• I UP FRONT Berries 'n Bon Bons FIGHT THE BIG "F "... ATTENTION: PARENTS OF COLLEGE STUDENTS! FURNITURE FADING Send a survival kit full of love and noshes from home. — ALL OCCASION GIFT BASKETS & TRAYS — 21711 W. 10 Mile LOCAL & NATIONWIDE DELIVERY Suite 122 Southfield, MI 48075 351-4362 SOLAR SALES, INC. SUGAR FREE & KOSHER UPON REQUEST Sun Control Products Curriculum Continued from Page 5 537-7900 Authorized Dealer Applicator BE A VALENTINE PIN-UP Give Your Heart To Someone You Love VALENTINE SPECIAL 8"x16" COLOR PORTRAIT only $25 00* GOLDENBERG PHOTOGRAPHY 350-2420 *our selection offer expires 1-22-88 ROCK SOLID INVESTMENTS ONE YEAR 7.75% Annual Percentage Rate 7.98% effective annual yield 5 YEARS 8.75% Annual Percentage Rate 9 .040/0 effective annual yield $500 MINIMUM DEPOSIT *COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY If you're looking for a flexible, safe investment plan ... look to First Security Savings Bank. We have investment plans from daily accounts to 10 years which pay the highest competitive rates and are insured. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal. Rate subject to change. Other Rates and Terms Available FIRST SECURITY I FSLIC SAVINGS BANK ••• S•••ryps Om 1 , 00 OW f OUAl HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ... 1760 Telegraph Rd., Suite 201, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48073-5875 HOURS: MONDAY-THURSDAY 9:30-4:30 FRIDAY 9:30-6:00 16 FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1988 Just south of Orchard Lake Rd. (313) 338-7700 I ricula on the market." He added that making en- dorsements would place the HMC in an awkward position. "I told (curriculum sponsor) Sid Lutz that when he ap- proached us. Nevertheless, he wanted our Education Com- mittee to see it." Rabbi Rosenzveig said the HMC gave the curriculum "enormous assistance," a claim disputed by the pro- ject's principals. "We allowed them to work in our library and photograph our artifacts. I have some doubts that they would have done it without us," the rabbi said. "We held the seminar here for the teachers, and gave them con- siderable, considerable assistance." Nagourney said the cur- riculum project sought the HMC endorsement at the re- quest of HMC members who attended the project's fun- draising meetings. "We did not expect to gain their en- dorsement, and we were only allowed access to their facilities begrudgingly." The HMC, he said, then wanted credit on the cur- riculum cover for its assistance. Jealousies aside, the Center for the Study of the Child has received eight endorsements and is pursuing 24 more from organizations and individuals associated with the study of the Holcaust. It is seeking support from foundations and the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion, and is studying the possibility of packaging the project differently for sale to the public in bookstores. NEWS Cabinet Okays Budget, Cuts Education, Health Jerusalem (JTA) — A $29.9 billion national budget, ap- proved Sunday by the Cabinet, has been sent to the Knesset Finance Committee, from which it is expected to emerge, after long and pro- bably undramatic delibera- tions, more or less intact. The Cabinet handed Finance Minister Moshe Nissim an important per- sonal and political victory when it voted 18-2 to endorse his budget package for fiscal 1988, after more than five weeks of behind-the-scenes wrangling among the ministers. There were two abstentions and one minister demonstratively refused to participate in the vote. The budget, though $5 billion over the 1987 level, calls for cutbacks in govern- ment expenditures of $463 million, only about $8 million short of the reductions originally proposed by Nissim on Nov. 30. Premier Yitzhak Shamir expressed satisfaction that the budget was adopted. He and Nissim said its passage ruled out the danger of "elec- tion year economics." The two negative votes were cast by Education Minister Yitzhak Navon and Health Minister Shoshana Arbeli- Almoslino, both of Labor. They objected strenously to Nissim's cuts in subsidies for health and education. The health budget will be reduc- ed by $40.6 million from last year and the education budget by $6.25 million. But Navon said after the Cabinet meeting that the Yitzhak Navon: Won't resign past weeks of negotiations narrowed the gap between his ministry's demands and the Treasury's position. He said there was therefore no cause for him to resign, as he had threatened at one point when negotiations were at a stalemate. Navon said last month he would quit if the budget end- ed free high school education in Israel. Apparently he won on that point. Pope, Waldheim To Meet Again? New York (JTA) — Pope John Paul II will meet with Austrian President Kurt Waldheim during a visit to Austria scheduled for June 23 to 27, according to news reports from the Vatican Tuesday. The pope also will meet, on June 24, with Austrian Jewish leaders who protested his controversial audience at the Vatican with Waldheim last summer, the reports said.