COMPILED BY ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Wanted: College Students Interested In Adoption T he North American Conference on Ethi- opian Jewry is look- ing for a few good college students. Students are needed to "a- dopt" — which /entails a small monthly fee — their Ethiopian counter- warts in Israel. The NACOEJ recently sent letters to more than 100 American and Canadian colleges, offering speakers and slide shows to provide updates on the Otituatio-n of Ethiopian Jews, both those still in Ethiopia and those in Israel. • "The response has been terrific," an NACOEJ ospokesman said. "Speakers who have been on missions lito Ethiopia already are giving talks on many cam- puses, and, as a result, col- -- V lege students are not only fully informed on this issue, they are clubbing together to adopt Ethio- pian college students in Israel." Colleges that have signed up for the adoptions are Colgate, the Fashion Institute of Technology, the University of Delaware, Connecticut College, SUNY at Bing- hamton, Skidmore, Adel- phi, Rutgers, Towson State University, and the Uni- versity of Western On- tario. Colleges interested in adoption, or obtaining at NACOEJ speaker at no charge, should contact Meyer Leiman at the NACOEJ, 165 E. 56th St., New York, N.Y. 10022, or call (212) 752-6340. EM'AFR 'AUER Odessa To Host Jewish Concert he Ukrainian govern- ment, Tel Aviv Uni- versity and the city of Odessa have teamed up to organize an internation- al festival of Jewish music, to be held in October in Odessa. The festival will mark the city's 200th anniversary. Joseph Dorfman of Tel Aviv University, who will serve as artistic director, said the event will cele- brate the fact that some of the world's leading musi- cians are Jews from Odessa. They include vio- linists David Oystrach and Nathan Milstein, and pianists Emil Gilels and Beno Moiseevich. The festival will com- prise 18 concerts and the works of 30 Jewish com- posers. nn Faxed Prayers Hit The Wall T o, you've just come home and checked out the mail and, once again, it's about as exciting as reruns of "I Dream of Jeannie." The sweepstakes ("You are a finalist for our big prize!" — You, and 60 million other Americans). The bills. The requests for charity. The fliers announcing another dry cleaner opening. Can't somebody come up with something decent to warm the mailbox? This could be the S answer. Nishma is a New York- based organization call- ing for "investigation and re-investigation" and the "highest standards of scholarship" in Torah study. It regularly pro- vides — at no charge --- packets and brochures offering Torah perspec- tives by a variety of schol- ars. For information, con tact Nislima at 555 Kap- pock St., Suite 18B, Bronx, N.Y. 10463, or call (212) 884-1240. el Aviv (JTA) — The . ancient custom of writing prayers to the Almighty and inserting them in cracks between the stones of the Western Wall has moved into the 20th century. The Israeli government's Bezek telephone company announced it has opened a special Fax-to-Hashem department. A Bezek rep- resentative will collect the messages and place them at the Wall. The new service costs the normal charge for a fax call to Israel, with no addi- tional amount charged for hand delivery to the Wall. The number is 011-972-02- 612-222. El Al Israel Airlines has lent a helping hand to the Israel Guide Dog Center for the Blind. Recently, the national airline of Israel carried four Labrador retriever puppies to Israel. Two were from South Africa and two, named Charles and Di, were from New York. Shown above are Ilan Jarus, El Al's cargo manager in the United States, Norm Leventhal, international presi- dent of the Israel Guide Dog Center, and the lovely Charles and Di. Was LBJ A Righteous Gentile? es, he was, accord- ing to a recent report in the Texas Jewish Post. Writer Tom Tugend says that Lyndon B. Johnson could see the evil end of Hitler's rise to power and, consequently, arranged privately for the immigra- tion of hundreds of East European Jews to the United States. University of California- Los Angeles Professor Robert Dallek told Mr. Tugend that LBJ's grand- father "drilled it into his grandson that to bring about the second coming of Christ, the Jews had to return to Israel, Jerusalem must be their capital, and that the boy must always help the Jews." During the 1930s, when LBJ was a small-time Texas politician, he read a book called Nazism: An Assault on Civilization, describing Hitler's plan to murder the Jews. Learn- ing that a Jewish friend in Austin was headed toward Poland in 1938, the future president gave him 40 pre- approved, nameless visa forms (which was illegal). He later arranged for sev- eral hundred Jewish refu- gees, stranded in South America, to come to the United States. What's The Time Line, Comrade? T a) >- cc can and Jewish history. For a copy, send $3.25 to the JHS (Jewish Historical Lif Society) of New York, 600 phia is Line, offering a poster, "Time 1492 to the West End Ave., New York, 1 1 N.Y. 10024. Present," charting Ameri- he National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadel-