BAG A SUBSCRIPTION BUSINESS ANDREA ROSENBERG has been promoted to risk manager of Schostak Brothers and Co., Inc. Mrs. Rosenberg joined Schos- tak in 1984. She served as project man- in ager of charge Rosenberg overseeing the company's move last March from offices in the Honeywell Building in South- field to the First Center Office Plaza, also in South- field. As risk manager, Mrs. Rosenberg is responsible for identifying the company's ex- posure to loss, reducing or eliminating - risks, and pur- chasing the necessary insur- ance protection. GLORIA P. RIVKIN of West Bloomfield, has been appointed a director and sec- retary of the Matthew McNeely Neighborhood Foundation. To The Jewish News Today Subscribe To And Receive A Sturdy Tote Bag With Our Compliments! If you ever need a reason to become a Jewish News subscriber, now you have two. For starters, there's our new tote bag. It's roomy .. . perfect for workout clothes, books, diapers, knitting. Most important, you'll receive The Jewish News every Friday in your mailbox for 52 weeks, plus our special supplements. We bring you the latest — from West Bloomfield to the West Bank. There are also new entertainment and singles sections, an amazing marketplace of goods and services for sale and the most comprehensive array, of advertising informa- tion in the area. A great newspaper and a complimentary tote bag await you for our low $24 12-month subscription rate. Bag A Subscription To The Jewish News Yes! Start me on a subscription to The Jewish News for the period and amount circled below. Please send me the tote bag. This offer is for new subscriptions only. Current subscribers may order the tote bag for $5. Allow four weeks delivery. Please clip coupon and mail to: JEWISH NEWS TOTE BAG 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP (Circle 1 year: $24 --- 2 years: $45 — Out_of State: -$26 — Foreign:-$38 One) Enclosed $ 42 Friday, June 12, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS HARRY L. JACOBS of West Bloom- field, president of Congress Col- lection Corp., was elected president of the Michigan Association of Collection Agencies. The MACA regu- lates business Jacobs practices, prescribes ethics, and prom- otes proper conduct of its 108 members. CONTINUUM CENTER OF OAKLAND UNIVERSITY will preseiit a three-hour workshop for dual career partners at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Oakland Center on campus. There is a fee. To register, call the Continuum Center, 370-3033. THE FUDGERY has opened at Tally Hall/Hunters Square in Farmington Hills. The store combines entertainment with candymaking. Workers double as part-time song- and-dance entertainers while concocting the confections. JANKA ASSOCIATES, a training and communications company, will conduct one- day seminars on employment interviewing for health care personnel July 7 at the Ramada Hotel in Southfield, July 8 at the Botsford Inn in Farmington, and July 10 at Weber's Inn in Ann Arbor_ The registration fee includes all seminar materials and luncheon. For information and registration forms, con- tact Janka Associates, 399- 3233. SHELDON S. BROWN AND ASSOCIATES of Oak Park has been appointed to handle all public relations ac- tivities for Norman J. Ochelski, CPA. ELLIOTT SHEPARD, co- owner of Shepard Drugs, was appointed by Governor James Blanchard to the Michigan Board of Pharmacy. DENNIS P. DICKSTEIN, president of the Builders Association of Southeastern Michigan announced the naming of business people and residents to the Homearama committee, buil- der's corps and liaison group. Among those named were: Gerald Brody, Jeffrey Cohen and Steven G. Winkler. LAWRENCE S. JACKIER has been elected to the board of di- rectors of Louis-bas d Germania Savings Bank. A prin- cipal in the suburban Detroit-based law firm of Schlussel, Lif- Jackier ton, Simon, Rands, Galvin and Jackier, P.C., the 44-year-old corpo- rate business attorney was elected to the board of the $700 million-asset financial institution at its annual meeting in mid April. Canadian Court To Allow New Thal For Zundel Toronto (JTA) — The Supreme Court of Canada last week rejected a request for appeal by the Ontario government, aimed at restor- ing the conviction against pro-Nazi propagandist Ernst Zundel. Following the Supreme Court's decisiOn, Ian Scott, Ontario Attorney General, promptly announced Zundel will get a new trial on the same offense. Zundel was found guilty in 1985 of breaching a "spread- ing false news" section of the Canadian criminal code by publishing a booklet denying the truth of the Holocaust. He was sentenced then to 15 months in prison and ordered not to publish anything on that subject. Last January the Ontario Court of Appeal, in a five-judgepanel, unanimously rejected the conviction on grounds of irregularties in jury selection and not permit- ting certain items of evidence. '