Sculptress Added JFCS, Resettlement Service to Camp of the Arts to Hold Combined Meetings Marilyn Leon has been added to the Jewish Center's Camp of the Arts Staff for the 1970 season. Miss Leon, who will be sculpture and ceramics instructor, working on her master of fine arts degree at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, with majors in ceramics and weaving. She re- ceived her bachelors of fine arts degree from Stephens College where she majored in dramatics and spent two season in summer stock. Camp of the Arts is an intensive program for 7th-l1th - graders and stresses the Jewish component in the arts. The combined annual meetings of Jewish Family and Children's Service and Resettlement Service will feature a play, "Broken Cir- cle," produced by the Center Thea- ter, 8 p.m. June 18 in the Aaron DeRoy Theater of the Jewish Cen- ter. Arnold Faudman, president of Jewish Family and Children's Service, said the purpose of pre- senting this play is to help the audience visualize the impact of a marriage problem on a family and the role of a professional family caseworker in helping people re- solve their difficulties. "Broken Circle," written by Each participant chooses a Nora Stirling for the Family major area in the visual arts Service Association of America, (drawing and painting, scultpure is one of a series of "Plays for and ceramics, jewelry and metal- Living," written especially for craft, photography), or the per- family agencies for public inter- forming arts (choral music and pretation of their programs. guitar, dance and drama). The camper will select two courses At the annual meeting of Jewish from a major, and one from a Family and Children's Service, minor. there will be election of board In addition to regularly sched- members for the coming year. Wil- uled classes, jam sessions are held several times a week featuring Personalities, who, through demon- strations and informal discussions expose the campers to areas of the arts that they would not nor- mally encounter. Included in this program are the University of Detroit Reper- tory Theater, the Jewish Center's Festival Dancers, Ron Harwood, Bob Benyas, Bob Judson and Gary Schaub. Camp of the Arts is a five-day- a-week program, with two sessions, June 22-July 17 and July 20-Aug. 14. For information, or brochure and application, call the group services division, DI 1-4200. Summer Safari '70 for Center Tweens The Jewish Center offers a daily travel progrem to 7th, 8th and 9th graders this summer. Safari '70 will meet June 22-July 17 and July 20-Aug. 14. Each morning, trippers board the bus to points of interest in metropolitan Detroit. Activities will include outdoor art shows, horseback riding, tours of all kinds, swimming in and out- doors, sporting events and activi- ties and a wide range of events. For registration information and application for this or any Jewish Center summer program, call the Center, DI 1-4200. Teen Volunteers Called There are a limited number of openings still available in the 1970 Center Teen Volunteer Corps, a program which allows teen (10th- 12th grades) Center members to work with such Center groups as sport skills camp, "mini camp," Tips-Tops trips, senior adult pro- gram and special service projects. Schedule are flexible. For infor- mation, call the group services division of the Jewish Center, DI 1-4200. Habonim Youth to Give Program Habonim Labor Zionist Youth will present its final program of the year, "Children of Persecu- tion," 8 p.m. June 12 at Sholem Aleichem Institute. The presentation consists of dance, song and drama and is bas- ed on two books of children's Poems. "I Never Saw Another Butter- fly" is a collection of poems and drawings written by the inmates of the concentration camp at Terezin. "Children Under Fire" is a collection from the kibutzim of Israel, written by the children were sheltered in the bunkers during the Six-Day War. The program is organized and written by the members of the ken (Detroit group) who range in age from 10 to 17. Folk dancing and refreshments will follow. The public is welcome. liam Wetsman is chairman of the nominating committee, which in- cludes Mrs. Norman Wachler, Bruce Thal, Mrs. Norman Katz, Mrs. Jack Baroff, Mrs. Leo Oreck- lin, Mrs. Benjamin Schottenfels, Mrs. Charles Lakoff and Merle Harris. There will be two proposals for amendment of by-laws, both were approved by the board of directors of JFCS at its May 7 meeting. One amendment would increase the membership of the board of direc- tors from 27 to 36, in addition to past presidents who are automatic- ally life members of the board. Another amendment would reduce the number on the nominating committee from nine to five board members. Faudman will present a summary of the activities of the agency during the past year. Mrs. Samuel J. Caplan, presi- dent of Resettlement Service, will preside over that agency's meet- ing. There will be nominations and election of board members and of- ficers, and Mrs. Caplan will report on resettlement activity. She will report on the increase in resettlement activities as a result of the gradual deteriora- tion of the position of the Jews in Europe and the increase of anti-Semitism in many Iron Cur- tain countries following the six- day war and after the Soviet in- vasion of Czechoslovakia. Mrs. Caplan noted that almost all of the refugees who have come to the agency during the past year have arrived from Poland. From June 1969 to May 1970, Re- settlement Service provided finan- cial assistance, counseling and other concrete services to 46 fam- ilies, consisting of 126 individuals. In a comparable period in the pre- vious year, the agency served 31 families, or a total of 92 individ- uals. Mrs. Caplan indicated that there have been continued activities and processing of indemnification and restitution claims against the Ger- man government on behalf of vic- tims of the Nazis, and there has been an increase in the number of awards received by Jewish fam- ilies from the Detroit area during the past year. From January to December 1969 these families re- ceived $150,392 in awards from the German government. Following the annual meetings and the presentation of the play, there will be a reception in Shiff- man Hall. There will be no admis- Temple Beth El Youth Elect New Officers At the annual meeting of the Young People's Society of Temple Beth El, the following officers were elected: Jeffrey Pearl, presi- dent; Sue Kaufman, David Shapero and Peggy Lindenbaum, vice presi- dents; Martha Goldman, and Bar- bara Breskin, secretaries; Mark Schatz, treasurer; and Bill Kux, Michigan State Temple Youth board member. sion charge, and the public is in- vited. Mrs. Bernard Pincus of the Jewish Family and Children's Service board is in charge of recep- tion arrangements. How Camp Copes With Drug Users By BEN GALLOB (Copyright 1970, JTA, Inc. Officials of a Los Angeles Jew- ish summer resident camp, faced with the problem of drug use by staff members and campers, re- sponded with a stated and en- forced ban on all drug use at the camp and by seeking to make camp programs so meaningful that no one at the camp would want to use drugs. The problem and its solution were described by Mike Schle- singer, program director of Camp JCA of the Los Angeles Jewish Centers Association, in a report in the current issue of "Jewish Community Center Program Aids," a quarterly publication of the Na- tional Jewish Welfare Board. He reported that the problem cropped up intially at the 1965 camp session when camp officials learned that a few staff members were using marijuana both in the camp and on their days off. At the 1966 camp session, more peo- ple were noted to be involved in drug use but camp officials felt none of the campers had become involved. The first step was to make the camp policy on drugs generally known to the community, the pro- gram director reported. He said it was deemed essential that staff, campers and their parents know the policy before they came to camp and so, "in our initial inter- view with prospective staff mem- bers," that policy is spelled out. Staff applicants not in agreement with that policy are advised not to seek a camp job. The official added "we explain to staff mem- bers the limit on drug use at the camp, its rationale and the sanc- tions: immediate dismissal." The policy also is explained to camp- ers, both before and after they arrive. They are told that "drugs are out at camp and that breaking this policy means going home. The problem for campers who use drugs becomes the risk: is it worth jeopardizing their stay at camp?" Officials knew that many of the young campers used mari- juana frequently or occasionally in the city and they asked such campers why they did not bring the drug to camp. The answers varied. Some said "we like camp and don't want to be sent home." But most offered a more involved answer: "We don't need drugs here." This answer was by far the most common. The program director then an- alyzed means used to help drug users to reach that decision. He declared "we must strive to make the camp community really rele- vant, meaningful and helpful. One of the primary keys is to motivate campers and staff to make the camp important enough to war- rant the disuse of drugs." The result of that effort was that "many campers expressed the feeling that because of the atmos- phere, relationships, activities and life style of the camp, the daily ex- perince became so meaningful and exciting that drugs no longer added a new dimension, as is so often the rationale, but instead detracted from it." Bus to Sharm el Sheikh TEL AVIV (ZINS)—A new bus route linking Tel Aviv with Sharm el Sheikh is now in service. The route covers a distance of 850 kilometers and runs through the heart of the Sinai Desert. For the time being bus service is avail- able only once a week, leaving Tel Aviv every Tuesday morning at 7 a.m., on a three-day journey into the desert. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Vocational Consultant Friday, June 5, 1970-37 Writes Professions Guide Students who are seeking careers with challenge, fulfillment and good income may find their answer in a new book written by vocation- al consultant Walter Duckat, direc- tor of guidance of the Federation Employment and Guidance Service of New York City, affiliated with the Federation of Jewish Philan- thropies. His book "A Guide to Profes- sional Careers" published by Ju- lian Messner contains 288 pages of material on almost 100 professional careers ranging from accountant to wood scientist. Students and parents will find facts on the nature of professional careers, their requirements, du- ties, the range of earnings of pro- fessionals and prospects for new- comers. There is a list of jobs available in government service to any college graduate and a biblo- graphy of free vocational literature on many professions. Candy Centerpieces Personalized Party Mementos Invitations and Party Ac- cessories for all occasions. MARCIA MASSERMAN 646-6138 Kol Ami Picnic Sunday Temple Kol Ami's Sunday school picnic will be held Sunday at Marshbank Metropolitan Park, immediately after school. Students will bring lunch, and pop and ice cream will be provided. BAR MITZVAH and FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT SAM EMMER SWEET SIXTEEN 358-0938 DANCE PARTIES! And His Orchestra Portraits by We furnish everything but the Kids! Art Linkletter's as always fine quality photography Merrillwood Bldg. Mall Birmingham Corner 12 Mile & Evergreen 251 Merrill, cor. Woodward Phone 357-1215 or 588-0300 647-5730 Professional Entertainment THE SHELDON ROTT ORCHESTRA Featuring Television Personality, Singer Vickie Carroll 352-0937 341-8525 Finest in Eye Wear! Complete Prescriptions Filled Lab on premises for fast service 18437 W. 8 Mile Rd. 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