Father Deserves the Best! That's What Greis Jewelers Stands For. The couple was settling down in Kansas City when Galex began to say, "I'd better go to Israel. It's time." "On our first date, she told me she intended to return to the Middle East," Schechter recalls. They were married in April 1985. That October, they found themselves in an apartment in the Negev town of Arad, beginning the year-long WUJS (World Union of Jewish Students) work-study program. Its first six months are devoted to Hebrew-language and Judaic studies. But after three months, Schechter says he got the itch to work again. He went to Jerusalem and made the rounds of all the news agencies. "No one was looking for any help, un- til I got to CNN," he says. Schechter worked at the CNN bureau free for two weeks. At the end of the fortnight he was offered the position of bureau producer. "One doesn't get visited with that kind of luck very often," Schechter says. The couple rented an apartment in Jerusalem's stately Rehavia neighbor- hood. Then Galex returned to Arad to finish the Hebrew course, "which is why she speaks Hebrew better than I do," Schechter says. In 1986 Galex signed on as assistant producer for CNN's Jerusalem operations. It was a dizzying time to be a jour- nalist in Israel. "It seemed like the United States and Israel got into a series of serious disputes during that time," Schechter says, and ticks off the Pollard Affair, the beginn- ings of Iran-Contra and the controversy over Israel's use of American cluster bombs. Natan Sharansky was released from a Soviet prison and arrived in Israel during Schechter's stay. The Americans launched a bom- bing raid of Tripoli, Libya. And in the fall of 1986, Schechter was one of 300 journalists covering a meeting between Israel's Shimon Peres and Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak in Galex's old stomping ground of Cairo. It was Schechter's first time in Egypt, and the visit allowed him to see first-hand a little of his own family his- tory. He visited the old city, known as Fostat, where the ancient Ben Ezra synagogue stands. In that synagogue, Schechter's great- grandfather, scholar and a founder of Conservative Judaism, Solomon Schechter, had spent several years at the turn of the cen- tury, poring over papers in the synagogue's genizah, or repository. The genizah con- tained fragments and papers dating from the Middle Ages. Solomon Schechter's research threw light on the life of Jewry of a thousand years ago. The papers Solomon Schechter uncovered ranged from philosophic works to the notebook of a little boy. "The machberet (notebook) had the alef-bet on one side and some doodling of his house and his parents on the other side. It shows that Hebrew school has gotten no more exciting in the last thousand years," David Schechter deadpans. In May 1987, Schechter and Galex returned to the United States. Two months later, Ted Turner snapped the couple up and they came to Atlanta. Galex says she has "gotten kind of passionate" about "Future Watch," which covers "anything that has to do with the future. The show is as expansive as our imaginations," she says. One of her favorite stories was about a time capsule, sealed in 1940 at Oglethorpe University, and not to be opened until the year 8113. Included in the capsule were recordings of Adolph Hitler and Franklin Roosevelt, con- temporary gadgets, pieces of hashish and a machine to teach English to those who open the capsule. "It wasn't assumed that English would be spoken in 8113. What moved me was they thought it was impor- tant to preserve knowledge and customs," Galex says. From working on the series, Galex says she now believes anything is possi- ble. Her orientation toward the future has been strengthened by the an- ticipated birth of her and Schechter's first child in September. Meanwhile, Schechter's work keeps him thinking about the present, or at least as far into the future as the next weekend's news coverage. And he reminisces about his work in Israel. About the time he waited outside the Knesset men's room to ask then-Defense Minister Yit- A. Dunhill Lighter 5381 Now $245 B. 18k Key Chain $285 Now $164 ) C. 18k Ring—Onyx & Diamond $6.91 Now $483 D. 14k Bracelet $48.4" Now $234 E. 18k Ring w/.93ct of diamonds $2-48II Now $1,736 F. 18k Cuff Links $720" Now $500 G. Seiko Watch .$275 Now $165 855-1730 32940 Middlebelt Rd. (At 14 Mile Rd., in the Broadway Plaza) JEWELERS Custom Designed Jewelry to Your Taste HOURS: Mon. tn. iu-o Thurs. 10-8, Sat. 10-5 - PLAY STRUCTURES For Fun at Home Extra Heavy-Duty Construction To Last A Lifetime Sold With or Without Installation • Prices From $650 to $1650 ■ Visit Our Display in West Bloomfield at 7549 Pontiac Trail 1/2 Mile East of Haggerty Road. For Additional Information Please Write or Call: . Guffrey Products 7549 Pontiac Trail West Bloomfield, MI 48033 (313) 624-7962 In Brighton (313) 229-9646 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 51