DETROIT Maccabi Galas Planned By Ann Arbor, Windsor RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer A nn Arbor and Wind- sor are giving the 1990 Jewish Com- munity Centers-North American Maccabi Youth Games a truly metropolitan flavor, according to Jay Robinson, Games general chairman The two cities are plann- ing key aspects of the Games: Ann Arbor is handl- ing the opening ceremonies Aug. 19 at the Palace of Auburn Hills and Windsor is coordinating the coaches' party Aug. 25. "I've said this before: this is a totally community-wide thing," said Robinson. "We have been getting the help of the synagogues and temples, the country clubs and the people all over the area. This is totally the institutions of our community who are helping make this possible. "It's great because the people in Windsor and Ann Arbor have been involved with Maccabi over the years, but their communities are not big enough to host some- thing like the Youth Games. So they are anxious to be a part of the Games and we're very, very glad to have their help," Robinson said. With the Games being held in Detroit for the first time since 1984 and some 2,900 athletes and coaches from around the world ex- pected, neither event will be "small potatoes." Chuck Newman of Ann Arbor heads the committee which is planning for a full house — 22,000 — at the Palace for the opening gala, which will feature enter- tainment and will be highlighted by an Olympics- style march-in by the various teams, with each carrying its own banner and flag. Ron and Larry Polsky of Windsor are directing the planning for the coaches' party, which is expected to draw an international crowd of 400. The Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center, main venue for the Games, will also be the site of the Chuck Newman: Orienteering experience. Ron Polsky: "Chance to relax." Larry Polsky: Windsor co-host. coaches' party, according to Ron Polsky. sonnel. The group toured the facilities. Volunteers will wear spe- cial clothing and maintain contact by radio, he said. They will be using some 1,600 feet of bicycle racks and 2,000 traffic cones in the staging area to guide the various delegations into the Palace for the opening ceremony. Palace personnel will take care of the sound system, lighting and other aspects of the night's enter- tainment. Windsor's Polsky brothers, who like Newman are mem- bers of the Games organi- zing committee, will be working on a much smaller scale in planning the coaches' get-together. "The coaches will be on their own for dinner that night. Really, they will be pretty much on their own the whole week. This way, they'll get a chance to meet and know one another the night before it all ends," said Ron Polsky. The finals in the team sports will be Sunday, Aug. 26. "This will give them a chance to relax, to talk sports, to talk countries, whatever. "We've hired the Marshall Korby band from West Bloomfield, which plays 1950s style rock n' roll. Hav- ing it at the JCC, it will be a poolside party," he said. Both Windsor and Ann Arbor will have their own teams participating in the Games. "We've got lots of good help in bringing this off," said Newman, who is presi- dent of the Ann Arbor Jew- ish Community Center. "The Palace is providing all the equipment, including communications and crowd- control, and their people are incredibly helpful. And they're not inexperienced in staging such big events, either." Nevertheless, Newman expects to have a cadre of 100 volunteers, many com- ing from Ann Arbor, assisting Palace personnel in crowd control, providing information and helping ticket-takers. Newman, whose son Michael will play basketball in his third and final Mac- cabi and whose wife Sharon is helping coordinate Ann Arbor's housing contingent, is no stranger to staging big events. He was in charge of timing and scoring for the national Orienteering meet held in Aim Arbor a couple of years ago. And he headed Ann Arbor's delegation to the previous two Youth Games, in Chicago (1988) and Toronto (1986). "We'll be needing to get the right teams to the right places at the right times for the opening ceremonies," he said, "and then we'll need to re-connect them with their host families at the end — no small feat in itself. We'll be having run-throughs beforehand and checklists to go by. Rabbi Lane Steinger holds a tree while Congressman Sander Levin digs on Temple Emanu-El's Atzim Chayim — Trees Are Life — Day April 29. Temple members and religious school classes planted 21 trees on the temple grounds in a program co-sponsored by Global Glenn Triest Releaf. "We're excited about it," he said, noting 20 volunteers attended the first meeting with Games chairman Robinson and Palace per- ❑ Jewish Communities Form Network Coalition KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer D etroit and seven smaller Jewish com- munities throughout Michigan recently formed the first statewide network- ing group aimed at building stronger Jewish community relations. A project of the Jewish Welfare Federation, the group is called the Michigan Jewish Conference. Among its plans is hiring a part- time consultant in Lansing to run the group and to serve as a political advocate for Michigan's Jewish com- munities. The staff member is expected to start the new position this fall. To date, Conference mem- bers include Detroit, Flint, Ann Arbor, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Muskegon, Jackson and the tri-city area — Bay City, Midland and Saginaw. Organizers hope to attract other cities. Michigan Jewish Con- ference Chairman Robert Naftaly proposed a $30,000 start-up budget for the pro- ject. Federation has allocated $25,000; smaller communities are expected to contribute at least $500 each to complete the budget. "This is a start; it is an ex- periment," said David Gad- Harf, executive director of the Jewish Community Council, who will supervise the group. "We are pleased with the enthusiastic re- sponse." The Conference is an outgrowth of a concept pro- posed two years ago by past Federation President Dr. Conrad Giles, who suggested opening a Lansing office to THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 15