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COMPILED BY STEVE STEIN
emigre
EAnis Scliolarstiip
`Forget Me not'
Anne Frank's friendship album.
friendship album that
contains an original poem
written and signed by
Anne Frank is the latest acqui-
sition of the Simon Wiesenthal
Center's Museum of Tolerance in
Los Angeles.
Written to classmate Henny
Scheerder and dated March 4,
p
1
1940, Ms. Frank's poem reads
in part: "Dear Henny, It is of
little worth, what I offer you.
Pluck roses on earth and forget
me not."
The album was donated to the
museum by Seymour Abrams, a
board member of the Wiesenthal
Center.
n-year-old Karlie Welt-
man of Huntington Woods
finished in first place and
won a Gotz collector doll from
Germany, a $198 value, in the
Gotz "Design A Dream Doll"
contest conducted by the Doll
Hospital and Toy Soldier Shop
in Berkley.
The contest, for girls ages 7-
11, was part of the Doll Hospi-
tal's summer-long "Celebration
of the Doll" promotion.
All local contest entrants
have been entered in a nation-
al competition sponsored by
Gotz, one of the world's leading
doll manufacturers.
The national champion will
earn a trip to New York City,
where Gotz will unveil a new
doll designed by the champion.
You Can Be A Good Sport
e Detroit Sports Commis-
sion (DSC) will be mailing
invitations to 40,000 Detroit-
area businesses and individuals
this month, asking them to be-
come associate members of the
non-profit group.
Membership dues help finance
the DSC's ambitious agenda,
which includes bids to bring the
2001 NFL Super Bowl, 1998
World Figure Skating Champi-
onships and 1997 NHL All-Star
Game to Detroit.
"While we have the backing of
many large corporations, our ul-
timate success depends on grass-
roots support in the community,"
said Tom Constand, DSC presi-
dent and managing director.
The DSC gained more than
200 associate members from a
smaller mailing last September.
For information on becoming a
DSC associate member and its
benefits, call 1-800-448-8448.
J E WIS H NEWS
awyers play to win, whether
they're in the courtroom or on
he golf course. That's why
the competition was fierce at the
Oakland County Bar Associa-
tion's Golf '94 outing at Tam-0-
Shanter Golf and Country Club
in West Bloomfield.
Some 104 golfers participated
and the foursome of Joel Serlin,
Kevin Wilhelmi, Henry Niren-
berg and Richard Kuhn Jr. were
victorious for the second consec-
utive year. They shot 69 for 18
holes in the scramble event.
Paul Joelson shot a low gross
75 and Tom Drake carded a low
net 70. Mr. Kuhn and Marilyn
Kacy had the longest drives for
males and females. John Schae-
fer put a shot 35.5 inches from
the cup to earn closest-to-the-pin
honors and Fred Mester had the
low net score for a judge.
Winners of the orange ball
competition were Jack Louisell,
Todd Wells, Dirk Beckwith and
Steve Wells. Teams shot an or-
ange ball on each hole and the
scores were compiled.
Raffle winners were Paul Zosel
(20-inch RCA television donated
by the Paul Goebel Group), Dave
Rosenberger (RCA VCR donated
by Michigan Lawyers Mutual In-
surance), Elbert Hatchet (Sony
VCR donated by Paragon Un-
derwriters) and Victoria Metals-
ki (leather chair donated by
Maddalena Design).
B
Want To Volunteer?
Go To The Fairgrounds
A
Karlie Weitman and her first prize.
They Won't Object to This Victory Here's How
10,
erkley High School grad
and Oak Park resident
Leonid (Allan) Izikson, a
native of Minsk, Russia who
came to the Michigan with his
family in 1989, has been
awarded an H.T. Ewald Foun-
dation scholarship.
An aspiring physician, Mr.
Izikson is beginning his fresh-
man year at the University of
Michigan.
At Berkley, Mr. Izikson was
president of the French Club
and a student delegate to the
Congressional Forum spon-
sored by U.S. Rep. Sander
Levin (D-Michigan). He was
religion chair for his AZA
chapter and a delegate to the
Michigan State Temple Youth Allan Izikson:
Convention.
Berkley High School grad.
Ewald scholarships are
awarded based on financial need, launched in 1928 by H.T. Ewald,
overall scholastic record, personal a founder of the Campbell-Ewald
character and willingness to Advertising Company, now
share talents with the commu- called Lintas: Campbell-Ewald.
The scholarship program began
nity.
The Ewald Foundation was in 1956.
To Enter
O
ne of the items in the
Aug. 26 Round Up de-
tailed the 10th annual
Sydney Taylor Manuscript Com-
petition for aspiring authors of
children's books sponsored by the
Association of Jewish Libraries
(AJL)•
There was no information in
the item about how to enter the
contest, which offers a $1,000
cash award for the winner.
Those interested can contact
the AJL by mail at 330 Seventh
Avenue, 21st floor, New York,
NY, 10001 or by phone at 1-212-
678-8092. The deadline for sub-
mission is Jan. 15, 1995.
full day of volunteering pledges and corporate donations.
and fund-raising is on tap Volunteer Impact officials hope
Oct. 1 when Volunteer Im- to triple the number of partici-
pact holds its third annual Vol- pants and double the money
raised this year.
unteer-a-Thon.
For information on how to
Registration will begin at 8:30
a.m. in the Community Arts take part in the Volunteer-a-
Building at the Michigan State Thon, call Deborah Duyck at Vol-
Fairgrounds. After an orienta- unteer Impact, 353-6830.
Liz Kanter Groskind founded
tion session which will include a
keynote address by Detroit Free Volunteer Impact in 1990. Ste-
Press sports columnist Mitch Al- fany Lester Freeman is the or-
born, volunteers will head to pro- ganization's president.
jects across the
metropolitan Detroit area.
Teams of individuals,
groups and co-workers
will do landscaping
chores, pack food boxes,
paint, repair, renovate,
visit children and the el-
derly and perform other
tasks for non-profit agen-
cies.
Rock Financial and the
law firms of Miller, Can-
field, Paddock and Stone;
Butzel, Long; and Som-
mers, Schwartz, Silver are
among the businesses
which will send teams to
the Volunteer-a-Thon.
Last year, more than
350 volunteers helped
generate $35,000 through Working hard at last year's Volunteer-a-Thon.