COMMUNITY Irving And Sarah Pitt To Be Cited By JNF Irving and Sarah Pitt will be honored at the 28th an- nual Keter Shem Tov — Crown of Good Name — award dinner sponsored by Jewish National Fund on June 18 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek. Irving Nusbaum will serve as general chairman of the dinner. Dinner co-chair- persons are David L. Bittker, Stuart M. Bordman, Michael Brooks, George Grafe, Dennis and Sandra Dembs, Dr. Ar- thur and Rochelle Lieber- man, Sol Moss, Dr. Owen Z. Perlman, Peter A. Perlman, Herbert A. Pichler, Mack Pitt, Murray and Ina Pitt, Dr. Terry and Meryl Podolsky, Nathan D. Rubenstein, An- drea Sachse, Robert V. and Bluma Schechter, Sherman Shapiro, Donald R. Simon, Norton E. Stern, Joel D. Tauber and Charles H. Tobias. Irving and Sarah Pitt have aided Jewish students at area universities with scholarship funds and leadership training opportunities, including na- tional conferences and stu- dent visits to Jews in the Soviet Union. Yom Hazikaron Service April 16 Sarah, Irving Pitt Mr. and Mrs. Pitt also sup- port a series of programs at the University of Michigan Hillel aimed at fostering stu- dent involvement and understanding of contem- porary issues. The Pitts are active at Tem- ple Israel and support the B'nai B'rith Youth Appeal, the Anti-Defamation League and the City of Hope. Mr. Pitt is a member of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Commission. of the co-authors of "Life Un- worthy of Life," a curriculum on the Holocaust that is in in- ternational distribution. The program will also feature a candle-lighting ceremony by individuals from around the state who ex- perienced the Holocaust as children. The Michigan Historical Museum is at 717-Allegan at the corner of Washtenaw. Parking is available across the street. The Holocaust commemora- tion is sponsored by the Michigan Jewish Conference and the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. For information, call the Council, 962-1880. JWF Forms Plan Unit The Jewish Welfare Federa- tion will undergo a year-long strategic planning process to provide a blueprint for Federation's future. Mark Schlussel, president of Federation, has named David Page as chairman of the committee. A vice president of Federa- tion, Mr. Page chaired the The board of governors of the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame will sponsor a program of scholarship fun- ding from the Louis Handler Memorial Fund to the Fresh Air Society. The money will be used to help needy children spend a session at camp this summer. The Fund was created in memory of Lou Handler by his former Camp Tamakwa campers in 1989 on the occasion of Mr. Handler's induction into the Hall of Fame. Raymond Tanter State Holocaust Event In Lansing On April 17 The annual State of Michigan Holocaust com- memoration will be held noon April 17 at the Michigan Historical Museum in Lans- ing. The theme of this year's commemoration is "Through the Eyes of Children" and will focus on bigotry and pre- judice through the eyes of children who lived through the Holocaust. Governor John Engler will {present a gubernatorial pro- clamation for Week of Remembrance, and Represen- tative Maxine Berman will act as legislative host. Keynote speaker will be Dr. Sidney Bolkosky, professor of history at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, and one Hall Of Fame Camp Fund Task Force on Identity and Affiliation. Detroit is one of several federations conducting such a process, which follows the 18-month Detroit Jewish population study. The consul- tant to that report, Dr. Jacob Ukeles, has also been named consultant to the Strategic Planning Committee. Yom Hazikaron, Israel Memorial Day, will be observ- ed in community-sponsored ceremonies 7:30 p.m. April 16 at Congregation Beth Achim. The evening will include a presentation of the colors, a memorial torch lighting, flag lowering ceremony, a Yizkor service, a reading of the poem "The Silver Platter" and a speech by Moshe Fox, Israel consul for media and cultural affairs. Berman Award Nominations Asked Nominations are being ac- cepted for the fourth annual Berman Award for Outstan- ding Professional Service. Created by Mandell and Madeleine Berman, the award will go to a Jewish communal professional employed by the Jewish Welfare Federation or a Federation beneficiary. Nominees for the Berman Award must have worked in the Detroit Jewish communi- ty a minimum of five years. They must have demon- strated the highest profes- sional standards in their chosen field; made a contribu- tion to the general good of the Jewish community; demon- strated leadership and in- novation in their profession and applied creativity, dedica- tion, knowledge and care to providing services to the Jewish community. Nominations may be sub- mitted by letter to the selec- tion committee no later than May 15. Names of the nominees will remain con- fidential, and they may be renominated in subsequent years. Address nominations to Michael Berke — Confiden- tial, Jewish Welfare Federa- tion, 163 Madison, Detroit, Mi. 48226-2180. Edith Frankel Israel And Mideast Is Hebrew U. Topic Two Mideast experts will discuss "After the Storm: Israel and the Changing New World Order" in a celebration of Israel Independence Day, 7:30 p.m. April 17 at Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek. Sponsored by the Michigan Chapter of . the American Friends of the Hebrew University, the forum will feature Professors Edith Frankel and Raymond Tanter. Edith Frankel is director of the Mayrock Center for Soviet and East European Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She also serves as director of the Office of Academic Affairs of the university's Rothberg School for Overseas Students. She will be speaking on Israel's domestic agenda after the Gulf crisis. Dr. Tanter is professor of political science at the University of Michigan. He was a visiting professor of in- ternational relations at Hebrew University from 1973-78. He served as the personal representative of the Secretary of Defense at the Conference on Confidence and Security-Building Measures and Disarmament in Europe, Helsinki and Stockholm,. 1983-84. Prof. Tanter will address Israel's relations with its Arab neighbors. Co-chairs of the forum are Harold Berry and Allan Nachman. Program chairper- son is Esther Liwazer. The event is free and open to the public. Women's Groups Hear Groner, Maida Archbishop Adam Maida, Archbishop of Detroit, and Rabbi Irwin Groner, president of the Rabbinical Assembly, will speak at the annual joint meeting of the League of Jewish Women and the League of Catholic Women 12:30 p.m. April 10 at St. Hugo of the Hills in Bloom- field Hills. The topic will be "Catholic-Jewish Dialogue: An Unfinished Journey." This event represents the first time since Archbishop Maida has come to Detroit that he will publicly engage in a dialogue with the Jewish community. He was introduc- ed to the community at a gathering at Congregation Shaarey Zedek shortly after his arrival last spring. Rabbi Groner was recently among a delegation of Jewish leaders who met in the Vatican with Pope John Paul Groner • Maida II. The delegation engaged in dialogue with Catholic spokesmen on the condition of Catholic-Jewish relations since the Nostra Aetate, the Papal statement of 1965, call- ing for greater understanding of and renewed respect for Judaism by the Catholic Church. This meeting is open to the entire community. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 47 •