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Finally I had an inspiration. I phoned my sister-in-law. "Di- ane," I exhorted her, "Golda has had a hard life. She lost her whole family in the Holocaust. She had, to learn a new lan- guage — and she's no linguist. Let's let her feel that at least at baking mandelbrot she's a suc- cess. I'm going to tell her we all love her mandelbrot. Then maybe I won't have to eat any more of it. There was a humph at the other end of the line. Then the appeal to Diane's better nature won out. "I'm tired of making mandelbrot anyway," she con- ceded. "If she wants to show off, let her." At the next family dinner Golda brought more mandel- brot, but Diane arrived with a new concoction, chocolate cookies. They were delicious, and I took pains to say so veh- emently. But it was obvious that Diane, having withdrawn from the mandelbrot contest, was even more set against Golda than ever. "Mandelbrot is so passe," was her parting shot, sotto voce, when the des- serts were served. Jewish Voluntarism Shrinking Nationwide STEVEN A. COHEN Special to The Jewish News W altham, Mass. — The vast majority of Jewish adults no longer volunteer their time and services, either for Jewish organizations or the non- Jewish community, according to Gary A. Tobin, director of the Center for Modern Jewish Studies at Brandeis Univer- sity. _ This means that the nation- wide network of Jewish organ- izations that depend on volun- teers for fundraising and serv- ice delivery "need to find new ways to attract volunteers," said Tobin. "Otherwise, some may not survive at all, and others won't be able to carry out their responsibilities." Tobin's conclusions are based on demographic studies undertaken by the center in cooperation with local Jewish federations. Why so few volunteers? "The most common response, when asked why they didn't volun- teer, was that they were too busy," Tobin said. "The second most common response was that nobody had asked them to volunteer." "There always have been people who volunteer and lose interest, and there are those who never have volunteered and never will," Tobin contin- ued. "But one interesting change we are looking at is that Jewish women are less likely to volunteer today than in the past. "Many women used to track into volunteer work fairly early in life, after marriage and having children. But now they are getting married later and having their children la- ter. "In addition, many more are working outside the home for pay, and Jewish organizations haven't adjusted to accommo- date them. "Do they have volunteer meetings that working people can attend, or do they still meet in the morning? Do they create volunteer roles that managers are comfortable with, or do they still expect everyone to cut lettuce? The answer is, they haven't adjusted. "As we move into the next decade, fundraising and serv- ice delivery in the Jewish community still will be based on voluntarism. If these organ- izations don't adjust and find new ways to attract volun- teers, they won't succeed." Copyright JTA Inc. Kreisky Resigns From Socialist Party Posts Vienna (JTA) — Former Chancellor Bruno Kreisky last week resigned from his posts in the Socialist Party to protest the selection of Peo- ple's Party leader Alois Mock as Foreign Minister. The two parties comprise Austria's coalition government. Socialist leaders said they hoped Kreisky would recon- sider his decision to step down as honorary chairman of the party and president of the Institute for Interna- tional Policy and the Renner Institute, his party's academy. According to a Socialist daily newspaper, Kreisky said he couldn't go along with a foreign policy designed by Mock, who was head of the People's Party during Kurt Waldheim's successful run for the Presidency last spring and summer. Ugly anti- Semitic statements surfaced during the campaign as the World Jewish Congress re- peatedly raised questions about Waldheim's Nazi af- filiations and military ac- tivities during World War II.