*00,0 *****0 ************************************* The World FINAL WEEK FOR ENTRIES • • WE WANT TO MEET YOU ******************* *****************************0 Do you have all the right ingredients to be the HOST or CO-HOST of a new, national KOSHER COOKING SHOW to be produced right here in Detroit? Not even an ounce of previous television appearance is required! TO APPLY, send a photograph (and a videotape if you have one) with a bio, resume or letter about yourself stating why YOU would really cook as the host or sidedish to: EVERYTHINO KOSHER c/o Media One Television 27800 Franklin Road Southfield, MI 48034 Deadline for entries is June 12, 1998. Materials cannot be returned. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS EVERYTH1NO KOSHER Media0ne • This is Broadband. This is the way. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6/5 1998 46 'TN JN Get Results... Advertise in our Entertainment Section! Call The Sales Department (248) 314, 7123 Ext. 20P) Kristallnacht 1938: an unfortunate comparison. faxed — anonymously — to Holocaust Memorial Council members. But Roth, while using an unfortu- nate comparison, was "attacking an extreme voice in Israel, not Israel itself," said Deborah Lipstadt, a Holocaust scholar at Emory University in Atlanta and a member of the board that runs the museum. "I wouldn't have used that particular analogy because it's too often used in an abhorrent way by people who compare Israel and the Third Reich. But there is nothing here to sug- gest that he was anti-Israel, or that he was comparing the Israelis to the Nazis." She pointed to Roth's long record of Holocaust scholarship, and added that his comments were not signifi- candy different from charges made by mainstream Israeli leaders about Moledet, a movement many consid- ered overtly racist. "To attack a man on two paragraphs written a decade ago and not on the reams of scholarship he's produced is outrageous," she said. Roth's appointment as the first head of the center, created to expand the museum's scholarly role, has been widely applauded by Holocaust schol- ars and museum staffers. This week, museum insiders were angry about the attacks on Roth, although several indi- cated discomfort with the way he had phrased his arguments in the contro- versial article. Several Holocaust Museum sources expressed concern that a series of recent controversies — including the ouster of former director Walter Reich and the abortive visit by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat -- might make members skittish about Roth's appointment. "He'll be tarred and feathered for this," said one museum source. "This is a first-rate scholar who made an unfor- tunate comparison in a single newspa- per article. But there's always the danger that those in the Jewish community who are always looking for litmus tests