Vienna Honors
Wiesenthal

Festival New Year's
Eve Celebration!!

Janus Productions & the Jewish Community Center present

I DO! I DO!

HANUKAH SALE
20%-50% OFF

EVERYTHING

•
•
•
•
•
•

Fila • Head •
Sergio Tacchini •
Tail • Ellesse •
Nike • Keds •
Le Coq Sportif •
Ixspa

SALE ENDS
DECEMBER 14TH

All Merchandise is
Refundable &
Exchangeable

FREE GIFT
WRAPPING

Starring

Nancy Gurwin & Joe Lannen

Directed by Edgar A. Guest, III

FULL SERVICE SIT DOWN DINNER

catered by Sperber's

$75

per person

• Hors d'oeuvres - 7:00 p.m. • Show - 9:15 p.m
• Dancing after Midnite
• Dinner - 7:30 p.m.

at the

Jewish Community Center

6600 West Maple
West Bloomfield

For further information and reservations

call

70

661-1000 ext: 293

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1990

or

354-0545

47JVIVIS
Pead,
AE

29983 Northwestern Hwy.
Applegate Square • Southfield

Open Sunday 12-5

357-7744

Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Thursday 10-8:00

Desserts . .
By

Tortes • Breads
Sweet Tables • Wedding Cakes

I Bring this in for a 10% discount.
I

24370 W. Ten Mile. Road • Southfield, Michigan 48034

(313) 355-0088

Vienna (JTA) — Nazi-
hunter Simon Wiesenthal
accepted his sixth honorary
degree here last week with
the vow that he would con-
tinue to be "the voice of all
those whose mouths have
been shut forever."
Mr. Wiesenthal, who lost
89 family members in the
Holocaust, has devoted his
life to tracking down Nazi
war criminals all over the
world.
"I will never be quiet," he
promised at the awards
ceremony when the Univer-
sity of Vienna presented him
with an honorary doctorate.
The doctorate was in-
itiated by the student body
and approved unanimously
by the Academic Senate of
the university.
Minister of Science Erhard
Busek, who spoke at the
award ceremony, praised
Wiesenthal as a "warning
voice whose words have been
replete with humanity and
not with hatred."
Austria has only just
begun to erase its guilt
toward Simon Wiesenthal,
said Busek, a member of the
conservative Peoples Party
which ran Kurt Waldheim
as its presidential candidate
in 1986.
Mr. Waldheim, president
of Austria, is accused of
taking part in deportations
in the Balkans during World
War II.

C'

High School
Joins Network

Jerusalem (JTA) -- A
broadened curriculum that
integrates intensive re-
ligious studies with com-
prehensive science and
technology courses marked
the reopening of the only re-
ligious comprehensive high
school in Akko, under the
auspices of the AMIT Wo-
men educational network.
Formerly run by the Akko
municipality, Akko Ken-
nedy High School reopened
this month under joint
AMIT-municipality ad-
ministration.
Enrollment is expected to
grow rapidly, according to
the director general of
AMIT, Dr. Ami Ze'evi. "The
school has about 400 pupils
at the moment," Dr. Ze'evi
said. "But AMIT expects
that will grow rapidly as
students currently studying
at religious boarding schools
or non-religious high schools
will be drawn to the AMIT
high school curriculum."

li

