DETROIT Detroit Team Picks 16-Year-Old 'Vets' As Games Torchlighters ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor T he two veteran athletes of the Detroit delegation have been named torchlighters for the opening ceremonies of the Jewish Community Centers — North American Maccabi Youth Games. Robert Kamins and Ari Nessel, both 16, have par- ticipated in the Games each summer beginning with the 1985 regional games in Columbus, Ohio, when they were both 11. Kamins is a swimmer and Nessel has played on the Detroit soccer team for six years. The two will light the tor- ch marking the start of the Detroit Games at the open- ing ceremonies Aug. 19 at the Palace of Auburn Hills. An estimated 15,000 - 20,000 spectators are expected for the ceremonies. "To be in front of all those people will be a great honor," Nessel said. "The Games have been a really good time" for six years. The age rules have been changed since Nessel and Kamins first began com- peting in 1985 for the Detroit team. An athlete must now be 13-16 to com- pete in the North American Games and 12-16 to compete in the smaller regional Games. Kamins and Nessel will march with the Detroit dele- gation, the final group in a half-mile-long parade of 2,700 athletes and coaches at the Palace. They will Detroit Athletes Tb Meet Thursday A mandatory meeting for the athletes on the Detroit team will be held 7:30 p.m. Aug. 16 at the Maple-Drake JCC. Uniforms will be distributed and Games' registration and orientation will be completed. "We want to complete registration for our team on Aug. 16," said Detroit team captain Dr. Alan Horowitz, "because 85-90 percent of our athletes' families are hosting athletes from out of town, and most of those athletes will be coming in Aug. 19. We don't want our parents to have to register their own kids on the same day they are picking up in- coming athletes." come forward from the Detroit delegation late in the program to perform the torchlighting. The Palace ceremony carries a flashback for Kamins, according to Games chairman Jay Robinson. Kamins was scheduled to be a Detroit flagbearer at the Chicago Games in 1988. But his bus and many others were late in arriving at 15,000 - 20,000 spectators are expected at the Palace. Dyche Stadium at Nor- thwestern Unversity, and Kamins and 300 to 400 athletes from all over missed the athletes' parade. Robinson and several other adults gathered the athletes, crashed the gates and led their own parade into the stadium, to the chagrin of the Chicago or- ganizers. Robinson promises that any delegation late to the Palace will be allowed to follow his Chicago example. Kamins was a nervous 11- year-old in Columbus in 1985. "It was the first time I was away from home and it was overwhelming," said Kamins. "I was really scared, but I swam real well and I really enjoyed it." Kamins won five gold medals in his 11-12 age group that year. He had several top-six finishes in Toronto in 1984 and has been a steady performer in every Maccabia. Ari Nessel is described by teammates as a great offensive and defen- sive soccer player "who won't back down from anybody. Other Detroit athletes and former athletes will have key roles at the Palace. The torchlighters will be escorted by an honor guard of former Youth Games athletes who are serving as assistant coaches for the Detroit team this summer They are Steve Robinson (soccer), Kim Gurecki (girls basketball), Dena Bernstein (swimming), Michelle Mantel (table tennis), Marc Moss (track) and Eric Swartz (wrestling). The Detroit delegation has selected 10 other veteran athletes competing this year to march as flagbearers in front of the Detroit team. The group includes five- year Youth Games partici- pant David Hitsky (swimm- ing, soccer), and four-year vets Shaw Brown (soccer), Howard Larkey (soccer), An- drew Horowitz (soccer), Seth Hoffman (basketball), Merrek Sakwa (track), Danielle Garber (tennis), Sara Kolodin (track), Nicole Rudolph (softball) and Lauren Dworkin (swimm- ing). They will lead the 266 Detroit athletes and coaches in the parade. The doors of the Palace will open at 6:15 p.m. The crowd will be entertained with videos and live perfor- mances until the ceremonies and parade of athletes and coaches formally begin at 7:30. Admission is free and tickets are available in ad- vance at the Maple-Drake and Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Community Centers, or at the door. Synagogues Plan Games Events A number of Detroit-area synagogues have planned special Shabbat meals and services in conjunction with the JCC — North American Maccabi Youth Games. They include: Congregation Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield — Shab- baton Aug. 17-19 with a catered meal. For informa- tion., call Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg, 626-1807. Adat Shalom Synagogue — Outdoor service 8 p.m. Aug. 24. Luncheon following Shabbat service Aug. 25 for athletes and member families. There is no charge for the athletes, $3.50 for others. For reservations, call Shelly Newman, 737-0266, or Linda O'desky, 851-2206. Congregation Beth Achim — Dinner and services 7 p.m. Aug. 24. No charge for athletes, $8 members, $9 non-members, $5 children under 12. For reservations, call the synagogue by Aug. 15, 352-8670. Congregation Shaarey Zedek — Dinner and ser- vices 6:30 p.m. Aug. 24 for synagogue members who are Games volunteers or hosts. No charge for athletes, $10 for adults, $5 children. For reservations, call Dr. Alden Leib, 851-9118, or the syn- agogue, 357-5544. Temple Beth El — Dinner and services 6:30 p.m. Aug. 24 for member families hosting athletes. Adults $7, children under 17 are $5. Reservation deadline is to- day. Call the temple, 851- 1100. Temple Emanu-El — All host families are invited to prospective members' Shabbat Aug. 24 for a 6:15 p.m. picnic and 7:45 p.m. service. There is no charge, but reservations are re- quired. For information, call the temple, 967-4020. Temple Israel — All host families are invited to a 6 p.m. dinner and 8 p.m. Shabbat service Aug. 24. Adults are $10.30, children under 17 are $5.15. For in- formation, call Larry and Carole Miller, 855-1717, or Paula Shapiro, 855-2899. Temple Kol Ami — Special Youth Games observance 8 p.m. Aug. 24. Temple Shir Tikvah — 11 a.m. service Aug. 25 follow- ed by a picnic. Temple mem- bers will attend a Meadow Brook concert that evening; Youth Games families are invited. For information, call Joanne Levy, 689-4003. Temple Shir Shalom — Breakfast 9:30 a.m. Aug. 25 followed by 11 a.m. services. Open to all, no charge. The 70 host families living in Huntington Woods have organized a Shabbat dinner and pool party at the Hun- tington Woods Recreation Center 6:30 p.m. Aug. 24. There is a charge of $30 per family and families are ask- ed to bring a dessert to share. Paid reservation deadline is Aug. 15. For in- formation, call Carol Rosenfeld, 399-7299, or li- ana Schmier, 547-5908. The event is limited to Hun- tington Woods host families. Study Shows Tension Among Jewish Students SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer D ialogue between diff- erent Jewish movements is needed to counteract the polariza- tion found among Detroit Jewish students of diverse religious backgrounds, ac- cording to a recently releas- ed survey. The survey, which was conducted by Project STaR at the University of Mich- igan and the Wilstein In- stitute for Jewish Policy Studies of Los Angeles, studied the attitudes of students in the sixth, eighth and 10th grades toward other Jewish movements. Two day schools and four afternoon schools in the Detroit area were surveyed earlier this year. The study was prompted by concerns from the Ameri- can Jewish Committee and the Wilstein Institute that the Jewish community was becoming polarized, said Daniel Steinmetz, the TUC 11CTO/11T 1C4AIIOU KICIA/0 C E-1 LL CI