions (CJF). "Almost every discus- sion group recommended a limitation on the length of service" of board members, he said. "In almost every case, the suggestion was two con- secutive (four-year)terms ... and this would apply to officers as well." Similarly, the discussion groups felt that the Jewish Agency Assembly, a much larger body that meets an- nually, should restrict its delegates to "a formal term ... of two or three years, not only to improve their status but perhaps to bring about a healthy turnover," Epstein said. "Furthermore, there is, to many, an anomalous situa- tion in having the operative heads of the (Jewish Agency) departments sit on the policy-making body. It was felt there should be a sharp separation of man- agement from active opera- • tions," Epstein said. Epstein said the board members believed the authority of the chairman of the executive should be strengthened. They also called for "greater cooperation and coordination between the departments and elimination of duplica- tion in their activities and to strengthen the chair- man would be one step in bringing this about," he said. Meanwhile, the "non- Zionist" members of the board have announced their "endorsement" of the World Zionist Organization's Jerusalem Program which declares the "centrality" of Israel in Jewish life. The board also announced endorsement, too, of two other cardinal planks of the WZO ideology: fostering Jewish "and Zionist" educa- tion; and "active encouragement" of aliya from the free world. Board chairman Max Fisher of Detroit termed the endorsement "hiF- toric" and said it mea "we are all one family ... we are all Zionists." In practical terms, the "endorsement" will mean an overhaul of the Jewish Agency — to be planned and formulated by a series of sub-commissions — to meet what Fisher called "the aims of the '80s." Agency chairman Leon Dulzin told reporters that "within one year" these sub- commissions will have re- ported back and the new "joint approach to the main Jewish issues" will be on the way to implementation.