ON CAMPUS t oGS FALL at 1987 the Midrasha The People of The Book 0 *C° DATE Tuesdays, Sept. 8 = Nov. 3 Mondays, Sept. 14 - Oct. 12 TIME 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. COURSE Readings in Torah 7:30 - 9 p.m. Israel as Reflected in the Fiction of A.B. Yehoshua INSTRUCTOR Dr. Tikva Frymer-Kensky Prof. Abraham Balaban Mondays, Sept. 14 - Nov. 2 7:30 - 8:30 p.m. Tools for Learning Torah Ms. Rachel Kagan Tuesdays, Nov. 10 - Jan. 12 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. The Prophetic Tradition Dr. Tikva Frymer-Kensky Register at the Midrasha College of Jewish Studies 21550 West Twelve Mile Road • Southfield For further details call: 352-7117 Chairperson Edwin Shifrin Vice Chairperson Matilda Rubin Director Student Interns Aid Federation Agencies 13 MILE RD. 6 w 6 MIDRASHA 21550 W. 12 MLRD. - — — • ti 2 1 , 12 MILE RD. 5 9 11 MILE RD. Renee Wohl Federation's Allan Gelfond meets with Project JOIN interns Cindy Friedman and Melissa Lumberg. Ta, 4 uality and style are very mportant when purchasing OF sink and faucet set. erald Wholesale carries Refreshingly Different Items .a wide variety of fine, AT quality hardware for your )3ar and kitchen that will HERALD WHOLESALE nhance their decor. 20830 Coolidge Hwy. Oak Park, MI 48237 hown above (top photos) just north of 8 Mile Rd. are the Bates and Abbaka (313) 398-4560 bar sinks, as well as 10,000 (bottom photos) the K.W.C. and Broadway Collectio kitchen faucets. Herald Wholesale stocks a large selection of sinks and faucets for any room in your home. Visit our show- room where you always receive savings of 20% ai and more. HOURS: 9-5:30 OR CALL FOR A SPECIAL APPOINTMENT ANYTIME MON/FRI, 9-3 SAT d The Jewish Occupational Intern (JOIN) program, reborn after a seven-year hiatus, is providing Jewish college students with a chance to learn about com- munal needs while trying out potential careers at Jewish agencies. "More than 100 students applied for the 15 available summer internships this year," said program director Debra Silver, who added that the placements are in the areas of communications, ad- ministration, research, pro- gram development and human services. Project JOIN had been suc- cessfully operated by Jewish Vocational Service from 1974 through 1980 with initial fun- ding from the Max M. Fisher Jewish Community. Founda- tion of United Jewish Charities, and subsequently through the agency's alloca- tion from the Jewish Welfare Federation. In addition to their four-day work week, the students are required to attend a weekly seminar. Organized by the JVS staff, they include in- depth educational discussions of the history, and current and future problems, of the Jewish community. Seth Himelhoch, a sophomore at Brandeis University, expressed his delight with the program: "I feel very fortunate to have been placed at Borman Hall (Jewish Home for Aged). This was my first choice, and I can't imagine not having something to do with Borman Hall after the internship is over." Fran Cook, a program coor- dinator for adult day services and for developmentally disabled adults at JVS, was a Project JOIN student in 1979. She had just received her bachelor's degree when she heard about the program from an article in The Jewish News. "When I began my in- ternship, I was unfamiliar with JVS and not really in- volved in the Jewish com- munity . . . Through Project JOIN, I learned about the agency and became active in several communal organiza- tions." Cook is currently supervis- ing Rena Glaser, a Project JOIN student who is now thinking about a career in special education as a result of her work at JVS. "It's a special feeling for someone who came here as an intern, and fell in love with the agen- cy, to be supervising another young student," said Cook. Jewish Welfare Federation agencies that are par- ticipating include the Jewish Community Center, Jewish Family Service, Jewish Federation Apartments, Jewish Home for Aged, Jewish Vocational Service and United Hebrew Schools, as well as Federation itself and the Jewish Association for Retarded Citizens. In addition to employing Project JOIN students, Federation, together with the University of Michigan, has inaugurated an internship program which will help train graduate students for the growing field of Jewish com- munal service. "We hope this program will be mutually beneficial to Federation and the students," said executive director Michael Berke, who , noted that Federation's first intern, Shelley Milin, has made the transition from part-time in- tern to full-time professional. As staff associate, Milin directs the Business and Pro-