I YOUTH Attention: Youth Group Leaders and Advisers GRANTS ARE AVAILABLE... to promote social action programming by Jewish youth groups. The Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit invites you to send us the coupon below to receive more information and a grant application. Expand your youth programming! Send in your coupon today. Yes — we would like to enhance our social action programming. Please send us a grant application Name Youth Organization Address Phone DEADLINE DECEMBER 7TH Mail to: Jewish Community Council 163 Madison Avenue Detroit, Michigan 48226 New Arrivals European crafted cribs and furniture plus unique bedding and accessories provide the ideal background for that Very Important Baby. Bellini also offers youth furniture that grows with your child. \Es I. IN/ 1875 S. WOODWARD • BIRMINGHAM 48011 1 Block North of 14 Mile 644-0525 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 118 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1990 High School Study Program In Israel The Jewish Welfare Federa- tion — Israel Program Center and the Agency for Jewish Education are offering a high school semester in Israel for 10th and 11th grade students. The program, titled Project, currently in its third year, enables students to spend five months in Israel studying in an American high school. The students live in Jerusalem and experience life in Israel. The Youth Aliyah Department of the Jewish Agency will administer the program in Israel. • Participating students will depart for Israel in February 1991 and will live and study at the Goldstein Youth Village, an international educational center. Detroit students will be joined by students from Chicago, Cleveland and other Mid- west communities. About 40 young people are expected to take part in the 1991 spring semester. The fee of $3,850 covers tuition, room and board, tours, seminars and comprehensive health/hospi- talization plan. Not included in the cost are textbooks, pocket money, airfare, dental care, elective surgery, in- surance on personal belong- ings or a $50 non-refundable registration fee. In addition to the regular American High School cur- riculum, the program will in- clude intensive Jewish and Hebrew studies and tours of the country. A special em- phasis will be given to learn- ing about the Israeli society and encountering the Israelis on a personal level. Each student will have an adoptive Israeli family with which the students will spend holidays and free time. Students will also take part in activities of the Noar Le' Noar Youth Movement, BBYO's Israeli sister move- ment, with their peers. An informational meeting for Project Discovery will be held 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8 at the Agency for Jewish Education, 21550 W. 12 Mile Rd., Southfield. Rabbi Shlomo Tucker, the Israeli coor- dinator, will answer questions regarding the program. Families are invited to attend this meeting For information, call the Israel Program Center, 661-5440; or the Agency for Jewish Education, 354-1050. Bronfman Fellowships For Study In Israel The Edgar M. Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel — a program that sends 25 high school students to Israel for five weeks each summer for study, dialogue and travel — is now accepting applications for 1991. The Fellowships cover all expenses, including roundtrip transportation between New York and Israel, room and board, travel in Israel and in- cidentals, and are awarded solely on the basis of merit. In Israel, the Fellows will be led by a team of educators and counselors who themselves come from a broad range of Jewish backgrounds. The pro- gram will begin on July 7 with a two-day orientation seminar in New York. The group will return home Aug. 14. High school students in the United States and Canada who will be seniors in September 1991 may obtain application forms and detail- ed information by writing or calling the Edgar M. Bronf- man Youth Fellowships in Israel, 17 Wilbur Street, Albany, N.Y. 12202; telephone (518) 465-6575. Completed applications must be postmarked no later than Feb. 1, 1991. The names of the 1991 Fellowship reci- pients will be announced on March 25. The five-week stay in Israel is spent in intensive study, travel and discussion. The Fellows meet and take part in seminars with some of Israel's most penetrating political and cultural figures, debating and searching for in- sights in an atmosphere of open dialogue. Jewish life is explored against a back- ground of Israel's land, culture and customs. Upon their return to the United States, the Fellows participate in follow-up seminars that enable them to rekindle friendships, evaluate what they have learned and exchange ideas on how to apply the program's lessons in the years ahead. The adult staff accompany- ing the Fellows in Israel will include scholars-in-residence and counselors representing the Conservative, Orthodox and Reform movements.