FRONTL1N ES I *To the Jewish Federation Apartments: Thank you and all the other wonderful people responsible for making Federation Apartments possible. This is our mother's HOME — she just loves it. She is Orthodox and the kosher meal is very impor- tant to her. She gets dressed every day — and goes down and eats with her friends. It is the highlight of the day for her .. . We are so grateful to you all for making this dream possible for mother . . . Low Laczr Your gift to the Allied Jewish Campaign made a difference to someone .. . Jewish Federation Apartments is an agency of WMU Continued from preceding page the day after Tann's letter was printed defending Israel's actions in the administered territories. A friend of Tann's was hassled at the rally, and Tann's name was mentioned several times by the Palesti- nian supporters. The Friday rally was the se- cond on campus in recent weeks, and Tann said that Arabs from South Bend, Ind. were brought in for the demonstration. She estimated that WMU has 500-600 Jewish students "and many more Arab students." Tann has asked ADL to send her a packet of fact sheets. She is encouraging her friends to write letters to the Herald, and she is work- ing to have Arab and Jewish professors write side-by-side columns in the paper as was done during the Lebanon War in 1982. Tann based her letter to the editor last week in part on her experiences in December during a two-week visit to Israel and the territories, sponsored by B'nai B'rith. She defended Israel's right to defend herself against rioters, and pointed out that guns were used against the rioters only as a last resort. She also took the professor to task for failing to mention the Palestine Liberation Organization's terrorism against their own people and their opponents. *Taken from an actual letter. LOCAL NEWS U-D Will Study Righteous, Helpers RONNA HALL Special to The Jewish News ORCHARD LAKE ROAD AT FOURTEEN MILE • FARMINGTON HILLS • 855-3444 FOR YOUR VALENTINE Save $75 in Hunters Square /Tally Hall sales receipts dated February 1-13, 1988 and get a one pound box of chocolates FREE! Bring your sales receipts to the Tally Hall Mall Office anytime during this special promotion and get a coupon good for your box of delicious Truan's chocolates. Present your coupon to Truan's Candies in Hunters Square February 12th or 13th between LOAM and 5PM and receive our gift to you which is sure to delight your Valentine! OFFER LIMITED TO ONE COUPON PER PERSON 14 FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1988 he National Institute on Aging has awarded a two-year, $80,000 grant for the study of Helpers in the Holocaust (righteous gentiles) to Elizabeth Midlar- sky, psychology professor at the University of Detroit. Midlarsky, who is Jewish, first joined the faculty at the University of Detroit in 1978 and is currently Director of the Center for the Study of Development and Aging, a position she has held since 1981. She has been a practic- ing psychotherapist for the past 20 years, and has com- pleted numerous research projects. The most current is a grant also funded by the National Institute on Aging which examined Altruism and Helping Among the Elderly. "Studying the aging, says Midlarsky," is a natural move from the trends and behavior of childhood development to the study of values and the meaning of life in the older years!' Midlarsky has worked on a similar, international project with Samuel Oliner of Hum- boldt State University. But, says Midlarsky, "This study is particularly significant because it is the first time the federal government has sup- ported an examination of these helpers." She will be talking to survivors and vic- tims of the Holocaust as well as to non-Jews who helped them. Many different kinds of peo- Elizabeth Midlarsky ple worked to rescue Jews during the Holocaust. Often overlooked are the many "good neighbors" whose ac- tions made the difference bet- ween life and death for the Jews who they hid, sheltered, fed or protected in other ways. The Detroit-Windsor region is home to many immigrants from Poland, Italy, Germany, Lithuania and the Ukraine who lived through the Holocaust. Midlarsky hopes to identify and verify as many of these helpers through sur- vivors living in the area, as well as local parish priests. "Rarely, do helpers come for- ward and identify themselves?" says Midlarsky, "because they do not see their . actions as anything extraor- dinary?' The pilot portion of the study indicates that those people who were helpers 40 years ago and are still help- ing others today. Only when