COMMUNITY Comedian Will Close Allied Jewish Campaign Contributors who have made their pledges to the 1990 Allied Jewish Cam- paign are invited to a community-wide celebration at the Campaign closing event March 22 at the Jewish Community Center Maple- Drake campus. Comedian David Brenner will be the guest performer. Last fall, he starred in his own one-man show on Broad- way. Brenner enjoys telling stories about the Jewish neighborhood of his childhood. The event will start at 7:30 p.m. with a wine and cheese buffet. A dessert reception will follow the program, which will include "A Day in the Life . . .," a photographic essay about Federation agencies. Although the Campaign has raised more than $22 million to date, this figure is far short of the funds needed to provide vital services through Federation agencies. The biggest budgetary con- Workers To Hear Zvi Gitelman University of Michigan pro- fessor Zvi Gitelman, one of the world's authorities on Soviet Jewry, will speak before Allied Jewish Cam- paign workers, 6:45 p.m. Wednesday at United Hebrew Schools. Dr. Gitelman will address the workers on "A New Ex- odus: Soviet Jews in the Age of Perestroika" at the pro- gress report meeting. Workers will also receive an update on the 1990 Campaign. A light supper will be served at 6:15 p.m. Avanced registration is required. For information, call Federation, 965-3939. Students Aid Yad Ezra Reform and Conservative congregations in Metro Detroit will join with Temple Emanu-El to help eliminate hunger in the Jewish community. Through March 24, each synagogue and temple's 6th, 7th and 8th graders will col- lect non-perishable, kosher food for Yad Ezra. There will be a community-wide dance for those students 7 p.m. March 25, at Temple Emanu-El. For information, call Gary Dembs, 646-1740. cern is the need for assistance to new Americans arriving from the Soviet Union. This year, 1,000 Soviet Jews will be reunited with their families in Detroit. They need food, clothing, shelter, job training and other services provided by Federation agencies. While the immigration of Soviet Jews is an important issue, there are many others in the community who need help from Federation agen- cies and, from funds raised through the Campaign, of- ficials say. The elderly need housing and health care; young people need a quality Jewish education; and troubl- ed families require counsel- ing through Jewish Family Service. Besides funding local pro- grams, Campaign funds enable thousands of Jews around the world to receive medical assistance, food, clothing and education. In Israel, Campaign dollars also help the resettlement of hun- 2nd Holocaust Tour For Teachers Planned David Brenner dreds of thousands of im- migrants, most of them from the Soviet Union, Romania and Ethiopia. Faced with a possibility of U.S. cutbacks in foreign aid, Israel will depend on Campaign funds more than ever. For reservations to the clos- ing event, and to make a Campaign pledge, call Federation, 965-3939. Israel Summer Trip Scholarships Available This summer, Jewish men and women between the ages of 18 and 25 have a unique op- portunity to spend four weeks touring and studying in Israel. Ten full and 10 partial scholarships will be awarded to qualified applicants on a "first come, first approved" basis. The tour is sponsored by the Jewish Learning Net- work of Michigan and seeks to provide participants with an appreciation of Israel from a Jewish perspective. Full cost of the trip, including room and board, is $2,500. The tour leaves Detroit on June 25 and is scheduled to return July 22. A major por- tion of Israel will be toured with experienced guides in- cluding Masada, the Galilee, the Dead Sea, the Old City of Jerusalem, and the Negev. The tours are designed to combine the educational significance of each area with the opportunity to relax and enjoy the scenic beauty and sense of history. Between tours, there will be academic options, designed to supple- ment the experiences. Lec- tures will be in English and will provide an overview of current Jewish events, biblical analysis and Jewish history. "This program is a response to the times," explained Rab- bi Avaham Jacobovitz of the Jewish Learning Network. "We live in an age in which the concepts of Zionism are under attack by the press, academia, and forces within the Jewish community itself. No longer can we assume that our young people will be staunch supporters of Israel merely because their parents were. We must provide them with the knowledge and understanding that will enable them to make their own decisions. "This program attempts to provide the student with di- rect exposure to Israel's peo- ple, culture, history and socie- ty. Only in this way can we hope to achieve a truly mean- ingful learning experience." The scholarships are being co-sponsored by Tenenbaum College — Ohr Samayach and a local donor. The academic programs will be based at Ohr Samayach in Jerusalem. "We went 2 1/2 years ago with eight students," Rabbi Jacobovitz said, "and seven ended up going back to Israel." Those interested in the tour and scholarships may call the Jewish Learning Network of Michigan, 967-0888. The Holocaust Memorial Center will hold its second In- ternational Summer Seminar on the Holocaust for Educators. The three-week program is designed for those currently teaching the Holocaust to teens and adults. The program will open at the HMC on June 24, with three days of intensive study. The seminar's faculty will in- clude Randolph Braham, Ph.D., director of the Csengeri Center for Holocaust Studies, City University of New York; Carol Danks, instructor at Kent (Ohio) Roosevelt High School; Yehuda Nir, M.D., associate professor of psychiatry, Cor- nell Medical College, Cornell University; Leatrice B. Rabin- sky, Ph.D., instructor at Cleveland Heights (Ohio) High School; Rabbi Charles H. Rosenzveig, director of the HMC; David Weinberg, Ph.D., Bowling Green State Univer- sity; and David S. Wyman, Ph.D., University of Massachusetts. From June 27 to July 5, the group will tour several sites in Poland, including Warsaw, Cracow and Lublin as well as Majdanek, Auschwitz- Birkenau and Treblinka con- centration camps. Holocaust survivors will join the group for the tours and will provide first-hand accounts of the destruction that occurred. The final ten days of study in Israel will focus on the Holocaust and Jewish responses to it. In Israel, the group will tour Yad Vashem, Bet Hatefutsot (Museum of the Diaspora) in Tel-Aviv, the Ghetto Fighters' Museum, Rosh Hanikra, the Galilee and Massada. There will be an overnight stay on a kib- butz and personal visits. Women's League Holds Luncheon Michigan Branch Women's League for Conservative Judaism will hold a Purim luncheon and program "To Celebrate The Israeli Ex- perience" at noon March 5 at Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses. Geri Levitt, will entertain with her guitar, singing Hebrew, English, and Yiddish songs. She has been a teacher at Cong. Shaarey Zedek and at the College of Jewish Studies. She has performed in New York, Israel, Chicago and California, and has been featured with the Bel Canto and the Shaarey Zedek choir. Sonny Lippenholtz, will assist. There is a charge. For reser- vations by Feb. 28 call Frieda Davidorf, 661-4389, Event For Soviets Shalom Sunday, a program for Soviet newcomer families, will debut 3 to 7 p.m. Feb. 25 at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Community Center. It will include Jewish ex- periences, parenting classes, sports, crafts and entertain- ment on a weekly basis. The program will offer education and relaxation in a Jewish setting for the entire family. "The Ethnic Connection," a Jewish klezmer band will be featured Feb. 25. On March 4, a tutoring program to help school-aged children with their studies will begin. On March 10, families will be invited to go by bus to Con- gregation B'nai David to hear the Megillah and celebrate Purim with the congregation. March 18 will feature a bus tour of old and new Jewish Detroit. The program and a light dinner will be available for purchase. Translators will be available. To volunteer call Sheryl Litt or Sue Stettner, 661-1000. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 51