NEWS Kesher Continued from Page 1 END-OF-SUMMER PRICES 1992 MIATA CONVERTIBLE 5 spd. trans., with overdrive limited slip cliff., floor mats, tinted glass, wheel independent susp., driver side air bag, re- clining bucket seats, intermittent wipers, 116 horsepower, D.O.H.C. STK #0012 $'13 890* HOT PRICE 1992 323 A GREAT COLLEGE 5 spd. trans., w/ overdrive, sport buckets, P. steering, P. brakes, tinted glass, AM/FM stereo cassette, rear defrost, styled wheels, cargo cover, fold down rear seat, halogen lights, floor mats. STK #0038 CAR-.74 „, $7,495 HOT PRICE - 1 1992 MPV Auto. trans, A/C, cruise, tilt, P. windows, P. locks, Package A, 7 pass. seating, AM/FM cassette, rear defrost, tinted glass, rear ABS braking, cold pkg., rear wiper. STK #0085 HOT $ PRICE 16,995* *PLUS TAX, TITLE, DESTINATION. ANY REBATE BACK TO DEALER. ma . 0 AIRNOL "The High Performance Dealer" IT JUST FEELS RIGHT.' 29187 GRATIOT at 12 Mile Road Directly across the street from Arnold Lincoln-Mercury 445-6080 30 FRIDAY. AUGUST 28._1992 I not only to have a camp for kids with disabilities, but to make available to Jewish kids the opportunity for specifically Jewish experi- ences," Mr. Frank said. So an integral part of the camp became the Jewish ac- tivities. On Friday night, Kesher participants would light Shabbat candles, and on Saturday morning they were to join in services. They would learn Jewish songs and Israeli dance as well. Mrs. Nosanchuk's son, Rob, who is active in NFTY, heard about Kesher while the camp was still in the planning stages. He recom- mended his mother for the job, and she was hired soon after. Among Mrs. Nosanchuk's first tasks: gathering mate- rial and planning programs. "My mind," she said, "was going a million miles an hour figuring out what to do." She got soap bubbles and plaster-of-Paris and sci- ence activities and Jewish videos borrowed from her congregation, Temple Shir Shalom. She also met to discuss the program with partici- pants in the UAHC leader- ship training camp, which meets each summer at Kutz and was held the same time as Kesher. The camp draws teens from throughout the United States, and this year included participants from Israel, Holland and Germany. The teens were offered a chance to work as coun- selors at Kesher. Mrs. Nosanchuk said she expect- ed a handful of them, po- litely advised "it would be a nice thing to do," to volun- teer, "then be real happy when we left." Instead, she had 36 teens ready to work two hours a day and who were eager to extend the friendships long beyond the time Kesher had closed. "They weren't doing it just to be nice," she said. "They really cared. From the minute we came, those kids wanted to be a part of our lives. "Look at this," she said, taking out a Camp Memory Book, in which participants record their impressions of the summer. At the back is a space where campers write in names and ad-- dresses of new friends. By the end of Kesher, every camper's list was filled with counselors' names, Mrs. Noshanchuk said. "Having Kesher there re- ally enhanced and enriched the experience for our lead- — ership training kids," added Mr. Frank, a Detroit native and former director of MSTY, Michigan State Temple Youth. "They put- what they are learning in theory into practice." "The Kesher campers cz called them the big kids,' " Mrs. Nosanchuk said. "Lana was always asking, Which of the big kids is coming ?' '- Two paid staffers also =I worked at Kesher with Mrs. Rabbi Schindler "called on the Reform movement to make sure we were providing services for all our members" Nosanchuk. Campers were found by word of mouth an( through letters mailed 'to Reform congregations throughout the country. In addition to the Jewish programming, Kesher fea- tured games and swimming and the familiar green plas- tic dishes at mealtime. At, night, the campers slept in cabins on the same grounds as the big kids. The volun- teer counselors helped give the Kesher campers bubble baths and tuck them into bed, and no one ever corn- plained about changing the soiled undergarments of 12- year-old Greg. Kesher marked the first time some parents had been- away for any length of time from their disabled son or daughter, Mrs. Nosanchuk said. It meant one mother could take a vacation in New York; another went_ away with her husband. But none left without carefully packing their children's clothes and personal be- longings. "Be sure to check that Candace's sleeves are at the right length," Candace's mother told Mrs. Nosan- - chuk. Mrs. Nosanchuk said she hopes to return next year to Kesher. The camp is set to become an annual event. ❑