I ON CAMPUS I Onkyo Home Theatre You May Never Go Out Again. For Some, High Holidays Come At The Dormitory ALYCIA SPECTOR Special to The Jewish News S Imagine, A company that Educates, Installs and Trains You in Your own Home. Call or visit the Vitex Showroom and see the difference... DC-SV70 Doldy Pro Logic Surround Sound Receiver with 60 mode remote. Sale $ 722.46 TAR-W404 Double Auto- Reverse Cassette Tape Deck with continuous play function. DX-C206 Six Disc CD Carousel Auto Changer with six repeat modes. Sale $ 254.96 Sale $ 299.96 N i TEx 3160 Haggerty Road, West Bloomfield (313) 669-5600 Mon-Sat 10am-5pm or by appointment Sale Ends 10/30/92 11111 lllllllllllllllllll I lllllll I llllllll IIIIIIIIIIII lllllllll !WIWI lllllIlli III1IIrmTT11 0 Co N4b Factory Remaining 1992 Models COMPLETE STAR TAR T ING A making memories since 1982 $1305 THE TABLE CONNECTION MANY SHAPES & SIZES! Just Fill With A Hose And Enjoy Year Round In Your Home or Yard! 313-425-7227 Technologies An overwhelming response will necessitate /custom designed furniture laminates, wood, lucite seeing all customers by appointment. No dealers please MURIEL WETSMAN 661-3838 L VALERIE TAYLOR FASHION RESALE [ .40 3 Exclusively Women's Clothing Accessories Currec ntn Fashions Sizes 2-14 -# 4 1844 W. Woodward Birmingham 1 block North of 14 Mile Rd Wishing Our Friends & Customers "Happy New Year" 130 L BLOOMFIELD CARPET & FLOORING -AI 39880 14 Mile Road — Corner of Haggerty Road 624-4477 Newberry Square Plaza 540-9548 "We Pay Cash for Fine Clothing and Accessories" HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 12-6 CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354-5959 everal college students gather together to celebrate Rosh Hashanah. In this small room they have carefully set out a plate of apples and honey as a wish for a sweet year. Candles are lighted, the card table set with a tablecloth and assorted dinnerware. Each friend has contributed his or her own favorite dish to the festive meal. As the group prepares to say the prayers and sit down to eat, they hear someone in the hall yell, "Anyone got a beer?" and an accompanying blast of Guns `N Roses from the room next door. This disconcerting scene might be a reality for some college students away from home this High Holiday season. Although Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur celebrations in a college dorm room or apartment aren't ideal, many students find it too difficult, expensive, or have too much schoolwork to come home for the holidays. The scene isn't always as grim, or, by turns, comically ironic as the dorm room holi- day meal depicted above. Many college campuses pro- vide special services for Jewish students at the High Holidays through their cam- pus B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun- dation or other Jewish stu- dent agencies. Shani Lasin, program director of the Hillel Foundation at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, said students play a large role in planning and leading the Humanistic, Reform, Conser- vative and Orthodox services offered there throughout the High Holidays. Students can also sign up for hot kosher meals at Hillel on the holidays. Marni Holtzman, a 20-year- old junior from Grand Rapids, is a member of U-M's Reform Chavurah, the group that plans the Reform services, and she led a High Holiday service for the first time last year. "I do miss going home and being able to spend the time with my family, but I get pleasure out of leading the service," Ms. Holtzman said. "I live two hours away, so theoretically I could go home, but I like working with Hillel.' On Kol Nidre and Erev Rosh Hashanah, Ms. Lasin estimated attendance at 500-600 people for Reforni services, 1,000 for Conser- vative services, and 100-150 1 for Orthodox services. "It's big crowd, it's like standing- room only,"she said. Ms. Holtzman said this oh-' servance within the Jewish university community is a special part of the holidays for her: "The sheer fact that there are so many students nice. Even though th students are away from hom€ ' they still feel a tie to thE religion and feel the need tc come to services." Students, Hillel staff and' other members of the Jewisi community also corn together at a Tashlich obse , vance during Ro . Hashanah, in which the meet and walk together t Ann Arbor's Huron River throw bread into it, a sym,, bolic and spiritual act c ."; "throwing away" their sins: , Michigan State University, students can attend combing: Special holiday programs for thosg who can't go home. tion Reform/Conservative st vices at the Hillel Foundati. in East Lansing, and Detroit, area Orthodox families ho.. students for the holidays as well, said Jennifer Epstein' program director for MSU Hillel. Hillel services als draw students from neighbo ing Cooley Law School 1 - Lansing. Still, Hillel Foundation MSU isn't used to providi such services because n previous years, school was often not in session during the High Holidays due to the school's now-defunct; trimester system. Also, Ms. ``I Epstein said, "We estimate 8,(=—' percent of the Jewish students we come into contac, with are from the Detroit. area and go home" for the holidays. On other campuses out of state, the pressures of school. , and the distance away from home discourage students from making the trip for the High Holidays. Brad Haber, a 20-year-old from West Bloom- field attending Ohio State University in Columbus, said, "I just got to school last week and I don't feel like driving home four hours right away." Mr. Haber had not yet made plans for celebrating the holidays, but said he might