SOUTHFIELD: AT RISK? The changing face of Southfield schools. STILL STRONG, MORE INTEGRATED G Ellen Schlussel grew up in Southfield. Her parents, Mark and RoseLynn, still live there. Now she teaches first- graders at Leonard Elementary School. 28 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1991 all Gales was running a few minutes late this Fri- day morning. She made a quick stop at the audio visual room to copy some handouts for her first-hour Hebrew class at Southfield-Lathrup High School. As the final bell rang, she noticed a group of students standing in the hallway. She wondered why they were all late for class. A teacher explained to Mrs. Gales that the students were going on a field trip for black college recruitment. More students than ever are graduating from Southfield schools and going to college. Twenty years ago, when S-L was predominantly white and boasted of a large Jewish presence, the school wouldn't have sent such a large group of black students on this field trip. Yet today, the school system is more black than white, and Jewish families are moving out of the district more quickly than they are moving in. Many Jewish families living in Southfield send their children to Orthodox day schools, or to Hillel Day School and other pri- vate schools. Others reside in Southfield within the Birmingham school district boundaries. Mrs. Gales, who also teaches English, is ques- tioning the future of a Jew- ish Southfield, and she wonders whether Hebrew class will survive in a school system in which the numbers of Jews are fewer than ever. Forty-three students are enrolled in all sections of Hebrew. At one time, Heb- rew students numbered 100. Today, some classes attract fewer than 15. Heb- rew I has 16. Hebrew II has seven. "In three years, the pro- gram could be over," Mrs. Gales said. "All Jewish kids don't take Hebrew. Some parents are even say- ing, 'What if my kid starts Hebrew and then we leave?' So they don't sign up. "I can tell you which kids have left," Mrs. Gales said. "I can't make a value judgment. It's just too bad that we're losing these students. S-L is still in the top 10 schools around here." FRIENDS ARE MOVING AWAY "A lot of my friends have moved," said Marc Wasser, 14, an S-L student whose parents, Paul and Varda Wasser, have lived in Southfield for 20 years. "There is really nothing wrong with Southfield. Most of them say they want a better neighborhood. Southfield is not a bad neighborhood. People just think it is." "This is a good neighbor- hood and this is a good school," he said. With Hebrew, the district hoped to better service its Jewish community. So.uthfield remains the only public school district in Michigan that offers it. Southfield also was among the first districts to close school on the High Holy Days of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. S-L senior Joe Abraham lived briefly in Farmington Hills with his parents, Kathy and Albert, after they moved to the Detroit area about a year ago from Arizona. The Abrahams moved to Southfield because "we wanted to be closer to the Jewish community." _ Joe Abraham was enroll- ed at Harrison High School in Farmington, where he said he had few Jewish friends. He is happier in Southfield, where he knows "a lot Of kids." Julian Azaryavev , son of Yeva and Levy, also re- cently moved to Southfield. His family, from the Soviet Union, is one of 200 families that Jewish Reset- tlement Service has helped house in Southfield since 1988. Julian could only speak .