isapi uueo sol oqd ibo split between Akiva, Hillel and Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, with no support for other Or- thodox programs, the non- UHS Conservative schools or any of the burgeoning Reform temple schools. (The new Yavneh Academy Reform day school received a three-year, $140,000 start- up grant from the Max M. Fisher Foundation of United Jewish Charities, the en- dowment arm of Federation.) "The demographics of the. 1980s and early 1990s in- dicate that, percentage-wise, the Agency for Jewish Edu- cation as a hands-on deliverer of services is deal- ing with . a decreasing percentage of the afternoon and Sunday school popula- tion," Mr. Schlussel says. "The synagogues have become more involved in Jewish education, par- ticularly in the Reform movement," he says. "The (Reform) temples have seen an explosion of student- enrollment in their primari- ly Sunday school programs." Mr. Schlussel says the AJE role for the future has not been pre-judged, despite the recommendation of the Tauber Commission suppor- ting the concept of schools with closer ties to syn- agogues. "There are a lot of cogent reasons why the AJE should continue to be Federation's arm in this process. The Giles Commission will look very carefully at all these questions," Mr. Schlussel said. Dr. Conrad Giles, a past president of Federation, is heading the committee that will recommend, by the end of the year, implementa- tion of the Tauber report. He denies critics who say the study is "a diabolical scheme to decrease funding. That is the exact opposite of our stated goal." Mr. Schlussel says, "We are looking to find the most effective method to deliver Jewish education and get the best return for the money we put into the pro- cess." Although Federation leaders have on several oc- casions expressed a com- mitment to increased fun- ding for local Jewish edu- cation, new dollars seem unavailable. All Detroit- area Jewish agencies which are Allied Jewish Campaign recipients have been asked to either cut back or hold the line so that more funds can be sent to Israel to defray the cost of the Soviet Jewish resettlement effort. "Clearly there is not enough money for all the needs at the present time," Mr. Schlussel says. 0 fra Fisher came to United Hebrew Schools expecting to head the 72-year-old agency for six months. In the 3 1/2 years she has been superintendent, the name has been changed to Agency for Jewish Education as a reflection of its broader role, and Mrs. Fisher has seen a general unease among senior staff about their uncer- tain future. Many attribute Rabbi Bruce Aft's recent decision to leave the Community Jewish High School for a pulpit in Washington to that uncertainty. Mrs. Fisher can recite a litany of AJE accom- plishments during her tenure: more teacher devel- opment programs, increased cooperation between all of Detroit's Jewish schools, the AJE Family Living Room, DARE reading and Chai programs, and im- provements in the high school and UHS programs. Parents are not as satisfied. Enrollment con- tinues to drop at UHS, from a high in the 1950s of 7,000-8,000 to 756 this year. A dozen Conservative parents who participated in a Giles Commission focus group last month included several who had used both UHS and other Conservative afternoon schools. While voicing concerns about all the schools, they ,strongly favored the synagogue schools. UHS parents com- plained about lack of discipline in the classrooms, lack of achievement and lack of parental commitment. Mrs. Fisher has concerns as well. "We need a lab school to try things out," she says. "Our program won't work if the Agency for Jew- ish Education is just a resource . . . And, if you don't have your own elemen- tary program, who will feed into the high school pro- gram? As excellent as it is, will the kids come from other schools? "We are doing good things," she says, "but it is hard to keep good staff when every Monday and Wednes- day they hear they may not have a job next year. "The community has a right, and I think it is very positive, that they study Jewish education," Mrs. Fisher says. "But it is unfor- tunate that the process is go- ing on five years. The pa- tient can die. "Will they give more money like they promised? Will they give the money to the congregations? Who will care for the unaffiliated?" The Giles Commission is trying to answer those ques- tions. The Jewish Educators Council of Metropolitan Detroit — made up of Jewish school administrators from all denominations — has Above: Jennifer Granat participates in class at Adat Shalom UHS. ALLOCATIONS FROM CAMPAIGN The following are the direct allocations to schools from the 1990 Allied Jewish Campaign: AJE-UHS $920,500 Akiva $183,710 Hillel $262,825 Yeshiva $230,345 Yeshiva Gedolah $18,000 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25