26 Friday, November 11, 1E3 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Sieff Research Fellowship Launched Shenkmans to Dedicate Library. at Annual Beth. Yehudah Schools Fund-Raising Event NEW YORK — The Sieff American Committee. Research Fellowship for The establishment of the Physicians, a mid-career re- fellowship program was sidency and study program part of the tribute to Lord for..physicians from around Sieff, head of Britain's the world on the campus of Marks and Spencer de- the Weizmann Institute of partment store chain, at the Science in Israel, has been Weizmann Institute dinner launched by the institute's in New York last month. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Shenkman will endow the Jack and Miriam Shenkman Library at the Sally Allan Alexander Beth Jacob School for Girls, a di- vision of Beth Yehudah INTERNATIONAL SALON • Sunday Burials CHICAGO (JTA)— A bill which permits previously restricted Sunday and holi- day burials in Illinois and invalidates union contracts with cemetery manage- ments which ban burials on such days, a situation of concern to observant Jews, has been signed into law by Gov. James Thompson. Welcomes CHARLEY MUMMA to our staff 4327 Orchard Lake Rd. For Appointment: in the Call 851-9131 Pine Lake Mall or 851-9132 Pearls of wisdom. Shop at Tapper's and Save. More than ever before Tapper's has the selection you've been looking for. Select a gift from Tapper's. We've got style! RETAL 126.75 B 146.28 C 592.87 SPECIAL AT 101.40 117.00 474.30 RETAIL D 347.50 E 231.02 F 186.25 SPECIAL AT 278.00 184.82 149.00 RETAIL G 315.50 548.25 I 212.50 H SPECIAL AT 252.40 438.60 170.00 Cash Refunds • Free Gift wrap 26400 West Twelve Mile Road in Southfield's Racquetime Mall Northeast corner of 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy. 1371:13 170N E The Sally Allan Alexander Beth Jacob School for Girls, top photo, and the Yeshivath Beth Yehudah School for Boys, are two of the components of the Beth Yehudah Schools which derive support from the an- nual fund-raising dinner. JACK AND MIRIAM SHENKMAN * * * Alexander School the school School and Rabbinical Col- system includes. a nursery lege and the Yitzchok and pre-1A program, the Stollman Kollel Graduate Yeshivah Gedolah High program. Israel Pleased at Result of Lebanon Talks - A ' Schools, at the schools' an- nual dinner 7 p.m. Sunday at Fairlane Manor. Cocktails will be served at 6. The Sally Allan Alexan- der School has an enroll- ment of 225 students at its Beverly Hills campus. The school provides Hebrew and secular education for chil- dren in grades one through 12. Shenkman served for 20 years as board member,' officer and president of the United Hebrew Schools. The Shenkmans have dedi- cated the Jack and Miriam Shenkman Library and Audio Visual Room at Shaare Zedek Hospital, Jerusalem, endowed an academic chair in the teach- ing of "Post-Biblical. Found- ations of Western Civiliza- tion" at the Jewish Theolog- ical Seminary of America and the, synagogue in Ann Arbor and a school building in Farmington for Chabad Lubavitch. The Shenkmans charitable interest also includes support of Israel through the Jewish Na- tional Fund, having dedi- cated a forest in 1977, the Synagogue Council of America and various medical facilities in De- troit and Israel. Rabbi Norman Kahn, executive vice president of the Beth Yehudah Schools, stated that Shenkman will be presented with the 14th annual Golden Torah Award not only "in recogni- tion of his efforts for Beth Yehudah Schools, but for his continuous dedication to Torah education through- out our community and throughout the world." Besides the Sally Allan 357-5578 HOLIDAY HOURS (Starting Nov. 25th) Mon.-Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-8:45 10-5:45 12-4:45 I. Layaways Invited Tapper's , JeAAMPAt- I JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel feels the first round Of the Lebanese national re- conciliation talks in Geneva ended fairly well from its point of view. The May 17 Lebanon- Israel agreement is still in- tact despite strenuous Sy- rian efforts to have it abro- gated, government sources noted after Sunday's Cabinet meeting here. They added that Syria's desire to replace Lebanese Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan with a more malleable politician was also thwarted. "Not a bad balance sheet so far," the Israeli sources said. They cautioned, though, that Lebanese poli- tics are notoriously difficult to predict — especially given the precarious secu- rity situation in various parts of the country. The second round of the Geneva talks, scheduled to resume Monday, could yet deal a mortal blow to the May 17 agreement. • The first round of the talks ended last Friday with the conference mandating President Amin Gemayel to Jaunc ► a new diplomatic effort to bring about Israeli with- drawal. The president is also to negotiate "on in- ternational levels to as- sure the total and abso- lute sovereignty of Leba- non over its entire terri- tory." Syrian efforts, through Damascus' Lebanese client-factions, to have the May 17 agreement abro 7 gated failed against the solid resistance of Gemayel and some of the pro- government factions. A subsequent move to de- clare the agreement "fro- zen" was discarded in favor of the more vague formula empowering Gemayel to negotiate on Lebanon's be- half and report back to an- other round of the talks scheduled for mid- November. The Israeli sources said that this mandate to Gemayel meant that the president had emerged from the conference with his standing enhanced. The Syrian-backed opposition factions had hoped for a diametrically opposite out- come. . Last ... week the Lebanese factional lead- ers unanimously adopted a resolution mandating Gemayel to fry to obtain America's' intervention in ending the occupation of Lebanon by foreign troops. The resolution mentioned only Israel's occupation, but spokes- men for four of the fac- tions supporting Gemayel said the resolu- tion indirectly, and with- out mentioning Syria by name, also calls for a Sy- rian withdrawal. The Christian Phalangist spokesman, Alfred Maadi, said the adoption of the resolution by all the fac- tions signified "a victory for Lebanon as a united na- tion." Veteran rightwing Maronite leader Pierre Gemayel, the founder of the Phalangist Party and father of President Gemayel, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the resolution as adopted was "the best we could do." The road to eminence and power from obscure condi- tion ought not to be made too easy, nor a thing too much of course.,