r o 46 Friday, January 5, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Youth News ARRY FREEDMAN rchestra and SHALOM the chapel. ADAT Shoresh (seventh and Garinim (fifth and sixth grades) will hold Shabat eighth grades) will conduct services 10 a.m. Saturday in Shabat services 10 a.m. Saturday in the board room. Migdal Tzion (ninth - 12th grades) will have Shabat services 10 a.m. Saturday in the board room. The group also will have a ('ctrl belated New . Year's Eve Pilone 398-6894 party 9 p.m. Saturday in the Specializing In 1 home of Sandy Vieder, ";;*--- Portraits & Sound Movies 29876 Northbrook, Far- niington Hills. For details, call the youth department, 851-5100, or Debby Vieder, adviser, 352-0213. - Steven Lupovitch and Sportswear Boutique Mark Schostak attended the USY International con- vention, Dec. 24-28 in Cher- ryhill, N.J. * * * BNAI DAVID youth de- partment announces regis- tration is being taken for its annual winter weekend re- treats at Camp Tamarack for all youth in grades three through 12 during January and February. Children in grades three six will attend While merchandise lasts Feb. 9-11; youth in grades seven and eight, Feb. 16-18; On Fall &Winter Fashions and teens in grades nine to 12 Jan. 2628. Select Weekend retreat activi- Group Of ties will include outdoor to- bogganing and skating along with indoor games and a Saturday night social. Shabat youth, services will all sales final - sizes 4-18 be held. Cabins -are win- terized. For application or information, contact the 20079 W. 12 Mile Rd., Country Village Mall synagogue .youth-line, 10-4:30 Mon. :Sat. 557-8325. . Visa & MasterCharge 647-2367 119 .vi%/c‘l.tv°\(.0- -- P. 'Y{h(tcr 1:11 Just Marilyns FANTASTIC INVENTORY SALE OFF to 50 15% Blouses 111 /2 _ OFF 356-0493 I JACK BARNES e s Pr sent PRE—TEEN & TEEN DISCO BALLROOM DANCE CLASSES PHASE I. Line Dance Fast/Slow PHASE II • Swing & Latin PHASE III Advanced only At 3 Dance centers W. Bloomfield Plaza 851-2400 Birmingham 642-4292 Troy 689-9918 BETH ACHIM will be the scene for tryouts for the all-city Jewish youth choir Tuesday and Jan. 15 at 7 p.m. Boys and girls age 12-18 are invited. Shabat services for youth age 13-18 will be held 10 a.m. Saturday in the Klein Chapel. Owing to a fire in the youth lounge, junior congregation will hold serv- ices in the board room at 10 a.m. Saturday. Kadima (grades seven and eight) will hold an oneg Shabat 8 p.m. today in the home of Felissa Burns, 20560 Old Stream, South- field. For reservations, call Shelly Konheim, 642-4294. Lahav (grades nine-12) will hold a progressive dinner Saturday, begin- ning 7 p:m. in the home of Liz Kripke, 1312 Fairway Dr., Birmingham., There is a charge. For reserva- tions, call Ilene Mitz, 642-6195, or Susan Friedman, 968-4558. For information on youth activities, call Cantor Earl Berris at the synagogue, 352-8670. Students Win UHS Scholarship Alicia Klein and Michael Reifler are the first two re- cipients of the Pearl Schol- arship. The scholarship is awarded to senior high school students at United Hebrew High Schools "in recognition of scholastic achievements in Hebrew high school, involvement in Ruach (grades three- synagogue with emphasis four) will hold a mystery placed on Zionist activities car ride on Sunday, meet- outside school." The $500 scholarship ing 1:15 p.m. at - the synagogue. Children may be used for anyjoro- should d _ regs warmly. gram involving travel or Cost will include all ac- academic program in Israel. The two awardees are tivity fees and refresh- ments. Friends are in. active members of Habonim vited and parents are Youth Movement. needed to drive. For ad- - The Pearl Scholarship is vance reservations, con- made possible by an tact adviser Karen anonymous donor. Davidoff, 545-6232, eve- nings. Vandals Slash Atid senior group Jewish Center (grades nine-12) will hold Tennis Bubble an evening activity 7 p.m. Sunday;For information, The Jewish Community contact group president Center's tennis bubble was Diane Shaw, 967-4415. slashed by vandals and de- Ha-or- (grades fiVe-six) flated Dec. 22, causing ex- will meet 2 p.m. Jan. 14 for a tensive damage to the ten- pin-ball party. Masada nis courts and lighting fix- (grades seven-eight) will tures. Two boys aged 17 and 14 gather at 6:30 p.m. for an evening activity. For infor- were caught in the incident mation, contact adviser and are being prosecuted. The slashed bubble has Danny Kaplan, 398-7422, been repaired and re- evenings. inflated but other repairs Shabat Story Hour group may prohibit the playing of will display photographs tennis until April. The taken at its Dec. 24 Hanuka facility may be opened to. celebration during its joggers in two to three weekly meeting at 10 a.m. weeks. Saturday. All children age 4 to 7 are invited to join each week for games, stories and Camp director Marvin songs. Junior congregation Berman and program coor- groups also meet 10 a.m. for dinator Elliot Sorkin of the young people age 8 to 14. Fresh Air Society will par- For information on youth ticipate in the National program activities at Bnai Conference on Jewish David, contact the Camping sponsored by the synagogue youth-line, Jewish Welfare Board 557-8325, or -library, 557- Tuesday through Jan. 14 in Hollywood, Fla. 8211. Camp Conference None But the Brave By PAUL ELDRIDGE It cannot happen here, You blithely say, It cannot•be That people good and civilized Would raise the ghetto's walls about us, Brand us with the yellow badge, Shame us and torture us, Beat us and starve us — It cannot be It cannot happen here. Yet those who dwelt across the Rhine, They; too, were civilized. Cathedrals, blazing jewels of faith, Illuminated the breast of the natioriL Universities, diadems of learning, Haloed her forehead; Music, cataract of balsam, Soothed her blood; • Art, kneaded in stone and metal, - Pressed into canvas and silk, Coquetted before her eyes — They, too, were good, They, too, loved children, Fed the sparrow, Tended the flower, Protected the aged, Foregathered in home and wine shop, Sang And played And Laughed And loved —. But, they, too, were Christians, And where the cross is The Jew is crucified — This die shibboleth of Christendom; This its sacred circumcision. Every annal of their glory Has a foot-note of our grief, Every arch of their triumph Is a tombstone to our defeat, - Every bell that hails their victory Tolls our marches to the grave. It cannot happen here — How quickly you forget, • How easily forgive! How like the docile sheep, Grazing, To whom the glitter Of the butcher's knife Is but a sheaf of sun rays Playing upon the grass! How long more shall you be The uninvited guest? " How long more, the poor relation, Timorous petitioner For shelter and for crumbs? How long more shall you drink The lulling wine of pity And chant the endless litany Of glorified affliction? How long more shall you flaunt The shattered scepter And the tattered robes, Monarch of ashes and of tears? Crash love's jar ,of honey Fermented and moldy, Fling the olive branches Withged and wormy! Brim the cup of hate! Hate of exile, Hate of ghetto, Hate of scapegoat, Hate of fear, Hate of threat, Hate of insult, Hate of tolerance, Hate of hate! Drink deep And drink again Until your blood is fire And your fist is steel! Center Lists Coming Events The Jewish Community Center will conduct audi- tions for "Tevye and His Daughters," by Sholem Aleichem, 7:30 p.m. Wed- nesday and Thursday in the Aaron DeRoy Studio Thea- ter in the main Center com- plex. . Steve Goldsmith will di- rect the production. For in- formation, call the Center, 661-1000, ext. 250. The Center also an- nounces the art of Maxwell Chayat will be on display at the tenter Jan. 13-30. Meanwhile, children's films, including "Winnie the Pooh," will be shown 2 p.m, Jan. 14 and 28 in the DeRoy Studio Theater: . There is a charge.