Question of the Week: Can you name the author who wrote a rebuttal of T.S. Eliot's antisemitism? •CZ6L u! paus!lcind 'ionoins a Jo/ saioN ui papnpu! s! 'wood o so UGTIIJM IOU of Jaiunoo sjjoum •mouss a yt uo pooig puo ioaial Jo aDog 4xaN uow eta apnpu! slJom s!t.i 'g [6 [ u! wog -Jou4no H s!mor Lisup9 Joindod o 'Ijouininianuoww] s! eH uamsuv . tr,'"Wgit . , Asv . • . ..;;AAVAlt Elizabeth Applebaum AppleTree Editor hese are no ordinary ducks. First of all, they're plastic. Second, they have pink-and-blue bills and dark sunglasses. Third, there will be a veritable multitude of them in one place at one time: 10,000, in fact. Now here's the best news: if you've got one of the lucky ducks, you're a winner. From 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 27, at Maple Beach in Kensington Metropark near Milford, the Greater Detroit Chapter of Hadassah will sponsor its first Detroit Ducky Derby. Proceeds from the event will fund research and treatment of pediatric cancer at Hadassah Hospital in Israel. Sportscaster Don Shane of WXYZ-TV (Channel 7), along with his wife, Mona, are serving as honorary chairmen of the event, which is co-sponsored by the Jewish News, WXYZ TV, Metro Parent Magazine and HomeTown Newspapers. - • , • of West Bloomfield tries on the duck costume Bottom: Wendy Kohlenberg, and children Jared Kohlenberg, 6 Y2 and Liza, 3, of West Bloomfield label the ducks at Hadassah House in West Bloomfield. Jlt 8/18 2000 67