TRAVEL Brooklyn Continued from preceding page MICHAEL ZIPSER Rare Coin Investment Specialist Zip's Investment Pick of the Week: 1834 HALF DIME Graded mint state 64. These early five cent pieces are extremely rare and in uncirculated condition. In the last 10 years they have increased in value at over 30% compounded annually. Current price $4 995. Richard Charles Rare Coin Galleries Michigan's Only Fully-Accredited Coin Dealer Southfield, Michigan 48075 4000 Prudential Town Center (313) 356-5252 Largest in-stock selection of baby furniture at lowest prices CHEST CHEST HUTCH CRIB 5-DRAWER 3-DRAWER 27997 29997 21997 13497 We carry Simmons, Child Craft, Bassett, Aprica, Perego, Gerico, Kolcraft, Dutailier Glider Rockers. MON., TUES., WED., SAT. 9:30-6; THURS. & FRI. 9:30-9; SUN. 12-5 Biddle L'and E:71111 ® OAK PARK: 22130 COOLIDGE ANN ARBOR (SCHAEFER) AT 9 MILE 200 S. MAIN 'TUES., WED., THURS., ROSEVILLE: 31770 GRAT1OT SAT. 9.30_5.30 (NEXT TO FARMER JACK'S) MON. & FRI. 9:30-9 - ROCHESTER: CLOSED SUN. ' 1406 WALTON BLVD. (HILLS PLAZA) , 1990 ALL PRO SPORTS CAMPS FOOTBALL CAMP * FEATURING Rodney Peete Michael Cofer Jerry Ball July 9-13 BASKETBALL CAMP ( FEATURING James Edwards Rick Mahorn Mark Aguirre July 9-13 July 16-20 BASEBALL CAMP * FEATURING Cecil Fielder Matt Nokes Gary Ward July 23-27 For Boys & Girls Ages 8 to 18 CALL 646-1616 FOR LOCATIONS & MORE INFO 68 FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1990 above the English, and we pass Russian restaurants and stores. Brighton Beach, now home to thousands of Russian Jews, is known as "Odessa by the Sea" and this one avenue shows us why. After a brisk walk on the boardwalk, where we pass the Moscow restaurant and see other evidence of the Russian Jewish presence, we head for an eatery that pre-dates the Russian Jews. A simple sign outside this Brighton Beach landmark says "Mrs. Stahl's Knishes." Inside, the place is packed with customers who are lined up for the home-made knishes that this no-frills eatery has been serving for 57 years. Many have come a long way from Brooklyn for bagfuls of knishes. "I have customers from California who stop in here when they're in New York and shlepp the knishes home on the plane," says owner Les Green. Being a Jew from Brooklyn is a nationality all its own. ❑ NEWS Council Formed To Plan Future Of Auschwitz Warsaw (JTA) — An international council will hold its first meeting this month to chart the future of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum at the site of the death camp, which more than any other has become a universal symbol of the Holocaust. Its guidelines will be an extensive list of ideas and proposals formulated by Jewish intellectuals from nine countries who met in England last month. One proposal would bar unilateral changes at the site of the camp without con- sultations. It is clearly aimed against the repetition of such ar- bitrary acts as the estab- lishment of a Carmelite con- vent on the Auschwitz grounds and the erection of religious symbols there. Another proposal is that the museum's displays and monuments make clear that over 90 percent of the 1.6 million men, women and children who died at Auschwitz-Birkenau were Jews, and that except for Gypsies, they were "the only people condemned to torture and death for the mere crime of existing." But the proposals stress that the museum must ac- knowledge the "very large numbers" of non-Jewish vic- tims and must recognize the camp's key role in the Nazi campaign to destroy Polish nationhood. Stanislaw Krajewski, the Polish representative of the American Jewish Congress, who is a member of the new panel, reported that the Polish Ministry of Culture has just formed an Auschwitz Foundation to at- tract foreign donors to the Auschwitz Museum. "So far, all maintenance and other costs have been covered by the Polish government," Krajewski said. Foreign members of the international council for the Auschwitz Museum include Israel Gutman of Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, who is a Warsaw Ghetto sur- vivor; Rabbi Michael Beren- baum, head of the program committee of the U.S. Holo- caust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.; Professor Anthony Polonsky of the London School of Economics, who is director of the Oxford Institute of Polish-Jewish Studies; Theo Klein, former president of CRIF, the repre- sentative body of French Jewish organizations; and Austrian scholar Herman Langebein. Neo-Nazis Rampage In Berlin Bonn (JTA) — Rampaging neo-Nazis and other extreme right-wing youths have caused severe injuries and property damage in East and West Berlin. The targets so far have been mainly leftists and for- eigners. But the police were attacked, too. At least 10 policemen have been hospitalized. At least 50 rioters have been arrested. Most were identified as skinheads, shaven-headed youths who wear Nazi-like regalia and spout right-wing slogans. The police chiefs of West and East Berlin met last week to coordinate a strategy to deal with the mounting violence on both sides of what used to be the Berlin Wall.