UP FRONT Reform Day School In The Planning Stage NEW! Easy Scoop and Seal Package! Five local temples are considering opening a combined day school in September 1988 JUDY GERSTEL Special to The Jewish News D etroit area Reform congre- gations are laying the groundwork for a Reform day school by opening separate kindergarten programs this fall. A combined school could open as early as September 1988, possibly sharing the facilities of United He- brew Schools' high school on Twelve Mile Road in Southfield. Temple Emanu-El currently has 16 students in a kindergarten program, and plans to have two kindergarten classes in the fall. ICE CREAM Temple Israel and Temple Beth El plan to open kindergarten classes in September, and Temple Kol Ami will send some kindergarten stu- dents to the Temple Israel pro- gram. Although local Reform leaders prefer to emphasize that the precedent-setting day school is still very much in the planning stage, a ARTIFICIAL FLAVOR ADDED series of meetings has been held involving rabbis and representa- tives from the local temples and Jewish Welfare Federation officials. HALF GALLON The UHS facility, which at one time was shared with Akiva He- A Wesley's box with two supervisory symbols (label and lower right). brew Day School, is just one site being mentioned. Temple Israel and Temple Beth El's efforts have led to involving the smaller Reform congregations, Kashrut Council, said he had "a according to Marvin Goldman a ALAN HITSKY sharp falling out" with Paul Bor- member of the Reform Day School News Editor man over Goldman's agreement to Committee and a past president of work with A&P. "I was engaged by Beth El. orman Foods, the parent A&P for its Michigan group, which "We've only been talking for company of Farmer Jack has 59 stores." Goldman said the two months," explained Goldman, supermarkets, has . ended "and we've had three meetings al- its 20-year association with Rabbi A&P is preparing an entire line of ready. At the next meeting, each of Jack Goldman and switched kas- dairy products that will be kosher, the congregations will present its hrut supervision of its Wesley and has already begun distributing Tom Tov kosher bread that is pro- own demographic study." Farm Maid house brands to the Goldman emphasized that a Council of Orthodox Rabbis of duced under his supervision at a Hamtramck bakery, is planning Reform day school would have to Greater Detroit. in-store kosher delis and possibly offer "a secular education of the Gilbert Borman, public rela- highest quality" as well as a qual- tions director,:\ of Borman Foods and in-store kosher bakeries. "A&P is being very aggressive ity Jewish program. son of president Paul Borman, said about this," Goldman said, "and it This year there are 1,900 chil- the company "essentially decided to should be very good for the com- dren in the elementary grades go with someone new." Rabbi attending afternoon and week-end Goldman, however, said the change munity." He regrets his departure programs at the five temples. They occurred after he agreed to super- from Farmer Jack, he said, but are Temple Israel, with an enroll- vise local products for A&P super- that's what happened." Goldman said he was surprised by Paul ment of 923, Temple Beth El (490), markets in Michigan. Continued on Page 14 Continued on Page 14 Goldman, of the Metropolitan FLAVORED Borman Foods' Units Change Their Kashrut Supervision Campaign Hits $22.4 Million Allied Jewish Campaign lead- ers announced Thursday night that the 1987 Campaign has achieved $22.4 million in pledges. More than 900 persons attended the Campaign closing event at Adat Shalom Syn- agogue, which featured comedian Alan King. Campaign chairmen Emery Klein and Paul D. Borman ex- pressed their appreciation to Cam- paign volunteers, while Jewish Welfare Federation executive vice president Martin Kraar pointed out that an additional 3,100 previous contributors would still be con- tacted. Some 15,000 contributors pledged the $22.4 million total. This compares to just under $22 million that was pledged by the closing event last year. B ROUND UP Pleasant Ridge Mayor Ousted Attorney Jeffrey Sherbow was elected Monday to a two-year term as mayor of Pleasant Ridge. Sherbow, 36, ousted incumbent Thomas Latta by a margin of 432 to 422. The city's board of canvas- sers will determine Monday if a recount is necessary, but a spokesman for the city clerk's office said a recount would be unlikely. Sherbow was out of town at press time, but John Sopt, a partner in Sherbow's Bloom- field Hills law practice, said that the mayor-elect cam- paigned on a platform of open government. There is no place for closed city commis- sion meetings in a small community like Pleasant Ridge, Sopt paraphrased Sherbow as saying. Sherbow, a newcomer to Pleasant Ridge politics, will- be sworn in on Monday. War Criminal Gets Reprieve Washington (JTA) — Al- leged Nazi war criminal Karl Linnas received an 11th-hour reprieve from deportation to the Soviet Union Monday when Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall issued a temporary stay to allow the full court to consider the de- portation order. Marshall acted after a fed- eral court in Manhattan re- jected Linnas' final appeal last week. The 67-year-old native of Lithuania would have been the first war crimes suspect ever deported to the Soviet Union. He was tried there in absentia in 1962 and sentenced to death. The deportation order was expected to be carried out Monday night. Linnas' fate may be decided when the Supreme Court holds its next conference on April 17, or by telephone poll of the nine Justices before then. The Supreme Court has twice in the past declined to review Linnas' case. Envoy Sees Strong Ties Despite the Pollard Affair, relations between the United States and Israel are becom- ing stronger, especially in the wake of the formal declara- tion of Israel as a U.S. ally, Israel's ambassador to the United Nations told an Ann Arbor audience March 29. Binyamin Netanyahu was the keynote speaker at the third annual Israel confer- ence day at the University of Michigan, sponsored by 17 on- and off-campus organiza- tions. He said that Israel is more respected now than in the past, due to a decline in Arab power, better relations with the U.S. and changing atti- tudes about terrorism. Shultz To Join Moscow Seder Washington — Secretary of State George P. Shultz plans to celebrate Pesach with Jewish dissidents at a seder Monday in Moscow, according to a State Department offi- cial. The seder will be conducted at the U.S. Embassy's press and cultural center. Vladamir Slepak is among the Jews invited to the seder. Shultz may also meet with Andrei Sakharov• 7