THE KLAU• Candidate linked to Nazis wins vote 10 - • . • •Ali G 201224 Mississippi Jewry 20 years after '60s violence 14 ZioAist Organization NEC to convene in Detroit 18 SERVING DETROIT'S METROPOLITAN.JEWISH COMMUNITY AUGUST 17, 1984 CLOSE-UP irst step to athletic stardom, or just an opportunity to make friends with Jews from ateign lands — the 1984 Maccabi Youth ames are sure to provide competitors and fans with a lifetime of memories. Washington (JTA) — Eli Wiesel, chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, praised the Jus- tice Department's Office of Special Investigations for its years-long battle to deport Archbishop Valerian Trifa from the United States. • Thousands of. Romanian Jews died during the Holocaust as a direct result of Trifa's anti : Semitic incite- . ments in Romania in 1942 when he led the fascist Romanian Iron Guard in a pogrom against Jews. "This suc- cessful action by our Department of Justice's OSI signals once again that there is no room for such war crimi- nals in our midst. I applaud our gov- ernment for the expulsion of Trifa." Trifa, who was ordered deported Continued on Page 7 iEDD SCHNEIDER • ff Writer Angeles were really little more than an appetizer. Now comes the main course. Beginning Sunday, some three dozen delegations of youths aged 12-16 will compete in nine different sports and take part in numerous so- cial and cultural activities as the sec- ond United States Maccabi Youth Galnes get under. way. Opening • ceremonies for the 1984 Games, which are being co-hosted by the Jewish Community Center and the Detroit Sports for Israel Committee, are set for 7:30 p.m. at West Bloom- field High School. Because the Detroit competition will include nearly three times the number of participants than there were at the first Maccabi Youth Games in 1982, the scope of things • here is really different than it was in Memphis (site of the first festival);" according to Jay Robinson, chairman of the Games. "In Memphis, there were maybe 250 or 300 kids from out of state. In Detroit; with so many more kids, the additional host families and volunteers, the logisti- cal problem is a quantum leap from what the organizers encountered two years ago." With the most difficult part of pre-Games preparation, recruiting delegations and finding housing Detii)it Maccabi Youth swim team completed, JCC Physical Education member Libby Stern practices for the Director Dr. Marty Oliff has spent competition. most of the past two weeks finalizing For nearly 1,000 Jewish teena- the athletic event and busing gers from across the country and schedules. In addition to a team from around the world, the just-completed the Detroit area, 30 U.S. cities and Summer Olympic Games in Los Continued on Page 25 • BY GARY ROSENBLATT Editor Of all the difficulties involved in planning the 1985 Allied Jewish Campaign, perhaps the toughest is getting the two chairmen together in the same room at the same time. N'ot because they don't get along. On the contrary, even a casual observer can see how easily Stanley Frankel and Robert Naftaly relate to each other with their endless stream of good-natured verbal jabs. Close friends for several years, both men are native Detroiters in their 40s, successful in their professional fields and extremely active in Jewish causes. And that's the problem. They are sometimes so busy, with such di- Continued on Page 30 Bob Naftaly, left, and Stan Frankel hope to raise more than $22 million in the Allied Jewish Campaign. 4•••■•••41...1.1X: