NEWS 1'1'1' SNEAK PREVIEW'S STORE WIDE CLEARANCE! 3 0- 5 0 % OFF EVERYTHING IN STORE!! SELECT GROUP 75 % -NEAK,RE,,E OFF* Previous Sales & Layaways Excluded 29508 Northwestern Hwy. Sunset Strip Southfield • 3 5 4 3 5 5 4 Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 - Sterling Silver takes dramatic forms plus color accents. LaBret's offers you a sophisticated collection for that special someone. Curriculum Continued from Page 1 moral issues that are used in making choices." Dr. Bolkosky believes the new curriculum answer- shistorical revisionists who claim the Holocaust never happened. It also explains the Holocaust in terms and ex- amples that students can relate to their own lives. Although there are 20 Holocaust curricula now available in the United States, Life Unworthy of Life has been endorsed by Holocaust scholar Raul Hilberg. The Anti- Defamation League's Interna- tional Center for Holocaust Studies, which has produced its own curriculum, calls Life Unworthy of Life one of the three best in the country. These endorsements will be critical to the local cur- riculum for marketing pur- poses. Lutz Associates has put up $100,000 worth of money and time through the Center for the Study of the Child to produce the curriculum, and 1,000 sets are to be publish- ed at an additional cost of $160,000. Paying for the pro- ject is now high on the agenda. The Center for the Study of the Child has held several fundraising parlor meetings among Detroit-area sur- vivors. Another parlor is scheduled this weekend. Sur- vivors and others locally and nationally are being asked to sponsor a page of the cur- riculum, the videotape or whole lessons. The center has also applied to several local foundations and 40 national- ly for grants. A major project this fall will be to market the curriculum nationally. The fundraising is necessary, Dr. Bolkosky said, because the $275 price for a teacher's manual, videotape and 35 student textbooks is the "market price," but "doesn't begin to cover the costs." The Center for the Study of the Child also wants to subsidize poorer school districts which may not be able to afford the curriculum. For that reason, the copyrightfor Life Unworthy of Life is held by the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. Any profits from sales of the cur- riculum will be used by the Council for Holocaust education. Nagourney in November will meet with a consulting group in Washington, D.C. to plan a national marketing ef- fort. He will also meet with representatives of the Na- tional School Board Associa- tion, the National Education Association and other educa- tional groups. Sidney Lutz believes the new curriculum "will be good anywhere. There is nothing else like it in Holocaust education."In-service training for teachers is not required for its successful use, Lutz said. An expected additional benefit locally is increased at- tendance at the Holocaust Memorial Center, which is one of the suggested field trips in the new curriculum. SWEETEST DAY SPECIAL Cubic Zirconium TENNIS BRACELET $125.00 Shown with Theodore Comet, left, CAW director of iriernational affairs and national coordinator of Otzma, are Detroiters Amy Schiffer, Karen Geller, Andrew Silverman, Nathaniel Warshay and Deborah Sokol. LaBret Jewelers Fine Jewelry And Gifts IN ROBIN'S NEST • WEST BLOOMFIELD • 7421 Orchard Lake Road Corner of Orchard Lake Rd. and Northwestern Hwy. Mon. Sat. '10-5:30 • Thurs. 10-8 • Repairs done on premises • 737-2333 - Visa, American Express, Mastercard, Diners Club • Free Gift Wrap • Cash Refunds 26 FRIDAY, OCT. 16, 1987 Otzma Begins Year New York — Launching the second year of the innovative "Otzma" program, 57 young men and women have arrived in Israel to begin a year of community service work. Six Detroiters are among them. They are: Amy Schiffer, Karen Geller, Andrew Silver- man, Nathaniel Warshay, Deborah Sokol and Dan Ginis. Otzma is an early leader- ship identification program for young aciults age 18-24, designed to strengthen the bonds between North American communities and