THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 14 Friday, April 24, 1981 New Jewish Agenda Hosts Holocaust Memorial Sunday In Memory of Six Mil- be held 3 p.m. Sunday at lion" is the theme of a musi- Temple Emanu-El. The cal and cultural program to program will feature Au- schwitz survivor and noted pianist Henia Goodman. The program is sponsored by New Jewish Agenda of Detroit. Test Preparation Included in the program will be Mrs. Goodman's How do you prepare daughter, poet and musi- for these important cian Dovida Ishatova. tests? Wayne State University Get the facts — Prof. Ronald Aronson will no cost or obligation give the opening remarks. Accompanying the two ' visiting artists will be local violinist Harold Smith. The musical pro- gram will include selec- 32466 Olde Franklin Drive tions by Ernst Bloch. Farmington Hills, Mf 48018 There is an admission (313) 851-2969 (call collect) Calf or write for more information: charge. LSAT GRE SAT GMAT &xton / 1",i Educational Centers Cong. Shaarey Zedek's Beth Hayeled (nursery school and kindergarten) will present a program on child rearing 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the synagogue's youth lounge. A panel will present var- ious theories of child man- agement, including be- havior modification, Dreikurs, Ginott, child de- velopment and more. Panelists include: Dr. Steven Spector, assistant professor of pediatrics, Wayne State University, and pediatric psychologist at Children's Hospital; De- nnis Skowrowski, school so- cial worker, Farmington Public Schools; and Dr. Stephen Hillman, associate professor and program coordinator for education Your Sign of Value for Sales • Service Custom Leasing TamaRoFF Buick-DMC-Honda 28585 Telegraph Rd. across from Tel-Twelve Mall Southfield, Mich. Phone 353-1300 ■■•■•••■ An anticipated record set- ting philanthropic year is expected to be recorded at the May 6 cocktail reception and meeting that will con- clude the 1981 Allied Jewish Campaign - Israel Emergency Fund. The meeting will be held at 8 p.m. at Cong. Shaarey Zedek. Television journalist Martin Agronsky will be the guest speaker. The pub- lic is invited. There is a charge. For reservations, call the Jewish Welfare Federation, 965-3939. At the closing meeting, totals for this year's fund- raising effort will be an- nounced by Campaign lead- ership in what may again prove to be metropolitan Detroit's most successful Campaign to date. However, Campaign General Chairmen Mar- vin H. Goldman and David S. Mondry note ••••• ■•■ • • • ••••••••• LET US PLAY THE LEADING ROLE We've Never Missed A Curtain Call! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • (Or Drapery Call) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Draperies Bedspreads Blankets Window Shades Lamp Shades Pillows Venetian Blinds ‘10 \ * 1 -TA SI c. y lfoy uo r ue' x r e i s m t i no gv d i nrg a p w ee r i c e s a n t 0 r fe itmaankoet • • =1111111l. 891-1818 ,Suburban Call Collect VISA & MASTERCHARGE • • • •. • • • Agronsky is the host and moderator of "Agronsky and Company" on NBC, which is presented Sundays at noon on Channel 4. Dur- ing his 30-year career as a journalist, he has covered nine successive national political conventions and wartime action worldwide in such places as Spain, Singapore and Libya. Awards received by Ag- ronsky include a National Headliner for his analysis on ABC-TV, and the Alfred I. duPont Award for his coverage of the Eichmann trial for NBC News. VISA' and clinical psychology at WSU. The public is invited, and refreshments will be served. Louise Spector is chairman of the evening. The Beth Hayeled will be open, and staff will be available to answer ques- tions. For details, call the Beth -Hayeled, 357-5544. Dutch-Arafat Meeting It a Surprise: Begin TEL AVIV (JTA) — Pre- mier Menahem Begin ex- pressed surprise that Foreign Minister Christoph Van der Klaauw of The Netherlands plans to meet Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasir Arafat during his current Middle East visit as chair- man of the European Eco- nomic Community (EEC) Council of Ministers. Begin told a group of vis- iting Dutch members of Parliament that the meet- ing with Arafat would be tantamount to recognition of the PLO. A Foreign Ministry spokesman in The Hague stressed that his contacts with Arafat did not imply Dutch recognition of the PLO but were strictly in Van der Klaauw's capacity as chairman of the EEC which has undertaken its own initiative to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict. • • Wax Museum • Adds Anne Frank • • d w i r n ed -io nw st a o ll r another We Remove & Install DRAPERY CLEANERS • • • For your drapery cleaning and you can be assured of the finest and most complete servcie. ALL YOUR HOUSEHOLD ITEMS PROFESSIONALLY DRY CLEANED OR LAUN- DERED. 1 N room. t k N‘1 0 . that a number of persons in the community have yet to make their pledge. They ask that pledges be made immediately, by contacting the Federa- tion office, so that the 1981 goal may be achieved in time for the closing meeting. Shaarey Zedek. Hosts Event on Child Rearing Thursday TamaRoFF • *•••• -aii••• Record Total Sought for Campaign Closing • • • • • • • • • • • oo****•*•0055•*••000410411411005111541110500500• AMSTERDAM (JTA) — A figure of Anne Frank -has been added to the Madame Tussaud wax museum here. Anne is shown at the age of 14 sitting at a desk and writing her diary in a room which is a faithful reproduc- tion of the attic in the house where Anne Frank and her family hid during the Nazi occupation of Holland. < MM. In the top photograph, at the Podiatrists- Optometrists and Opticians sections brunch are, from left, Dr. Paul Feinberg, speaker Moses Schonfeld, Dr. Sheldon Goldstein and Dr. Harris Mainster. In the bottom photograph, listening to Dr. Conrad Giles at a Synagogues and School Section meeting, are from left, in back, Rabbis Robert Abramson and A. Irving Schnipper and, in front, Rabbis Ernst J. Conrad and James I. Gordon and Mildreth Rubinoff. U.S. Team Holds Trials for '81 Maccabia Games By HASKELL COHEN (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) April was a busy month for Jewish athletes, as they took part in the trials, in various sports, in prepara- tion for the 1981 Maccabia Games. The Games take place once every four years. Some 3,500 male and female athletes will con- vene July 6-16 in Israel for the 1981 games. The United States held four trials for male basket- ball players and one for women this past month. In addition to basketball, the soccer contingent, num- bering approximately 200 members, held tryouts in several different locations including New York, Bal- timore, and Los Angeles. All in all the members of the United States Committee Sports for Israel, which sponsors these quadrennial games, are very busy select- ing the performers for the "Jewish Olympics." It seems that the biggest interest, at this point, lies in the male basketball trials, namely because the United States, a decided underdog in 1977, edged out the fa- vored Israeli team in the last moment of play by one point. The Israelis are geared for revenge, but the team representing the Holy Land will be a young one and not necessarily the club which would nor- mally represent Israel in the Olympic Games. The accent is on youth and the coaches might sac- rifice experience to give these youngsters an opportunity to get the necessary experience to compete with the non- Jews in the international competition slated in the next few years in Israel. Basketball is challenging soccer for the role of most popular sport in the Middle East. When the Maccabi Tel Aviv team defeated Sinudyne Bologna of Italy only a few short weeks ago in the European Cham- pionship Game which was held in Strasbourg, the whole country went ber- serk. Winning in basketball has become such a fetish that Israeli scouts, during the spring months and early summer, scurry over to the United States in droves and several recruiting scandals have already been reported. In one case, a basketball star went to Israel and palmed himself off as a Jew and even served in the Is- raeli army. He married an Israeli woman and is living there now and is the star of one of the top teams in the country. This practice must be halted before it becomes an obscenity and gets Israel into trouble with the Feder- ation of International Bas- ketball Associations. Brandeis to Sell U.S. Steel Stock WALTHAM, Mass. — Brandeis University plans to sell some $350,000 worth of common stock in the United States Steel Corp. because of the company's involvement in South Af- rica. According to Marver H. Bernstein, Brandeis president, the company re- fuses to subscribe to a se,t- principles governing practices in the apartli:',,,a' country and that the corn- pany has not sold its South African operations as it had previously promised to do. Afghan Matzot NEW YORK (JTA) — The 17 remaining Jewish families in Afghanistan comprising 66 individuals in the cities of Kabul and Herat were air freighted a shipment of 288 pounds of matzot for the Passover sea- son by the American Jewish Joint. Distribution Commit- tee.