COMPILED BY STEVE STEIN Lights! Camera! Actium! here will be an added at- traction at the 10th annu- al induction dinner for the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. For the first time, the athlet- ic and personal achievements of the year's inductees will be doc- umented in a video presentation. Detroit Free Press columnist Mitch Albom will narrate the video, which will focus on in- ductees James Kamman, Robert Luby and David Rott. The dinner is scheduled for Nov. 7 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield. It will begin at 6 p.m. For ticket information, call Elayne Wolfson, 810-788-0921. —t s Mitch Aibom will narrate the first Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame video. Justin Time For A Correction ustin Goldfarb was sur- prised to read in The Jew- ish News that he had lost 8-0 to Stuart Levy of Great Britain in a first-round age 15- 16 boys tennis match at the 1994 Jewish Community Centers North Amer- ican Maccabi Youth Games in Cleveland. That's because he wasn't even at the August games. A back injury early in the summer forced Goldfarb off the Detroit team, but the word never reached the organizers in Cleveland. Goldfarb was kept on the tennis bracket sheet and his name was listed in the results which were posted in the busy foyer at the Mandel JCC and dis- tributed to media and team lead- ers. "My friends have been won- dering what happened to me there," Goldfarb said. "I've been trying to tell them that I didn't even go to the games." Goldfarb, 17, a senior at Bloomfield Hills Andover High School, will be a co-captain of the Andover boys tennis team next spring. It'll be his fourth year on the squad. As a junior, Goldfarb won the Southeastern Michigan Association championship at No. 2 singles. Goldfarb also played No. 2 sin- gles as a sophomore and he was on the Barons' No. 2 doubles team as a freshman. $18 T H E D E TR OI T J E WIS H N E WS Blurs A Mond' Of 1,1mcites 12 he non-profit North Amer- ican Conference on Ethi- opian Jewry (NACOEJ) has an idea for area parents who don't know what to give their child for the eighth day of Chanukah. According to the NACOEJ, an $18 gift in honor of the local child will provide a nutritious lunch for one month for an Ethiopia Jewish child enrolled in an NACOEJ af- ter-school program in Israel. The idea behind the programs is to give Ethiopian students a chance to study in the afternoon and catch up to their Israeli-born classmates. T Romano 13a ► ed haft 'De* Cluutuizak Special "The lunches are essen- tial because Ethiopian chil- dren are poorly nourished," said NACOEJ national di- rector Barbara Ribakove. The honored local child will receive a personalized certificate of appreciation and an Operation Solomon reunion photo from NA- COEJ. Parents should send their contribution, name, address and child's name to the NACOEJ at 165 East 56th Street, New York, NY 10022, or call 212-752-6340. orry, Roseanne, but you can't do a Chanukah special this year. That's the word from ABC Television brass, who said last week there wasn't enough time for Roseanne to produce a Festival of Lights spe- cial before the holiday begins Nov. 27. Unofficially, according to a New York Newsday story re- ported by the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency (JTA), network officials didn't like the idea of Roseanne turning the Jewish holiday into a comedy routine. One of the proposed guests for Roseanne's special was Neil Diamond, who hosted a network Christmas special last year. The JTA also reported that Roseanne has been trying to put together a Chanukah special since 1991. Their Narration Is Just Zoo-Per our celebrities with Michi- gan ties have provided nar- ration for videos that Sue Marx Films of Royal Oak is pro- ducing for the Detroit Zoo. This Story Is For The -Birds Magician Harry Blackstone Jr. will "appear" In a Detroit Zoo video. N of even buzzards are safe in the skies over Lebanon. During their usual fall migration from Eu- rope to their winter home in Africa, at least 10 were shot. According to a Jewish Tele- graphic Agency (JTA) report, the 10 wounded honey buzzards were brought to the Hula na- ture reserve in northern Israel for treatment. Five died from their wounds, and five were transferred to the Ramat Gan Safari park. Game officials said none of the five sur- vivors is expected to fly again. The videos are part of a series of nine which will be shown dai- ly in the new Wildlife Interpre- tive Gallery after its scheduled opening in the spring of 1995. The celebrities who have recorded for the videos (and their Michi- gan connections) are ac- tress Julie Harris (Grosse Pointe), actor James Earl Jones (Manistee), magician Harry Blackstone Jr. (Colon) and ABC tele- vision's Hugh Downs (Wayne State Univer- sity graduate). Actress Lily Tomlin (Detroit Cass Tech High School and Wayne State graduate) and actor/playwright Jeff Daniels (Chelsea) will record for zoo videos later this year. Tourney Raises Racquet And Scholarship Funds e Jewish Community Center's Sam Young Memorial Fund will be at least $4,000 richer thanks to the second annual Sam Young Memorial Racquetball Tourna- ment. Thirty players took part in the two-day, blind-draw doubles tourney at Franklin Racquet Club and the winning team was made up of Mike Yellen and Moses Nicholson. They defeated Robert Young and Sheldon Yellin in a tie-breaker in the finals. The other semifinalists were Dave Woodcox and Jay Lieber- man and Craig Meklir and Bill Deacon. Mr. Young died of cancer 41/2 years ago at age 47. He was one of the Detroit area's first rac- quetball pros and a champion player. The interest from the endow- ment fund which bears his name is used for scholarships for youngsters who can't afford to take part in the JCC's summer camp program, especially sports activities. Gail Young, Mr. Young's wid- ow, said this may have been the Ti last Sam Young Fund racquet- ball tournament, but not because it hasn't been a success. "We may do a run/walk next year to get more people involved," she said. "You can only get so many people to play racquetball." - Gail Young's husband was a racquetball pro.