Beth El Teens Back Course in Sex Education at Religious Schools; Magazine Reports Views A panel of teen-agers from Temple Beth El has recommended a course in sex education and marriage in religious schools, taught preferably by the rabbi. Noting the prevalence of con- temporary social problems trace- able in large part to poor—or no— sex education and critical of the failure by many parents to teach their children adequately, the teen-agers feel the subject be- longs in the curriculum of re- ligious schools. The panelists state their views in a symposium published in the current issue of Keeping Posted, the magazine for Jewish teen- agers and parents, published by 0 the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Eight students—all in Grade 12 of the Beth El religious school— took part in the symposium, which posed the question: "Judaism believes that mar- riage and the family are sacred to God. Do you feel, therefore, that our Jewish religious schools should introduce a course on the subject of sex and mar- riage for teen-agers in upper grades? Would such a course be helpful?" After discussing the question in class, under the direction of Rabbi Morton M. Kanter, asso- ciate rabbi of the congregation, th Page Final Youth Sabbath of Year Slated at Beth Abraham; to Install Officers The final Youth Sabbath Ser- vice of the season will be held at Beth Abraham synagogue 9 arm Saturday in the main sanctuary. Those who will chant the ser- vice, read the Torah and offer the sedrah summary are Gary Gutman, Harry Young, Ronald Bar-Bat Mitzvah Club Sets Closing Session; USY to Go Picknicking The season's last session of the Bar and Bat Mitzvah Club will be held 8:15 a.m. Sunday in the chapel, where members of the Senior United Synagogue Youth Chapter will conduct the morning service. This will be followed by break- fast and the distribution of awards to members who have acquired the skills of Torah reading and applied such skills at the junior and youth congregations during this past season. These are Richard Axelrod, Jeff Cohen, David Green, Tommy Letvin, Bryan Lovy, Jeff Perl- stein, Robert Rubin, Ronald Sher- Waldman. Rev. Larry Vieder is instructor. * * * All USY chapters of the Adas Shalom Synagogue will jointly sponsor a Lag b'Omer Picnic at John F. Kennedy Park 1 p.m. Sunday. They will barbecue lunch and participate in stunts and games. Ava Atler Takes Lead in Farmington Musical Ava Atler, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. LeRoy L. Atler, 32550 Rock Ridge Lane, Birmingham, will play Princess Maria in the musi- cal "Call Me Madam" at North Farmington High School 8 p.m. today and Saturday. Ava has performed locally be- fore many groups as well as hav- ing sung on television. She is active in Aliyah Bnai Brith Girls and is the Sweetheart of Gershwin Aleph Zadik Aleph boys' group. DRAPERIES Dry Cleaned and Finished with decorator fold. Removed, measured and rehung to your satisfaction. Commercial — Residential Phone for free estimates YOUNG'S DRAPERY CLEANERS 8914 W. 7 Mile Rd., UN 1-6688 students prepared their own writ- ten replies. Seven of the eight students replied "yes" to the ques- tion posed. The eighth also an- swered affirmatively, but added, "Sex should be taught not in the upper grades, but rather, in the lower grades. In the upper grades, specifically in Grade 12, I feel a discussion on sex would be wasted. It would be a joke." Nearly all the panelists scored what Gina Burnes, 18, called "the inability of many parents to talk about sex on a mature level" with their children. David Fox, 17, said: "The manner in which many people learn about sex has been proven deplorable." Susan Klein, 17, said: "It is ap- parent that the problem of sex education can no longer be left to parents alone." Barbara Salzen- stein, 17, declared, "If sex instruc- tion is left to parents, the teen- ager will be back finding his in- formation on the streets•" Michael Wertheimer, 17, said: "Some individuals feel that the whole subject should be ignored and left to nature and to personal experience. But leaving sex to ex- perience is a risky business, even in the most sophisticated societies. The panelists rejected the possibility that public schools might give such a course. Susan Meltzer, 1'7, pointed out that "sex education should be taught in the religious schools, where students have the same back- grounds and living standards. Instruction could be . . . more meaningful than in public school, where one must deal with a vast variety of students. Science Fair to Be Hel d at Hillel Day School Exhibits of projects and experi- The Science Fair of the pupils of Hillel Day School will take ments, under the guidance of sci- place 8 p.m. Wednesday at the ence teachers Mrs. Deborah Alt- man and Mrs. Betty Friedman school building. will be on display. The exhibit will be open on Wednesday evening and all day Flint Graduation Set Twenty-one students will be Thursday. The public is invited. graduated at ceremonies sched- Michigan's 16,500 manufacturing uled by Cong. Beth Israel of Flint 8:30 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Satur- establishments employ an esti- day at the synagogue on Hamilton mated 1,062,000 people. and Oren Ayes. A reception will follow services. (Names of the graduates will be listed in the June 4 issue of The Jewish News.) Kopelman, Martin Singer, Andrew Beider, Daniel Peitz, Arthur In- dianer, Jeffrey Charaeih, Jay Tower, Joel Gardner and David Singer. Torah readers will be William Schlaff, Bernard Partner, Mark Bello, William Chait, Larry Bello, Joe Fleish and Bruce Fishman. Harold Gache will deliver the sermon. During this service, Dr. Robert Schlaff, newly elected president of Cong. Beth Abraham will in- stall and present the charter of the new officers of the Beth Abra- ham Branch of NOSY, National Religious school participants will Council Synagogue Youth. He will feel secure and at ease, among also install the new officers of their own friends, with someone Beth Abraham Synagogue Youth. they can respect and confide in Frank Leiderman, director of . . . their own rabbi." Gina -advised that attitudes be education and youth, also will stressed, saying that if the rabbi participate in the services. "is willing and able to guide us in cultivating proper attitudes, Violinist Erica Brown then perhaps the meaning of sex and the part it plays in the life `Top Soph' at Boston would be realized truthfully." University Music School The idea of including courses Erica Brown was selected out- in sex and marriage in the cur- standing sophomore of the year by riculum of religious schools is members of the faculty in Boston not new. The Lutheran Church in University's music department May America, for example, has already 13 at an honors assembly. The issued a textbook for its teen- award is based on achievement in agers, "Love, Sex, and Life." all aspects of study. A few rabbis in American con- Miss Brown, the daughter of Mr. gregations conduct their own and Mrs. Joseph Brown, 16834 "marriage preparation" courses Washburn, studies violin with the for older students, and a number concertmaster of the Boston Sym- have indicated the need for such phony Orchestra, Joseph Silver- courses in view of generally high stein. She graduated with highest divorce rates and the rising rate honors from Cass Technical high of illegitimate births throughout school in 1963 and won a four- the nation. year, full-tuition scholarship at As far as is known, Jewish teen- Boston University. agers have never expressed their Recently, she successfully audi- views on the subject until this tioned for the renowned Tangle- symposium in "Keeping Posted." wood orchestra and will play with Rabbi Alexander Schindler, di- the organization for eight weeks rector of the Department of Jew- ish education, Union of American this summer. Hebrew Congregations, praised candor and the intelligent ap- Linda Fisher Receives the proach of the students partici- pating in the symposium. He said: Journalism Award "Judaism regards every aspect Linda Fisher a senior majoring of human life as holy to the Lord. in journalism at Wayne State Uni- Marriage itself is called kiddushin, versity, received a $100 tuition `consecration,' a term based on the award from Theta Sigma Phi, Hebrew word for 'holy.' The women's journalism fraternity, at Tanach is emphatically concerned its annual ladies of the Press with the family life of the Pa- Breakfast May 15. triarchs and their posterity. The Miss Fisher, former editorial di- Talmud and other sacred litera- rector of the Daily Collegian, was ture discuss realistically and in cited for her work for the school great detail matters concerning newspaper and for the Pontiac marriage and sexual relationships. Press, where she was employed We have long needed responsible texts and teaching materials suit- during the summer. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. able for our youth today. "The intelligence and candor of Jack Fisher, 20118 Stansbury, she is president of Beta Mu Chapter, the Detroit students, and the in- Theta Sigma Phi, at Wayne State. terest expressed by rabbis and laymen in many parts of the country, encourage us in our plan Atid to Talk Business to issue in the very near future a Detroit Chapter of Atid will hold textbook on marriage and sex a business meeting 4 p.m. Sunday education for Jewish teenagers, at the home of Marilyn Sitron, for use in our religious schools, 17521 Roselawn. Eliezer Silverman and in the Jewish home." of the United Hebrew Schools will THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS discuss "What Is the Reconstruc- Friday, May 21, 1965-27 tionist Movement?' 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