THE JEWISH NEWS THIS ISSUE 60( SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY JANUARY 22, 1988 / 3 SHEVAT 5748 400 Prepare For Super Sunday Calls Detroit will join 150 American Jewish communities this Sunday in the single largest one-day telephone appeal on behalf of the Jewish people. Detroit's Super Sunday telethon will involve more than 400 volunteers telephoning thousands of prospective contributors to the 1988 Allied Jewish Campaign. Although Super Sunday Chairmen Ruth Broder and Howard Tapper are reluctant to set a dollar goal, they hope to exceed last year's total of $885,423. The overall Cam- paign has a goal of $26 million to sup- port 60 local and worldwide beneficiaries of the Jewish Welfare Federation. Local needs include 350 Jewish families living at poverty level who are eligible to receive federal grants to purchase food. In addition, Jewish Family Service has clients receiving emergency financial assistance, rent subsidies, kosher Meals on Wheels and other support services. With ris- ing costs and a shifting economy, this agency counts on increased Federa- tion support in the coming year. Some of the local agencies sup- ported in part by the Allied Jewish Campaign include Jewish Home for Aged, Federation Apartments, Fresh Air Society and the Jewish Communi- ty Center. In a few months, Federation's budgeting divisions will be making hard decisions about these and other needs, including resettlement of Rus- Continued on Page 16 GOP Caucus System May Be Abolished KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer Larry and Elliot Chassin WIPING THE TEARS The state's only elected Jewish Republican legislator said he will strengthen efforts to demolish the state's caucus system by spring in the aftermath of party turmoil during Michigan's Republican county caucuses last week. David Honigman, R-West Bloom- field, last June introduced a bill in the state House of Representatives that would bring back to the state "a much more effective primary system!' He will campaign to get the bill — now pending in a House committee — passed into law by the end of the 1988 session. "We are going to have a presiden- THE ISOLATION OF BEREAVEMENT CAN BE DEVASTATING. A TEMPLE ISRAEL GROUP HELPS INDIVIDUALS THROUGH THEIR GRIEF. Door to door for seniors. tial primary in 1992," Honigman said, adding that the ruckus which denied any Republican candidate a clear-cut victory was "embarrassing, confusing, convoluted and opaque." Honigman so far has support from 33 co-sponsors and several Jewish party activists. He does not expect op- position to the bill. "Now more than ever I am sure the system will be changed," Honigman said. All the candidates — Vice Presi- dent George Bush, Pat Robertson, Rep. Jack Kemp, Sen. Bob Dole, Peter du Pont and Alexander Haig — have publicly stated their opposition to the system. Bush, Robertson and Kemp are fighting for the state's 77 Continued on Page 18