48 Friday, November 21, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Israeli Sports Official, Volleyball Team Visit U.S. By HASKELL COHEN (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) Uri Afek, the head of Is- rael's Sports Authority, a subsidiary of the Ministry of Education, has been visit- ing the U.S., going from city to city to renew acquain- tances with friends he had made over the past few years. Afek was one of the young students sent over from the State of Israel to secure his master's degree in physical education at UCLA. Uri is very well liked and many of his supporters and friends will be upset, some- what, to learn that his pre- decessor, Yaariv Oren, is re- WARS THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK? EMPIRE POT PIES EMPIRE CORNISH HENS 119SAVE LB 39c LB. EMPIRE TURKEY or CHICKEN SLICES 3-OZ PKG 79` SAVE 30c 8-0Z PEG 99 • CHICKEN •TURKEY SAVE 40c EMPIRE CHOPPED LIVER SPREAD 8-OZ . CUP KOSHER FOODS AVAILABLE AT: • • • • • 4 TELEGRAPH/LONG LAKE IN BLOOMFIELD TWP. SOUTHFIELD/13 MILE IN BEVERLY HILLS ORCHARD LAKE/13 MILE RD. IN FARMINGTON HILLS TELEGRAPH/15 MILE RD. IN BIRMINGHAM 12 MILE EVERGREEN IN SOUTHFIELD 99' SAVE 46c MOST STORES OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. TO 10 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. ( PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DEC. 3, 1981. NO SALES TO DEALERS. ESTATE AUCTION Friday, Dec. 4 • Saturday, Dec. 5 • Sunday, Dec. 6 825 Woodward Ave., Pontiac, MI ITEMS FORMERLY IN THE PARKER ESTATE, FREMINGTON HOUSE, PENRITH AS WELL AS ITEMS FROM NUMEROUS OTHER CONSIGNORS. AUCTION: Friday, December 4 at 7 P.M. Saturday & Sunday, December 5 & 6 at 1 P.M. EXHIBMON: December 1-4; 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. December 4; 6 P.M. to 7 P.M. December 5 & 6: Noon to 1 P.M. CATALOGUES: at door $4, by mail $6 FEATURING: FINE FURNITURE: Edwardian Sideboard and Corner Cupboard. French Wardrobe Cabinet. Victorian Settee. Belgium Oak Bedroom Suite. Chinese Desk and Chair. French inlaid C scroll roll top desk. Jacobean style chairs. Carved Chinese Curio Cabinets. Vemi Martin Style Curio. Tables. Chairs. Dressers. etc. CHINA & PORCELAIN: Minton and Limoges China. Royal Dux. Wedgewood. Collection of Royal Doultan Figures. Royal Crown Derby, Sevres. Worcester. Meissen. etc. CUT CRYSTAL Libbey, Clark. Hawkes. etc.; PAINTINGS & PRINTS: Picasso. Norman Rockwell, Persian Illuminated Manuscripts. DeAndres. etc.: BRON7FS: LaPorte. Mene, etc.: ORIENTALIA: Porcelains, Bronzes. Snuff Bottles. Netsuke. etc.; JEWELRY: MISC.: Clocks, Oriental Rugs. Kaiser Porcelain Eagle. Christmas and Collectors Plates, Lamps, etc. SILVER: Tea pot with Paul Storr marks, tea sets, candelabra, trays. etc. EXECUTIVE BIDS ACCEPTED AT OUR ORDER DESK IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO ATTEND AND BID IN PERSON. 10% Buyers Premium. SCHEDULE OF FUTURE AUCTIONS: Antique Auction Jan. 21, 22 & 23 (removed from a local antique shop) NOW ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENTS FOR FUTURE AUCTIONS Auction Conducted by and at the Premises of: C.B. CHARLE5 1 (.Al KIES' -211 SIN( PIS9 • AUCTIONEERS • APPRAISERS • ESTATE SPECIALISI S 825 Woodward Avenue • Pontiac, Michigan 48053 • 1313/338 9203 turning from a sabbatical leave and will resume his position as top man in the Sports Authority. It appears likely that Afek will suc- ceed General Aharon Do- ron as head of the Federa- tion of Sports. •• • The Rogosin High School volleyball team made a tremendous im- pact on followers of the game here, when they slaughtered the West Point team and knocked off all of the opposition they competed against in the U.S. This high school team is one of the best in the European and Mid- Eastern sectors. •• • Some tennis followers in Israel were annoyed over the fact that the Israel ten- nis authorities paid out a total of $105,000 for a four-man, two-day tennis tournament, held in the in- door basketball arena lo- cated in Tel Aviv earlier this month. The tournament, which was underwritten by three large Israeli advertisers, featured Jimmy Connors, Ilie Nastase, Eliot Telscher, whose mother was born in Israel, and Shlomo Glicks- tein, Israel's number one ranked player. • • • The basketball season is well under way in Tel Aviv and Haifa. After five games, Brian Magid, a graduate of George Washington Uni- versity, who played on the 1977 U.S. Maccabia hoop team, already has returned to the U.S., disappointed in his team's five losses. He was playing with the Haifa Hapoel club and was av- eraging 19 points a game. The Haifa Maccabi team, however, on the other hand, is playing the best ball it ever had and is among the top five clubs in the National League. A good deal of the success of this organization is due to the fact that it has signed Willie Sims, the black, Jewish player from Louisiana State University, who starred for, the 1977 and 1981 U.S. Maccabia teams, and Dave Blatt, former cap- tain of Princeton Univer- sity, was one of the out- standing players on the 1981 Maccabia squad. Bell Opposed NEW YORK — The American Jewish Commit- tee has urged Congress to oppose the appointment of Detroiter William M. Bell as chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Bell, who was nominated for the position by President Reagan last June, is a black businessman in Detroit. The AJCommittee echoed National Association for the Advancement of Colored People opposition, criticiz- ing Bell's lack of adminis- trative experience to handle the EEOC's 3,300 em- ployees and $140 million budget. 15,000 Visitors Sets New Record for 30th Book Fair With more than 15,000 visitors in attendance at the annual Jewish Book Fair at the Jewish Community Center, a new record was set for the 30th anniversary of the annual event. The scores of volunteers have been very helpful, in the estination of the Book Fair coordinator Adele Silver. Thousands of books were sold after the sessions addressed by 30 authors. The volunteer leadership of this year's Book Fair in- cluded: Chairman Sandra Nathanson; vice chairman Dolores Silverstein; book display, Eleanor Korn and Cis Maisel; book inventory, Gertrude Lahr, Rose Roland and Mildred Ross; book selection, Joyce Burkoff; children's program, Marily Kohen, Rita Rochlen and Ruth Weingarten; decora- tions, Georgia Kux; gift shop, Belle Kukes and Eleanor Sugarman; He- brew, Ami Cohen; hospital- ity, Elaine Lesser and Eve- lyn Silverman; patrons, Shirley Zirkin; pre-Book Fair briefing, Marian Kan- tor and Bette Roth; sister- hood day, Lois Flak, Mari- lyn Herbach and Sylvia Lee; volunteers, Susan Rose, Mary Saidman and Sandra Zeskind; and Yiddish, Sarah Friedman. Agency Seeks Fairness on TV to Ethnic Groups NEW YORK — Joseph Giordano, director of the American Jewish Commit- tee's Louis Caplan Center on Group Identity on Men- tal Health has called on the television industry to "de- liver more authentic dramas that accurately re- flect" ethnic life, and to put an end to shows that mock and defame ethnic groups. Giordano also warned that progra'ms containing ethnic stereotypes can be particularly harmful to children. Israel and Cars JERUSALEM (ZINS) — One family in three in Israel now owns a car. About eight percent of Israeli house- holds have two or more cars. A study shows that 60 per- cent of those with higher education own cars. THE BEST IN MUSIC: • BILL MEYER GROUP 355-2721 • INNOVATIONS 589-2478 • PEOPLE'S CHOICE 459-7287 BOOK DIRECT & SAVE! invitations in blume inviting and exciting • paper goods for all occasions calligraphy 20% discount marcia blume 851-5079 "ONLY SALE" ONLY 15.50 FOR A PERM . ONLY $6.50 FOR A TINT . ONLY 41.50 FORA BLEACH... ONLY $5.50 FOR A HAIRCUT . ONLY $ 5.50 FORA SET ONLY $6.50 FOR A HAIRBLOW . . ONLY FIRST TIME CUSTOMERS . ONLY ON TUES. THRU SAT. ONLY THRU DECEMBER 31, 1981 . ONLY AT PAVILION SALON LOCATED AT HAMILTON PLACE 642-3410