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1

Henry Bloch

Continued from Page 18

National Jewish leaders
including Abraham Fox-
man, director of the Anti-
Defamation League, lauded
Mr. Watson's decision to
leave the Kansas City Coun-
try Club.
"There are those who fight
on principle," Mr. Foxman
said. "Mr. Watson felt that
this was an affront, an in-
sult, not only to his wife and
children but to America.
That usually is the best
vehicle to break it (anti-
Semitism) down.
More people like Mr. Wat-
son are needed to "stand up
and be counted," added
Jerome Chanes, co-director
for domestic concerns of the
National Jewish Commun-

ity Relations Advisory
Council.
Mr. Chanes said discrim-
ination at country clubs is on
the decrease nationwide,
"but that is not to say it isn't
a problem."
Mr. Watson, who has won
32 Professional Golf Assoca-
tion Tour titles and five
British Opens, also holds
memberships at two other
Kansas City country clubs,
Shadow Glenn, which he
helped design, and Oakwood
Country Club. Oakwood's
membership is predominant-
ly Jewish.

Ruth Baum Bigus of the
Kansas City Jewish Chroni-
cle contributed to this report.

Yeshiva Students Set
Visits To Nursing Homes

PHIL JACOBS

Assistant Editor

R

abbi Yerachmiel
Stewart said the boys
at Yeshiva Beth
Yehudah have studied about
good deeds and performing
acts of kindness. This time,
however, the third grade
Hebrew teacher wanted
them not just to discuss
those acts, but to perform
them.
On Sunday, over 100 Beth
Yehudah students, 20
parents, rabbis and teachers
will disperse to nursing
homes in Oak Park,
Southfield, Farmington
Hills and West Bloomfield in
what is being called the
school's first Bikkur Cholim
(visiting the sick) Day.
The students will sing
Chanukah songs to the
residents and give them
dreidels in honor of the holi-
day.
"The main thing is that
we've always learned about
loving kindness in the
Torah," Rabbi Stewart said.
"And there have been
classes at Beth Yehudah
who have done things on an
individual basis. We've had
classes send letters to the
soldiers in the Middle East,
we've had classes bring in
food for Yad Ezra (the kosher
food pantry), and we've had
classes do other good deeds. I
just wanted the school to do
something together as a
whole."
Rabbi Stewart said the
school wanted to visit a
cross-section of the Jewish
community, not staying ex-
clusively within the Orthodox
areas.
"We express in school that
we love every Jew," Rabbi

Stewart said, "so let's do it.
We express in school that
every Jew is important to us.
So let's show how."
Not all of the nursing
homes on the list, according
to Rabbi Stewart, are
predominately Jewish. Some
have residence rolls that are
25 percent Jewish. "But we
found the nursing homes
that we called are excited
and receptive to this," Rabbi
Stewart said.
The rabbi said Beth
Yehudah hopes to form a
club as a result of Bikkur
Cholim Day that will
regularly make visits to area
nursing homes and
hospitals. Also, he said,
follow-up discussions will be
held, allowing the students
to talk about what they've
seen and who they have met
at the nursing homes. ❑

JFS Offers
Support Group

Jewish Family Service will
conduct a new support group
titled, "Teenage . . . and
Beyond," to help adoptive
parents understand their
adolescents and the extra
pressures that adoption in-
troduces into this phase of
life.
The support group will deal
with reunions, 18-year-olds
and young adults seeking in-
formation on their adoptions,
adoptees growing up in
households with birth
children, peer issues, boy-girl
relationships.
The eight-week sessions
will be conducted by Esther
Krystal, Coordinator of J.F.S.
Adoptive Services, and
Frances Blaske. The group
will meet Tuesday evenings,
beginning Jan. 15, from

