UP FRONT ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor up nited Hebrew Schools was completing negotiations this week with the wife of a local agency head to serve as UHS acting administrator. Meanwhile, UHS has suspended the search for a permanent replacement while the Jewish Welfare Federation begins a study of Jewish education in Detroit. Mrs. Ofra Fisher, wife of Fresh Air Society executive director Sam Fisher, was expected to start her new duties Sunday if contract negotiations could be finalized. She has extensive educa- tional administration experience in the United States and Israel. At the same time, Federation president Dr. Conrad Giles and UHS president Dr. Barbara Goodman issued a brief joint statement confir- ming the new study and the halting of the selection process. Giles said the Federation became uncomfortable during the search for a successor to Dr. Gerald 'Miler, who left in August. "We felt we could do a better job of delivering education. If left the way it was, UHS would continue as in the past. We (Federation) made a decision that we should examine this before a new person was in place:' Although the joint statement said "there are no planned changes in the current delivery system for the forseeable future," Giles told The Jewish News that "numbers" — low enrollment at UHS and its annual $850,000 annual subsidy from Federation — are part of the reason for the study. But he emphasized that the Federation is interested in the total picture. "There was a high point in terms of the number of Jews being educated in the entire system," he said, "but now the numbers have changed. The demographics have changed. "Federation is the community- wide provider of Jewish education. We have to look at what we are doing for the Orthodox, what we are doing for the Reform . . . The numbers indicate that our primary provision of educa- tion to the community is reaching on- ly 35 percent of the community. The community will have to decide if what we are doing is appropriate." Giles said communal leadership does not want to commit more funds to a shrinking program. "Politically, if we are going to increase our fun- ding of Jewish education we will re- quire broad-based community sup- port?' Federation leadership is in com- plete agreement, Giles said, on the need for an education study. "It may make some people uncomfortable, but we believe the timing is fortuitous. We believe we need more Jewish educa- tion, and if we are going to have more, we have to make sure that it is going into the right mode" Giles is expecting to appoint the study committee within the next two weeks. It will be headed by former Federation president Joel Tauber and will include Goodman. "When the caliber of the committee becomes public," Giles said, "the community will know that we are deadly serious about doing the best job?' He added Continued on Page 14 Rel igious News Service New Administrator Starts Sunday At United Hebrew Actress Jane Fonda embraced Ida Nudel with Nudel's sister, Elana Fridman, and Israel Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir looking on when Nudel arrived in Israel from Moscow this month after a 16-year fight to emigrate. Shapiro Plans To Retain His Ties To Maize And Blue LILA ORBACH Special to The Jewish News U niversity of Michigan presi- dent Harold Shapiro is leav- ing home. He's going back to his alma mater in Princeton, New Jersey — but not forever. The 52-year-old, highly-acclaimed economist who seven years ago became the first Jewish president of the U-M, is moving on to become the first Jewish president in Princeton University's 241-year history. The op- portunity arose and he took it. But Shapiro isn't sure he'll ever be able to call Princeton home. After all, for more than two decades the only place he called home was Michigan. "This isn't a homecoming;' said Shapiro of his upcoming move. "Ann Arbor is more of a home to me than anywhere else."Shapiro feels so strongly about Wolverine country that he plans to return here one day — though he was reluctant to say when or in what capacity. "Maybe I'll just retire here and think a lot," he quipped. To insure a future return, the Shapiros will keep their Michigan homes, including a vacation home in Leland where they spend the month of August and several weekends throughout the year. In addition, Shapiro boasts that he's already ar- Continued on Page 12 ROUND UP Demjanjuk Thal Resumes Jerusalem (JTA) — The trial of suspected war criminal John Demjanjuk resumed in Jerusalem Mon- day after a two-month recess, with a determined effort by the defense to discredit a key document that could prove the 66-year-old, Ukrainian- born former automobile worker from Cleveland, Ohio is the brutal Treblinka death camp guard known as "Ivan the Terrible." The defense, in fact, was in shambles when the trial ad- journed last August. Demjan- juk fired his American at- torney, Mark O'Connor, and hired an entirely new defense team after a succession of Treblinka survivors identified him as "Ivan." Even more damaging was the testimony of experts that an SS identification card bearing a photograph of Dem- janjuk at about age 22, was authentic. The ID card was issued to Ukrainains and other prisoners of war who volunteered for guard duty at Treblinka. The prosecution obtained the original card from Soviet authorities. The defense in- sists it is a KGB forgery. The first defense witness Monday, Avraham Shifrin, a expert on the KGB, tried to convince the court of this. He said he was convinced that the document in- criminating Demjanjuk was forged and that once the trial is over and the suspect is con- victed, the KGB will admit to the forgery, making Israel's legal system a laughing stock throughout the world. The defense contends the KGB wanted to incriminate Demjanjuk as a measure against Ukrainian na- tionalism. Shifrin said it forg- ed thousands of documents accusing Russians and Ukrai- nians of collaboration with the Germans during world War II. He said the KGB regularly sends Christmas cards to famous people and when a-polite thank-you note is returned, the signature is filed for future forgery. The prosecution is not buy- ing Shifrin's testimony. State attorney Yona Blatman ac- cused the witness of seeking a platform to dramatize his opposition to the Soviet. JDL Members Are Sentenced New York (JTA) — Three members of the Jewish Defense League were sentenc- ed Monday for carrying out a series of "terrorist" bombings aimed at protesting the treat- ment of Jews in the Soviet Union. Victor Vancier, 30, of Queens, a former chairman of the Jewish Defense League, was sentenced to 10 years in prison Monday by Judge I. Leo Glasser of the federal district court in Brooklyn. In imposing the sentence, the judge told Vancier, "You .don't go bombing innocent people to make a point." At a separate session earlier in the day, Murray Young, 60, of East Meadow, N.Y., received a five-year term and Sharon Katz, 44, of Manhattan, was given a three-year suspended sentence and five year's pro- bation, which includes six months of house arrest. Hot Water Over Close Shave Tel Aviv (JTA) — The Or- thodox minority in the town of Netivot, east of the Gaza Strip, would deny their secular neighbors a close shave. They are boycotting shops that sell razor blades on grounds that Jewish tradition forbids the use of blades to remove or trim beards. The Orthodox insist there is no organized boycott. THF ❑ FTP(11T irwieu KIC1A/0