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SUMMER page 16

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Golf Cart

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Saturday, April 24th

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at Orchard Lake Road • 539-0540

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Woodward
Plymouth Rd.
7 Mile Road
North of 11 Mile West of Telegraph East of -275

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$5.00 Retail Value

with this coupon

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Monday - Friday: 10:00 - 8:00 [4:=
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Saturday: 10:00 - 6:00
Sunday: 11:00 - 4:00
* = While Supplies Last

These beautiful superb
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Purveyors Of The Finest
Kashan, Sarook, Bokhara,
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Photography
and Video

by

fie

WIWOMO0

932-1780

"We have been living
happily ever after since
camp," she says.
Tamakwa also may be
the place that sparked
many entertainment
careers and eminent busi-
ness deals. The list of for-
mer campers reads like a

Who's Who.

Among those who spent
summers on the shores of
the South Tea Lake in
Canada are William
Davidson, founder of
Guardian Industries;
Michigan Sen. Carl Levin
and his brother, U.S. Rep.
Sander Levin; the late
comic Gilda Radner; Chevy
Chase; U.S. District Judge
Avern Cohn; Roots
founders Michael Budman
and Don Green; and film-
maker Sam Raimi, who
also stars in the film. ❑

Havdalah Unites
Area Youth Groups

B

FREE

2 Ball Pack of
Professional Golf Balls

moved from Toronto to
Detroit, where she soon
married Mr. Simon, who
was starting a job as a
social worker at West
Bloomfield's Ealy Elemen-
ary School.

LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER

All Stores are Celebrating The Grand Opening
of Their New West Bloomfield Location

THIS OFFER AVAILABLE ONLY AT THESE
PARTICIPATING PRO GOLF LOCATIONS

and landed a summer job
as art director, Tamakwa
would be the place she,
too, would meet a spouse.
Bob Simon, from
Houghton, was working
as director of the boys'
camp the summer Ms.
Stein arrived. They were
friends.
"I thought he was a
nice guy, but there were
no flames then," she
recalls. "The kids used to
ask if I was in love with
Bob. We were a little
slow. It took five years."
Ms. Stein never re-
turned to camp as staff.
But she visited each sum-
mer thereafter. Slowly,
but surely, she struck up a
romance with the man the
children selected for her.
"I took him to Africa
into the bush for a 17-day
camping safari," she says.
"This was real camping,
with lions and big ani-
mals."
If he could survive an
African safari, Mr. Simon
was good enough for Ms.
Stein. Four years ago, she

en and Jerry, the ice
cream makers. from
Vermont, are investing
in Detroit's Jewish fu-

ture.
They are donating Peace
Pops, ice-cream desserts on a
stick, for the first Havdalah
and mixer for all Jewish high
school students.
The Havdalah is at 9:30
p.m. April 24 at the Agency
for Jewish Education build-
ing.
Jewish Community Coun-
cil is coordinating the event.
It is sponsored by Michigan
State Temple Youth, B'nai
B'rith Youth Organization,
National Conference of Syn-
agogue Youth, United Syna-
gogue Youth, B'nei Akiva and
Hashachar Young Judaea.
The service is the second
activity JCCouncil's Youth
Committee has planned. In
December, the group coordi-
nated a Chanukah party for
new Americans with Jewish
Experiences For Families.
The Youth Committee was
formed two years ago with the
goal of bringing together
teens from various youth
groups.
"We wanted to create one
group to provide area youth
with an outlet and social ac-

tion," said Brian Kott, chair-
man of the Youth Committee.
"We also want to see interac-
tion between groups and to
educate each other on the var-
ious branches of Judaism."
The Youth Committee con-
sists of two representatives
from each youth group.
Wendy Dworkin, a senior
at Southfield-Lathrup High
School, represents NCSY. She

Youth Committee
brings Jewish teens
together.

also headed the group writing
the Havdalah service.
"We decided we had to cre-
ate a service based on what
the Orthodox students felt
was most important to in-
clude," Wendy said. "Howev-
er, we included English
translations and songs from
each youth group."
A mixer, slide show, dis-
cussion groups and treats will
follow the service.
Among the Youth Commit-
tee's future plans are a pro-
gram coordinated with the
Walk For Israel and looking
for ways to better include un-
affiliated Jewish youth. ❑

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