86 Friday, April 26,,,1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 111111111 53—ENTERTAINMENT FREDDY SHEYER, Violin, piano. Weddings, anniver- saries. Jewish, Classical, Popu- lar. 661-2357. Clark Family Players BIRTHDAY PARTIES and other special oc- casions. Clowns, juggling, magic, music, dance, puppets, balloon sculpture. Call Mary Ellen 273-6716 J SPACE AGE COMPUTER PICTURES Taken of your guests at Bar Mitzvas, wed- dings, promotional parties, etc. IN Call 863-7736 for info t MUSIC FOR UFE Solo pianist or duo- trio-quartet. Bach to Boogie, Jazz & Classical. Parties and all occa- sions. 851-3574 7- CAR GAI'UR6S , „ CART° -5 SY ' #. 31/1105 il Cl1iE Z E rCR PARCIRS 293-172.3 54—CEMETERY LOTS ADAT SHALOM CEMETERY Six Mile - Middlebelt Single lot - $600. Pair, $1,180. To see site call 476-2437 or 476-2777 The Family of the Late NEWS ANNE APPLEBAUM Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory at 11:30 a.m. Sun- day, April 28, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi Benjamin Gorrelick will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Jew Is First Woman To Be Elected To National Basketball Hall Of Fame Springfield, Mass. (JTA) — Senda (Berenson) Abbott, a pioneer in the development of women's basketball, will be enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame July 1. Lee Williams, executive direc- U.S. To Aid Israeli Navy Tel Aviv (JTA) — U.S. Secre- tary of the Navy John Lehman announced last week that Israel will build three diesel-powered submarines for its navy, with fi- nancial and technological assis- tance from the U.S. He said that in addition to these arrangements, an agreement has been initialed for the joint design by Israel and the U.S. of a new naval missile and that the U.S. Navy will purchase another squadron of the Israel- manufactured Kfir jet fighter planes. Lehman was in Israel on a five-day visit as guest of the Israel Navy. His announcement means a new lease on life for the finan- cially troubled Haifa Bay ship- yards which had faced complete shutdown or at least large scale dismissals for lack of orders. Lehman said today, "I am very pleased to announce that the (U.S.) Navy has been so pleased with the performance and effec- tiveness of the Kfir jet that I have requested, and we have agreed in principle, to proceed with another squadron of Kfirs for our naval training." The Israel-designed Kfirs have been used by the U.S. Navy to simulate Soviet aircraft in training exercises. for of the Hall, said there are 143 men and four teams inducted into the museum. She will be the first woman. Abbott was known as "The Mother of Women's Basketball." While serving as director of phys- ical education at Smith College in Northampton, Mass., she intro- duced the sport to the female stu- dents. The first women's game was played March 22, 1893 at Smith. A native of Vilna, Lithuania, Abbott, working in conjunction with Dr. James Naismith, foun- der of the game, wrote the official rules for women's basketball in The Family of the Late FRANCES A. PERLIN Announces the unveil- ing of a monument in her memory at 11:30 a.m. Sun- day, May 5, at Hebrew Memorial Park, Lakeside Section. Rabbi Spectre will officiate. Relatives and friends are asked to attend. Pair Held In Killing Of Cab Driver Jerusalem (JTA) — Jerusalem area police are holding two sus- pects and seeking a third in con- nection with the murder of David Caspi, a Jewish taxi driver from Neve Yaacov, who was shot through the head Friday. The 33-year-old Caspi, a resi- dent of Neve Yaacov, operated the cab in partnership with his brother. The blood spattered ve- hicle was found with its head- lights on by an Arab resident who called police. Caspi's body was found nearby. Caspi's brother insists he was slain by terrorists. He was not robbed. The two suspects were arrested on the basis of, information pro- vided by a 17-year-old Arab youth who was admitted to an East Jerusalem hospital with gunshot wounds. OBITUARIES Hebraist Mildred Goldman People," which was co-sponsored ' by the Detroit Free Press she as- sisted Meyer Weisgal and Henry Montor in the organizational and preparatory tasks for a drama that gained national attention. Mrs. Goldman is survived by two daughters, Anna Goldman of Washington and Mrs. Robert (To- bie) Levine of Brookline, Mass.; two sisters, Mrs. .Philip (Anna) Slomovitz of Southfield and Mrs. Yosef (Geula Ethel) Schub of Chicago; and four grandchildren. University Closed After Search Jerusalem (JTA) — Military authorities closed down the Uni- versity of Bethelem Friday, after they found material described as "anti-Israeli incitement" at the school. The university will re- main closed until further notice. Security forces searched the campus following intelligence in- formation that the students in- tended to hold a nationalist ex- hibit. The material uncovered in- cluded books, pamphlets, tape cassettes and Palestinian flags. Part of the material included explicit calls for an armed strug- gle against Israel. The material was found in the storage rooms of the various student groups. University President Thomas Scanlen told newsmen Friday that one could hardly regard the material seized as incitement against Israel. Even the military agree that there was nothing very objectionable in a way of advocat- ing violence or anti-Semitism in the materials that they found, he said. However, he said, there was material that could be classified as political, but it should be seen in the framework of the difficult political situation in the area. 1892. She chaired the U.S. Women's Basketball Committee and was editor of Basketball Guide for Women. From 1911 to 1921 she chaired the physical education depart- ment at the Burnham School in Northhampton, Mass. She died at the age of 86 in 1954. Male Jewish inductees in the Hall include: coaches Arnold Au- erbach and Harry Litwack; players Barney Sedran, Nat Hol- man, Max Friedman and Adolph Schayes; contributors Abe Saperstein, Edward Gottlieb and Maurice Podoloff; and referee David Tobey. Mildred Goldman Boston, Mass. — Mildred Goldman, widely acclaimed as a book reviewer, with a Hebraic background, died April 19 at age 70. More than 500 of her admirers were at the funeral service in the main sanctuary Monday of Cong. Chizuk Amuno in Baltimore where her husband, the late Dr. Israel M. Goldman, occupied the pulpit for 40 years. Besides her skill as book re- viewer, Mrs. Goldman was a rec- ognized Hebraist. She assisted the late Ches Aleph Friedland in the preparation of his bilingual Hebrew-English book for chil- dren. Prior to her marriage to Rabbi Goldman she was the Hebrew sec- retary of Dr. Louis Finkelstein, president of the Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary of America, and Dr. Azriel Eisenberg, who headed the Jewish Education Association. During the presentation in De- troit at the Olympia of the famous spectacle, "The Romance of a IN MEMORIAM N In Beautiful Memory of Our Beloved Husband and Loving Father WILLIAM KAUFMAN Who left us April 25, 1984. You are forever in our hearts and thoughts. We love and miss you very much. Love Alice, Patty and Terry. In Loving Memory Of ABRAHAM SINAI April 29, 1982 Sadly missed and always remembered by his wife, Lena; daughters, Doreen and Irene; and grandchildren.