SINGLE LIFE Happiness Continued from preceding page immoral or fattening and treat yourself to at least five of them in the next month. FIN" GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST Established 1919 ‘6fr 642-5575 30400 TELEGRAPH RD., SUITE 134 Daily 10:00-5:30, Thursday 10:00-7:00. Saturday 10:00-4:00 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354 6060 - Turn a frown upside down. You could be unhappy because you're harried, says the founder of San Francisco's Carol Osborn Superwomen Anonymous. Give yourself a do-nothing day. Make a checklist of 24 things not-to- do today. To make it stick, tike off your watch and start and end the day with a long soak in a soapy tub. Keep a journal. Think of it as your best friend and record all your thoughts and feel- ings. It takes about three months of bookkeeping to see happy results. Fight that sad-sack feeling. Volunteer your services as a social worker. Being commit- ted to something constructive is the biggest blues-buster there is, says the Voluntary Action Center (VAC). National Cheer Up the Lonely Day is July 11. But why wait? To get in touch with an unhappy soul who'd like to hear from you, write the C.U. Club, 66 Maryland Dr., Battle Creek, Mich. 49017. `After _Divorce' Lecture Topic Beverle Versele of Oakland Community College will give a lecture followed by a ques- tion period on the problems and challenges faced by the single parent after a divorce in the auditorium of the Far- mington Hills Branch library on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Ad- mission is free. For reservations, call the library, 553-0300. Singles Meet For Discussion B'nai B'rith Michigan Singles will have coffee, con- versation and discussion on Monday at 7 p.m. in the home of Stella Rives, 16248 Mt. Ver- non, Southfield. Light refreshments will be served. There is a nominal charge. Everyone over 50 is welcome. !NEWS I East Germany Ready To Pay Reparations SUMMER SALE BEGINS JUNE 17 SAVE UP TO 40% ON SELECT MERCHANDISE 90 FRIDAY JUNE 17. 1988 Bonn (JTA) — East Ger- many has expressed its will- ingness to pay reparations to Jewish victims of Nazi perse- cution, a move that appears to stem from the Communist Germany Democratic Repub- lic's belief that the good will of Jews is the road to better trade relations with the West, particularly the United States. Heinz Galinski, leader of the West German Jewish community, expressed this view last Monday following his unprecedented meeting with East Germany's Com- munist Party boss Erich Honecker. The meeting made clear that the East German govern- ment sees world Jewry as a key factor in obtaining the "most-favored-nation" trade status it has been seeking from Washington. However, the State Department last week again rebuffed East German efforts for mfn status, despite its stated readiness to make available some 100 million marks ($58 million) in reparations to Jewish survivors of the Holocaust. Speaking with reporters in Potsdam, East Germany, Deputy Secretary of State John Whitehead said that the United Sates links most- favored-nation status in trade relations to a country's record on human rights. Whitehead said it remains up to East Germany to tear down the Berlin Wall. In a shift of its long- standing policy, East Ger- many made known last year, and confirmed at the meeting with Galinski, it was ready to compensate Jewish survivors of the Holocaust. I YOUTH I Essay Contest Winners Picked Amy Finkelstein and Noah Krugel, 11th graders at Southfield Lathrup High School, were first and second place award winners, respec- tively, in the State Board of Education Bicentennial Ad- visory Committee Essay Contest. The topic of the contest was "The U.S. Constitution Is 200 Years Old — What Does It Mean 'lb Me?" Bicentennial medallions were presented to the award winners.