THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Project JOIN Interns Acquire
Communal Service Experience

Singles Events

CRITERION CLUB has
completed arrangements for
a holiday visit to Toronto
and the Canadian National
Exhibition over Labor Day
weekend, Aug. 28-Sept. 1.
President Esther Bershad
said the goup will travel by
train and visit several places
of interest in the city.

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THE MICHIGAN JEW-
ISH YOUNG ADULT
COUNCIL will have a
dance for singles age 18-40 8
p.m. Aug. 17 at the Somer-
set Inn ballroom. The Amer-
ican Scene will provide mu-
sic for dancing, and
refreshments will he served.
There is a charge.
* * *
AVODAH CHAPTER,
Pioneer Women. will have a
luncheon and games party,
12;30 p.m. Wednesday, at
the Franklin Park Towers
Apts. club house, 27350
Franklin Rd., Southfield.
Friends are invited. There is
a charge.

Hearing Ordered
on Ballot Suit

A hearing has been or-
dered Thursday in Federal
Court in Detroit in a suit
brought by a Southfield
Man who city officials have
disqualified as a council
candidate in the NOvember
election.
Leonard Lowenstein, 47,
filed suit last week charging
his constitutional rights
were violated by city offi-
cials who kept his name off
the ballot.
Pat Flannery, city clerk,
and Sigmund Beras, city
attorney, said they refused
to enter Lowenstein's name
on the ballot because of a
1971 conviction for felonious
assault. Flannery, Beras
and the City of Southfield
are named as defendants in
the suit.
The Southfield City
Charter,' according to city
officials, prohibits convicted
felons from serving in elec-
tive positions. •

THANK YOU MOMMY and DADDY

For My Beautiful
New Baby Sister LISA

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DOES
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Speak Jewish?

ANGLO-JEWISH with Jules Abrams
9-10 am Mon-Thur
YIDDISH with Lou Levine 9-10am Wed
HEBREW with Uri Segal 9:30-10 am Tues

Friday, August 15, 1975 43

I Births

Aug. 8 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Hartwell (Janice
G•ushoff), 7505 Locklin,
Union Lake, a son, Arin
Samuel.
* * *
Aug. 4 — To Dr. and Mrs.
Marc Lee (Lori Leib), for-
mer Detroiters of Phoenix,
A•iz., a daughter, Michele
Ivah.
* * *
July 17 — To Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Silberblatt
(Tobie Kahn), 20885 An-
dover, Southfield, a daugh-
ter, Aimee Gwen.

Fae Kleinplatz, right, makes an effort to find time in
her busy schedule for quiet chats with her friends at the
Home for the Aged. Here, she shares some good news
with Prentis Manor resident Mrs. Becky Cohen before a
musical program one recent afternoon.

* *

When Fae Kleinplatz par-
ticipated in the experimen-
tal Project JOIN as a sum-
mer student intern last
year, she expected to study
Jewish community life and
communal service in Detroit
and to gain a little experi-
ence to list on her resume.
She is happily surprised
that, a year after, her Pro-
ject JOIN summer has
turned not only into a full-
time assignment but also
into a job heading another
experimental program in
communal service.
"I signed up for Project
JOIN because it offered
temporary social work
placements. I'd just com-
pleted my undergraduate
education in sociology and
was happy for experience in
the field," Miss Kleinplatz
said. "However, after my
JOIN internship at the Jew-
ish Home for Aged, I really
wanted to make Jewish
communal work my niche."

Now Miss Kleinplatz,
who was hired to be an
activities director at the
Home at last summer's
end, has been placed in
charge of a new experi-
mental program there.
The program, called Real-
ity Orientation, is one
which works to orient to
their surroundings con-
fused and senile senior cit-
izens or those with a loss of
memory.
Both Project JOIN and
the reality orientation work
at the Jewish Home for
Aged are funded by the Jew-
ish Community Foundation.
The foundation is a commit-
tee of the United Jewish
Charities,. Federation's sen-
ior agency, and was estab-
lished a decade ago to pro-
vide funding for
experimental projects not
ordinarily covered by the
agencies' budgets.
JOIN conducts a summer
and winter session. Selected
University of Michigan stu-
dents participate in the win-
ter program which earns
them credits toward their
degree. The credit-earning
assignments are field pro-
jects supervised by the Jew-
ish Vocational Service and
Community Workshop and
the Bnai Brith Hillel Foun-

dation at U-M. The program
also provides otherwise-
unavailable vocational coun-
seling and social services to
students on the Ann Arbor
campus.
The summer JOIN pro-
gram assigns college stu-
dents from several cam-
puses to work in Jewish-
Welfare Federation agen-
cies. It is administered by
the JVS-CW and the Jewish
Community Center.
This summer's assign-
ments for the 11 young
people who are JOIN in-
terns includes work in the
ulpan for Russian immi-
grants at the Jewish Cen-
ter, in-aide positions at the
Home for Aged and in the
volunteer department of
the Jewish Family and
Children's Service.
Interns devote four days a
week to agency work, and
spend the fifth work day in
a seminar session which in-
corporates the job experi-
ence into a conceptual
framework. Meeting with
the JOIN coordinator, they
compare agency experi-
ences, tour Jewish agencies,
attend lectures by profes-
sional and lay leaders of the
community, and discuss lo-
cal community programs.

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Scholarship Fund
Honors Cohodas

A scholarship endowment
fund has been established in
Israel in honor of Sam Coh-
odas's 80th birthday and his
association with the He-
bre• University of Jerusa-
lem.
According to the six col-
lege and university presi-
dents who will serve as hon-
orary co-chairmen for a
special 80th birthday trib-
ute to Cohodas, the univer-
sity will confer upon him an
honorary fellowship. The
party is slated for Sept. 10.
The co-chairmen are John
Jamrich of Northern Michi-
gan University, site of the
celebration; Raymond L.
Smith, Michigan Technolog-
ical University; Ralph Jalko-
nen, Suomi College; James
Perry, Gogebic Community
College; Edwin Wuehle, Bay
de Noc College; and Ken-
neth Shouldice, Lake Supe-
rior State College.

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in which you cannot
say a mean or sarcastic
thing.
—John Erskine

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