68 Friday, November 22, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS THE PLACE FOR SMOKED FISH! PEOPLE Curriculum BAGEL DELI & PRODUCE 6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. Continued from Page 57 West Bloomfield 851-9666 MON. THRU SAT. 9 TO 6, SUN. 8 TO 5 SUPER SPECIALS NOV. 22 THRU NOV. 27 SMOKED PILLAR ROCK FRESH SOLID WHITE LAKE SUPERIOR MEAT ALBACORE TUNA 95c6 $369 WHITEFISH 0 an lb FINEST SMOKED FISH TRAYS HANDOUT BELLY LOX BE A WINNER, PLAY ( Balm & smnt. Pt..1 Theo logical Student Program Officer Pasternak. Call The Jewish News Today THE CLASSIFIEDS • 354-6060 ( arrots Make a delicious oriental stir fried dish in a snap. All it takes is one of the oriental-style vegetables from BIRDS EYE" and our quick and easy • recipe. It's an absolutely Kosher way to enjoy the flavor of the East. GENERAL FOODS 1- SHANGHAI BEEF Combine 1/2 teaspo6n ginger, 1 tablespoon soy sauce and 1 minced garlic clove in a bowl. Slice I/2 pound flank steak into thin strips; toss with soy sauce mixture. Heat 2 tablespoons oil in a skillet or wok; add beef and sauté until lightly brown. Remove seasoning pouch from 1 pack- age (10 oz.) BIRDS EYE" . StirFry Vegetables:' any variety. Add vegetables to skillet. Stir; reduce heat. Cover and simmer 3 minutes, stirring once. Sprinkle contents of seasoning pouch over vegetables. Combine IA cup water and 1 teaspoon cornstarch; pour into skillet. Cook and stir about 1 minute until thickened. Makes about 3 cups or 3 servings. Serve with rice, if desired. .To use BIRDS EYE' Farm Fresh Mixtures — Cauliflower, Baby Whole Carrots and Snow Pea Pods or Broccoli, Red Peppers, Bamboo Shoots and Straw Mushrooms: Prepare recipe as directed without season- ing packet, using 1/2 package (2 cups) vegetables and increasing soy sauce to 2 tablespoons. 1985 General Foods Corporation .■ /4 f • It- Jr 4 9 • I • * $ • • • ti * t- t•- 4 V• 1. you can limit to just males or just females. But one of the major turning points for me in that thinking was during the Shiva for a close female friend's mother. I went to my friend's house one morning to daven and she led services. And having grown up with her it seemed like the most natural thing in the world for her to be up there. She wasn't male or female, she was just up there." So how does someone so pro- - gressive catch on with an in- stitution as rigid and conserva- tive as the Naval Academy? (Regulations required that he shave his beard for the first time since high school.) "I liked their uniform," he jokes, "but there was more to it than that. I see it as the fulfill- ment of a personal desire to do some kind of service for my country." Pastnerak first became aware of the Navy's chaplaincy pro- gram through some people at the yeshivah in Israel. After hearing how it worked and the great flexibility it offered, he got caught up with the idea. His offical moniker for the training is Theological Student Program Officer. The commit- ment began with 17 weeks of classroom training and boot- camp in Newport, Rhode Island this past summer. While still a seminary stu- dent, Pasternak devotes only his summers to the chaplaincy pro- gram, and there is no further obligation until he is ordained. At that point, he can go into active duty for a minimum of three years or choose to enter the reserves. One of the unique aspects of the program, however, is that if upon graduation from his Seminary he decides not to pursue ordination, his committ- ment to the Navy ends im- mediately. The Navy cannot pick up any of his schooling expenses be- cause of the Constitutional amendment separating church and state, but they do pay a sal- ary while he's enrolled in the training program. Trainees enter the program as an ensign and graduate as a second lieutenant. In addition, while Pasternak is still in school, he can request the type of on-the- job chaplaincy training he wants. "It's one of the Navy's favorite acronymns — ACDUTRA — Active Duty for Training. They can send me anywhere from shipboard to a recruiting depot or any outlet. I've requested hospital chaplaincy for next summer. And I keep going back every summer until I'm or- dained." Pasternak described his first summer's involvement as "a marvelous experience" which sounds like something between a job and an adventure (with apologies to the armed forces advertising agency). There were five other rabbini- cal students in his troop (includ- ing the husband-wife duo) among the 24 denominations re- presented. The Navy recognizes 130 and likes to call these "faith-groups." "Half of us were still students, half were already ordained, and of those, half were going right on to active duty." His own plans are still uncer- tain right now, but he has about four years before he must de- cide. The summer training days started at 5:30 a.m. and in- cluded classes on everything from a brief on the Soviet Navy to a talk from a former Vietnam war hero and prisoner of war, to instruction on Naval corre- spondence techniques. Paster- nak says, "The only thing simi- lar between the way the Navy writes a letter and the rest of the world writes letters is that they both use a paper and pen- cil." There are also history