I : 34 Friday, March 28, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS • rammui * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * ******* THE BROADWAY SHOP * * la — BRING US YOUR FURS FOR QUICK RE-SALE! RECORDING STUDIOS INVITES YOU TO SING AT YOUR NEXT PARTY Adventure Continued from preceding page CALL FOR DETAILS 851-9099 :THE BROADWAY SHOP .k * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 1C • Visit Our Studios at Tally Hall We buy and sell almost new designer clothes and furs Judy Verona, Eleanor Heyman 'FRAN EL 4Br Conveniently located at 32980 Middle Belt at 14 Mile Broadway Plaza, Farmington Hills * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * '* * * * * * • N rI7 • 851 - 7022 • GIFT CERTIFICATES Hebrew University's Dr. Auraham Simievic. • LOTS OF CHILDREN'S MOVIES '1.95 • MANY NEW RELEASES NEW MEMBERSHIPS reg. $20.00 NOW $ 5.00 EXPIRES 4-11-86 1111•11111•1 11M 1111111111111 1IM MIIIIIIIIIIII IIIMIII IMM11111111111111 1•11111 111 1111 11M11 1111 11111111111191 I • IT a ....CM=11ffite-ta: f l - - . I )41 ■ ,••• GENUINE DISCOUNTS I NATIONAL BRANDS JEWELRY - APPLIANCES V.C.R.s AND COLOR TVs ALL MAJOR APPLIANCES I I I I I I I SONY PRODUCTS • GENERAL ELECTRIC • PANASONIC • WESTINGHOUSE • EUREKA • KITCHENMAID • BLACK & DECKER • MICROWAVE OVENS • SMITH CORONA • SAMSONITE • HOT WATER TANKS • HITACHI • ROEPER • JENNAIR • SUB-ZERO • SCOTSMAN • VIDEO RECORDERS • VIDEO CAMERAS • TELEPHONE ANSWERING MACHINES • 14K GOLD CHAINS • CALCULATORS • SEIKO WATCHES • CROSS PENS • TELEPHONES • BINOCULARS • STEREOS • CAR RADAR DETECTORS • QUASAR • THERMADOR • CHAMBERS • RCA • SUNBEAM • MAYTAG • WHIRLPOOL 1 Ron QUASAR • a•• ■ ••■la•N iiF iri LeVoit's 1 Sin(r 1919 30825 Greenfield • Just S. of 13 Mile I I .1r) We reserve the right to limit quantities, and or withdraw from sale.) I I .411 , UP% ti■ i , . 7;,—;g111113 642-4466 Daily 9:30-5:30; Sat. 9:30-5 1 1-771 #11 O ation emphasized that all the summer programs work to maintain a delicate balance be- tween fun and education. "We don't want to overwhelm the kids, but we don't want them to miss the tremendous oppor- tunities here to learn. We want them to go home feeling satis- fied in both areas." Leaving Herzliya, the jour- nalists headed for the Sea of Galilee, watching the land turn green as they drove north. In Tiberias, we toured the ruins of a Roman era synagogue, whose mosaic floor is mysteriously decorated with Jewish symbols and signs of the zodiac. The group ate lunch at the Meuchas Youth Hostel with American participants in Sherut La'am, the Israeli equivalent of the Peace Corps. College students and graduates volunteer for one-to-two years to work in their professions in Israeli de- velopment towns. Richard Bloom, 23, of West Ora+, N.J., has been teaching English classes in Yokneam for six months, after completing a three-month Hebrew ulpan re- fresher course. Yokneam, at the opposite end of the Carmel mountains from Haifa, is a town of 6,200. It is the site where Elijah slew the prophets of Baal. "My living room overlooks the entire Jezreel Valley," said Richard, "and Yokneam is a place where everybody is invited into everybody else's house." Richard had visited Israel seven years ago as part of a United Synagogue' Youth sum- mer mission. "I always intended to come back, but not as a tourist." His work schedule, es- tablished by the school princi- pal, has him assisting a full- time teacher in two classes. He also teaches English .to adults two nights per week and works on his own with a retarded child. His schedule allows him plenty of time to visit Haifa in the afternoons. He occasionally re-arranges his work load to visit other parts of Israel. . Mixing into the community has been easy, Richard found. "In many ways, I'm treated like an honored guest." Although many of Yokneam's citizens have asked him to make aliyah and stay with them, he intends to return to the U.S. for law school in the fall. Sherut La'am has a strong interest in aliyah, Richard said, "and it is an ideal way to con- sider it. You don't have to find an apartment and you don't have to find a job. You see a more representative Israel than you might find in just visiting." Leslie Horowitz of New York teaches creative dance and English at an elementary school in Bet Shean. As the Project Renewal town for the Los Angeles Jewish community, the Sherut La'am workers in Bet Shean have received some perks above their standard Sherut La'am stipend. Leslie and two co-workers share an apartment, with a television and washing machine provided by L.A. Unlike Richard, Leslie's back- ground in Hebrew was limited and she finds that she must carefully plan, her vocabulary before each lesson. Her students are mainly Moroccan Jews who are third-generation Israelis. The Sherut La'am workers, she said, are well-accepted in the community. "We are constantly being invited to someone's home for dinner, or for Shabbat, or asked to come along on trips." Leslie- sympathizes with the Bet Shean teenagers, who have little to do in the small de- velopment town. "The boys and girls get dressed up in their best and simply walk up and • down the streets." She saw the Project Renewal effort making a posit- ive change in the people's lives. Close contact with Israelis is the object of a summer program at Ayelet Hashahar, the guest house at Kibbutz Gadot perched in the Galilee. overlooking Lebanon and Kiryat Shemona. For several years the kibbutz has had an exchange program with American towns, hosting Jewish teens from 'the U.S. and sending some of its youth to America. This summer, the kib- butz is matched with Marblehead, Mass. "It is important for Jewish youth from the United States to come to Israel for a few weeks," said Yechezekel Peleg, a