I NEWS I LCOHOL RUGS: USE and MISUSE A JEWISH CONCERN 5 Wednesdays in March, 7:30 p.m. Location: Congregation Shaarey Zedek 27375 Bell Road Southfield, Michigan FREE ADMISSION 7:30 p.m. March 1 Wednesday Speaker: Film: 7:30 p.m. THE DISEASE OF CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY: Early Indicators, Progression, Physical Complications Eric Loranger, M.D. Henry Ford Hospital/Pediatrics "I'll Quit Tomorrow" March 8 ALCOHOL, DRUGS AND TEENS Wednesday Impact on the Adolescent, Indicators, Progression Speaker: Jane Reiser Williams, M.A., Student Assistance Coordinator Huron Valley Public Schools 7:30 p.m. March 15 Wednesday Speaker: Film: 7:30 p.m. March 22 Wednesday Speaker: Film: 7:30 p.m. March 29 Wednesday Moderator: Panel: IMPACT ON THE FAMILY Sis Wenger, Manager, Community Education Henry Ford Hospital/Maplegrove "The Family Trap" INTERVENTION—A Way to Enable the Chemically Dependent Person to Accept Help Renee Gerger, M.S.VV., Intervention Specialist Henry Ford Hospital Chemical Dependency Treatment Programs "The Intervention" A Recovering Family OUR JEWISH COMMUNITY'S RESPONSE — What Can We Do? Judge Stephen C. Cooper, 46th District Judge The panel will include experts in the field including recovering professionals, community and youth leaders, treatment profes- sionals and educators. Parents, Kids: Attend as many sessions as you can even if only one . . . BUT COME! Presented by: Detroit Edison A good part of your life. (1-1/1ccpraf(7(ay,ital Chemical Dependency Treatment Centers For more information: Call 355-0133 16 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1989 . This important educational program is co-sponsored by (partial list): Adat Shalom Synagogue International Federation of Jewish B'nai B'rith Men's Clubs-Great Lakes Region B'nai B'rith Barristers Jewish Community Center of B'nai B'rith Young Organization Metropolitan Detroit B'nai Israel Congregation of West Jewish Community Council of Bloomfield Metropolitan Detroit Brotherhood-Jacobson B'nai B'rith Jewish Family Service Men's Lodge Jewish National Fund Congregation Beth Achim Jewish Parents' Institute Congregation Beth Abraham-Hillel Jewish Resettlement Service Moses Jewish Vocational Service Congregation Beth Shalom Metropolitan Detroit Federation of Congregation B'nai Israel Reform Synagogues Congregation Shaarey Zedek Michigan Conference of Rabbis Council of Orthodox Rabbis Mothers Against Drunk Driving Hadassah-Detroit Chapter (M.A.D.D.) Hillel Day School National Council of Jewish Women Na'Amat U.S.A. Project Pride Synagogue Council of Metropolitan Detroit Temple Beth El Temple Emanu-El Couples Club Temple Kol Ami Temple Israel Temple Shir Shalom The Birmingham Temple The Jewish News Women of Maimonides Medical Society Young Israel Center of Oak Woods - Zionist Organization of America Bill To Probe Nazis' Entry Into The U.S. Washington (JTA) A bill to create a federal commission to investigate how Nazi col- laborators were able to enter this country after World War II was introduced last week in the House of Representatives. The bill is among three con- gressional efforts backed by Jewish groups to increase the government's role in in- vestigating hate-motivated violence. On Tuesday, 79 members of the House of Representatives asked President Bush to sup- port "stricter law enforce- ment of bias-related crimes and more security for Jewish institutions." But no legislation to deal with the issue is planned. The purpose of the letter was to send "general signals" to Bush, ADL Washington representative Jess Hordes said. The one bill expected in that area, which would re- quire the Justice Department to gather data on crimes motivated by hate, was to be introduced Feb. 22. To try to gain support for the bill, the ADL is mailing the anti-Semitism study to all members of Congress, Hordes added. The bill failed last year despite passage of a similar measure which created federal penalties of as high as $250,000 and 10-year jail sentences for religious vandalism. The bill that would create a federal commission to in- vestigate how Nazis entered the United States was in- troduced by Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.). The bill would create a seven-member commission — selected by Congress and President Bush — that would have to file a report within 18 months on the "post-World War II smuggling of Nazis," Frank said. It would also recommend how similar ac- tions by U.S. intelligence agencies can be prevented in the future. Hordes said a related piece of legislation, which would speed up U.S. denaturaliza- tion and deportation pro- ceedings against alleged Nazis, may also be pursued. Hordes said that while his group supports the measure, some lawmakers feel that nothing useful would come from such a commission and that the issue is "past history."